Title: Lecture IV: STALINISM AS A STATE SYSTEM
1Lecture IVSTALINISM AS A STATE SYSTEM
- In the framework of the course Crucial Issues of
Russian Political History from the early XXth
century up the present time - Sergey Verigin, Ass. Prof.
- Petrozavodsk State University
2Contents list
- I. Fight for power in the Bolshevik Party after
Lenins death. Stalins victory. - II. Regime of Stalins personal power. 1930s.
3I. Fight for power in the Bolshevik Party after
Lenins death. Stalins victory.Historical
views of Stalins times.
- Scientific analysis of Stalin's activity in
Russian historiography began only during
perestroika, at the end of 1980s. In first works
dedicated to this problem, an assessment of
Stalin, given at the XX Congress of the Communist
Party (1956), was restored. The essence of it
was that together with positive moments of
Stalin's policy, negative facts also took place,
for example, Stalin's role in organizing mass
repressions. - Then assessments of Stalin's activity similar to
foreign ones (for example, made in works of Koen,
Konkwest, Deutcher, Boffa, Vert and other) were
given in the Soviets works of Aphanasyev,
Gephter, Tsipko and others. A negative assessment
of Stalin was consequently transferred to the
period of his ruling, which was called Stalinism,
totalitarianism of his administrative-command
system.
4Joseph Vissarionovich Stalin(1879-1953)
5Joseph Vissarionovich Stalin(1879-1953)
- Stalin's real surname is Dzhugashvili. He was
born in Georgia and in 1888 was given to a local
church school. He excelled there and received a
scholarship which gave him a possibility to enter
Tbilisi Theological Seminary in 1894 as a devour
believer in Russian Orthodox maxims. But in 1899
when he was just about to graduate he left
Seminary and started revolutionary activities. - In 1903-04 Stalin was in Siberian exile for
staging demonstrations in Georgia. In 1903, when
Russian Social-Democratic Workers' Party split
into Bolsheviks and Menshevike he joined the
former. Before the Revolution of 1917 he was
several times arrested by imperial police and
sent to exile, but always managed to escape from
there, the last time right after the October
revolution. - Although Stalin did not play a major role in the
Octover revolt, he was included into the
Bolshevik government as commissar of national
affairs. Stalin was successful in the party
struggle followed Lenin's death and by 1930
seized the power in the Soviet Union getting rid
of all his opponents and competitors. The years
of Stalin's rule, especially 1937-38, cost the
USSR thousands of lives. Stalin's mistakes in
military preparations resulted in the heavy
situation the Soviet Union found itself in the
first two years of the Great Patriotic War. After
the war Stalin was about to continue mass purges
and only his death in 1953 stopped them.
6Were there alternatives to Stalin?
- In this discussion some Soviet historians
acknowledged that Stalin's cult had been a
natural consequence of socialism as a one-party
system. There were a great deal of discussions if
there had been any alternative to Stalinism in
the Soviet society development. Some historians
(for example, Latsis, Kozlov, Bord'ygov and
others) tried to part Stalinism and Leninism, and
to find out real alternatives to Stalinism in the
USSR history of 1920s.
7Were there alternatives to Stalin?
- The possible continuation of a new economic
policy (NEP) was considered to be another way
out. Other historians (Klyachkin, Koginov and
others) proved that there had been no
alternatives to Stalinism in Russian history. The
reasons of Stalin's victory were explained
differently by a difficult international
situation, Lenins mistakes (he didn't manage to
stop Stalin). An opinion that Stalin was only
Marx's and Lenin's student and he had realised
their ideas in practice also explained the
situation. That is, Stalinism was considered to
be a continuation of Marxism.
8Heterogeneity of the Communist party
- The period of 1920s began for Soviet Russia with
a severe social-political crisis not only in the
society (we mentioned in previous lectures about
people's dissatisfaction with "military communism
policy"), but in the Communist (Bolsheviks) Party
as well. There were a lot of different fractions
and groups. - In 1921 a resolution "About the Party's unity"
aimed against Bolsheviks Party's split was passed
at the X Congress of the Russian Communist Party
- RCP(b)".
9Heterogeneity of the Communist party
- When Lenin was alive this resolution was seldom
used for the struggle against differently minded
in the party. It didn't mean a cease in the
discussions about country's and party's
development. For example, in 1924-1925 Trotskys
book "October's Lessons" concerning economic
problems was discussed in the party.
10Lev Trotskij
11Preconditions for Stalinism
- In the second half of 1920s Stalin used the
resolution "About Party's unity" in party
internal struggle. The result was the exclusion
of Trotsky and his supporters, his comrades
Kamenev, Zinovyev and then other Stalin's
opponents, Bukharin and Rykov from the Bolshevik
Party. The political regime was tough when
Lenin was alive in the beginning of 1920s. - In 1922 the Central Political Administrative
Board (GPU - according to the Russian
abbreviation) so was formed instead of VCiK. Its
aim was to struggle against counterrevolution.
The same year an entry of " counterrevolutionary
crime" was included into the Criminal Code. Any
action aimed at the overthrow of the Soviet Power
was considered criminal.Â
12Preconditions for Stalinism
- In 1922 some 47 famous socialist-revolutionaries
were convicted according this article. This
process had become the first important political
process in the Soviet period. In the autumn of
this year some 160 famous workers of culture and
science disagreed with Bolshevik policy were
deported. Such famous philosophers as Berdyaev,
Bulgakov, Frank were among then. At the beginning
of 1920s a political process over Mensheviks
leaders of the party took place. Most of them
were subjected to repression. - So, in 1922 Bolsheviks annihilated political
opposition and one party system was formed. It
had existed till the end of 1980s. Almost
everything in the country now depended on a
situation in the ruling Communist Party.
13Lenins last days
- In April 1922 Stalin was appointed as the General
Secretary of the Central Committee of the RCP(b).
He began to select personnel and to post them.
The selected personnel were devoted to Stalin. - Gradually, Lenin became aware of Stalin's danger
to the future of the country and party. But he
was seriously ill and since the end of 1922 he
couldn't participate in country's governing. And
at that very time Stalin began to put his plans
into reality. - In 1922-1923, at the end of his life, Lenin, who
was seriously ill and had no ability to rule the
country, wrote his last articles and letters,
which were later called "political will". - Lenin wrote in those articles about future plans
concerning the building of socialism in Russia
strengthening of the ruling party unity,
strengthening of the Workers and Peasants Union,
etc. He emphasized the necessity to win peasants
over to the Soviet power. - But Communist party leaders couldn't understand
the profundity of Lenin's ideas. They paid too
much attention to the struggle for power.
Trotsky, Stalin, Kamenev, Zinovyev, and Bukharin
thought that each of them could replace Lenin.
Their main aim was to defeat their political
opponents . They hid Lenin's "Letter to the
Congress", in which Lenin characterized every
political leader, from the society.
14Lenin's last days Vladimir Lenin and his wife
Nadezhda Krupskaja.
15Anti-Trotsky coalition
- On the eve of Lenin's death, the Thirteenth Party
Conference published, on Stalin's motion, the
decision empowering the Central Committee to
expel Party members for factionalism. At the
moment the leader died a new sanctity enveloped
his every word and deed, including this decision,
in which Lenin had taken part. Simultaneously
decreed a new recruiting campaign, nominally with
a view to strengthening the actual worker element
in Party ranks. Actually Stalin, as general
secretary, was able to bolster his own influence
by guiding the Party machinery in selecting new
members. In a few short weeks nearly a quarter of
a million men and women were admitted in the new
"Lenin enrollment."
16Anti-Trotsky coalition
- At the time of the XIII Party Congress in May
1924, the economic situation was improving
sufficiently to enable the triumvirs (Stalin,
Zinoviev and Kamenev) to call their critics to
account. Zinoviev openly attacked Trotsky and
demanded that he retract his "errors." As Stalin
had only shortly before opposed Zinoviev's demand
for Trotsky's arrest, he found it wise to remain
in the background. - The Congress was unmoved. It promptly took steps
to discipline the Russian Troskyites, as well as
dissidents in the other parties of the Comintern.
17Anti-Trotsky coalition
- Permanent Revolution
- After the XIII Congress, as far as could be seen
the chief antagonists were Trotsky on the one
hand and Zinoviev and Kamenev on the other. - Trotsky restated his old theory of "permanent
revolution," with its emphasis on the world
leadership of the proletariat and its implicit
challenge to the Leninist position on the role of
the poor peasantry in building socialism.
"October," said Trotsky, was the crucial stage in
the history of the Party. "October" meant to him
the time when Lenin adopted Trotsky's theory of
permanent revolution--at least in the sense of
rapid passage from the bourgeois to the socialist
stage.
18Anti-Trotsky coalition
- "Socialism in one country
- Stalin offered his theory of "Socialism in one
country. - In January 1925 the Central Committee removed
Trotsky from the War Commissariat, even though he
remained in uneasy possession of a seat on the
Politburo. This was the decisive blow. Although
he was still not completely crushed, Trotsky
receded to the background. - Although Trotsky was defeated, Zinoviev and
Kamenev soon discovered that the victory was not
theirs. In March 1925 the Fourteenth Conference
of the Party accepted Stalin's theory of
"socialism in one country," while Zinoviev and
Kamenev paid little attention. Soon afterward
Stalin was able to break up the triumvirate. Too
late Zinoviev and Kamenev attacked Stalin's new
theory. By the middle of 1925 he had found new
allies in Bukharin, Rykov, and Tomsky, who
accepted "socialism in one country."
19Stalin vs. Kamenev and Zinovyev
- Rykov had become Lenin's successor as chairman of
the Council of People's Commissars. Tomsky was
the leader of the Soviet trade-unions. Bukharin,
the "Left" Communist of 1918, was now, like Rykov
and Tomsky, on the "right" and the leader of
those who felt that the NEP was a success, and
while indeed socialism might be built in Russia.
Zinoviev and Kamenev, on the contrary, were
profoundly uneasy about the continuation of the
NEP, but they had been abruptly thrust into the
minority. - Zinoviev and Kamenev tardily recognized Stalin as
the man from whom they had most to fear and
carefully prepared an attack on him for the XIV
Party Congress, to be held in December 1925. - However, the plan completely miscarried. As
reconstituted just after the Congress, the
Politburo had three new full members Molotov,
Voroshilov, and Kalinin, all loyal of Stalin's.
Stalin also added several supporters to the list
of candidate members of the Politburo.
20Lenin, Zinovev and Kamenev
21Anti-Stalin coalition
- In 1926 old opponents (Trotsky and his
supporters) united with Zinov'év and Kamenev in
their struggle against Stalin. A united
opposition tried to win the majority of the party
over its side and to organise illegal structures.
But there was no unity among the opposition
members. Being supported by obedient party
members, Stalin managed to expel opposition
leaders from the party and to send his main
opponent, Trotsky, from Moscow. - In his struggle against opposition Stalin broadly
used the resolution "About Party's Unity", which
prohibited factions and forced the minority to
obey the majority. More often Stalin was
supported by OGPU bodies (that is the State
Political Administrative Board bodies). Stalin
used this body in the struggle against his
opponents.
22Zinovev , Kamenev and Bukharin
23Stalins getting rid of Bukharin. NEP policy
suspended
- January 1929 - Trotsky was deported out of the
USSR in accordance with Stalin's order. After the
defeat of opponents headed by Trotsky and
Zinovyev, Stalin didn't need Bukharin's support
from the society. Since 1928 his disputes with
Bukharin had been starting. (They were about the
NEP). - At the end of 1927 - at the beginning of 1928
there were serious problems with State grain
procurements. Peasants, not satisfied with low
prices on agricultural products, refused to sell
bread. Bukharin considered that fact to be a
contradiction of the NEP and urged to find a way
out on the NEP basis - which is to reach
understanding with peasants. As for Stalin, he
considered this information to be a "kulak's"
sabotage. He called upon for using extreme
measures - bread confiscation.
24Stalins getting rid of Bukharin. NEP policy
suspended
- In 1928 Stalin also called upon to abandon the
NEP and to begin a "big leap " - that is a forced
industrial and agricultural development. Besides
he called upon for a wider using of extreme
measures. Bukharin and his supporters (Rykov - a
chairman of the SPK of the USSR and Tomsky - a
Soviet Trade Union leader) tried to protect the
NEP, they were against extreme measures. Bukharin
understood that such measures in economy would
lead to extreme measures in politics. Bukharin's
struggle against these measures meant a struggle
against the formation of Stalin's individual
power.
25Stalins getting rid of Bukharin. NEP policy
suspended
- But forces were not equal. The party apparatus
supported Stalin. He seemed a guarantee of
stability and secured privileges to its members.
Besides that, Bukharin called upon for the
realization of reforms, which would it not be
effective at once. - In 1929 Stalin managed to discredit Bukharin and
his supporters, accusing them of the "right wing
group". In the autumn of 1929 Bukharin's group
failed. Stalin becomes the only leader in the
Communist Party.
26II. Regime of Stalin's personal power. 1930s
First processes and formation of the camp system
- All these events accelerate a process of
discontinuance of the NEP, and a formation of the
administrative - command system. Stalin and his
supporters fabricated a number of processes in
1930 - a process over the so-called Provision
(Promyshlennaj) party, and in 1931 a mensheviks
process. Since the beginning of 1930s closed
trials followed by extra-judicial punishments
were organized. The so-called "Troika"s (that is
groups made up of 3 members) were formed for
judicial proceedings. - Party and State leaders, heads of the District
Department of the GPU were the members of the
troikas. At first they accused "kulaks" only, but
then intelligentsia as well. Since the number of
convicted persons increased, at the verge of
1920s 1930s a reorganization of reformatory
institutions was carried out. Camps were their
main structures. In 1930 they were transferred to
the OGPU. A Central Camp Management (GULAG),
headed by Yagoda, was organized.
27Central Camp Management (GULAG) an ordinary
working day of GULAGs settlers
28Toughening of Stalins regime
- In the early1930s Stalin toughened his regime. A
new term "people's enemy" was used for the first
time in a resolution of the Central Executive
Committee and the People's Commissars Council of
the USSR of August 7, 1932. - People's enemies could be sentenced to capital
punishment or 10 years of imprisonment with
property confiscation. - In December 1932 a passport regime was
introduced in the country, which had been earlier
prohibited by the Soviet government in 1923. - In March 1933 OGPU bodies got a right to shoot
people without trial and investigation. - At last, on December 1, 1934, the day of Kirov's
assassination (Kirov was a leader of Leningrad
Bolsheviks), "the Law of the Procedure of
Management of Affairs concerning the organisation
of acts of terrorism" was adopted
29Sergey Kirov
30Repressions
- Repression was intensifying at the time when the
USSR Constitution was adopted in 1936. The Soviet
Propaganda announced it to be the most democratic
in the world. The Constitution parts concerning
people rights, principles of legal proceedings
were nothing more than a mockery in 1930s. - The following reasons of the 1930s repressions
can be mentioned - - the necessity to replace as quickly as
possible people, who got used to work in the
democratic atmosphere of the NEP, by people
devoted to Stalin's regime - - the possibility to explain economic and
political crises at the end of 1920th by the
activity of saboteurs and spies - - the method to force the population work
effectively without any economic stimulus.
31Repressions
- Enemy of People
- No segment of society was left untouched
during the purges. Article 58 of the legal code,
listing prohibited "anti-Soviet activities", was
applied in the broadest manner. Initially, the
execution lists for the enemies of the people
were confirmed by the Politburo. Over time the
procedure was greatly simplified and delegated
down the line of command. People would inform on
others arbitrarily, to attempt to redeem
themselves, or to gain small retributions. The
flimsiest pretexts were often enough to brand
someone an "Enemy of the People", starting the
cycle of public persecution and abuse, often
proceeding to interrogation, torture and
deportation, if not death.
32Regime of Stalins personal power. Great Purges
of 1935-38.Â
- By the end of 1929 Stalin's victory was absolute.
The whole political system of the USSR had
changed.  The regime of Stalins personal power
was formed. -
- The years of 1935-1938 were the top years of
Stalin's repression. Within this period three
large political processes over famous political
leaders were carried out. A possible opposition
to Stalin in the Red Army was defeated. There
were purges among industrial leaders and in
social institutions. The repression was on a
large-scale. At the end of 1930s the number of
imprisoned persons in the USSR was about 10-40
million people. - It was at the end of 1930s when Stalin's cult
reached its acme. His name was associated with
numerous successes in the USSR economy. His
authority was unshakeable he had no adversaries
worth mentioning. He was really very popular with
the Soviet people.
33Regime of Stalins personal power. Great Purges
of 1935-38
- The results of the purges
- - At least 681,692 people were executed
during 193738 alone, and only accounting for the
execution lists signed personally by Stalin from
archives of NKVD. - - The exact total of persons affected
remains uncertain and depends on how the count is
made, especially depending on the time period
considered and whether deaths related to the
Gulag and transportation losses are included.
Following Kirov's exploited death, it has been
said that roughly 1.7 million people were
arrested over the following decade, with nearly
700,000 executed. - One of Russia's leading human rights
groups, the Memorial Society, has released a list
of 1,345,796 names of people who fell victim to
Soviet political repressions.
34Literature to the topic 4
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Bolshevism. ?New York Longmans Green, 1939.
690p. - Bullock Alan. Hitler and Stalin parallel lives.
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?London Basingstoke, England Macmillan, 1978.
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New York, 1990.
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Cambridge, Mass., 1960. - Daniels, R. The conscience of the revolution
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1917-1967. London, New York Oxford University
Press, 1967. vi115p. (George Macaulay Lectures,
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Russian by Harold Shukman. London Weidenfeld
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Soviet state apparatus and economic policy,
1945-53. London Basingstoke, England Macmillan,
1980. 176p. bibliog.
37Literature to the topic 4
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Russia and the world. Cambridge, Massachusetts
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Soviet communist party reconsidered, 1933-1938.
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dictator. ?London Hart-Davis, 1971. 679p.
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history of the USSR from 1917 to the present.
London, Hutchinson, 1986. - Hindus, V. Red bread collectivization in a
Russian village. Foreword by R. G. Suny. -
Bloomington, Ind., 1988. - Ian Grey. Stalin, man of history. London
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648p. bibliography. - Issac Deutscher. Stalin a political biography.
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2nd ed. xvi661p. - J. N. Westwood. Russia, 1917-1964. ?London
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chronika. Moskva Nauka, 1975-1981. - Laird, R. Collective farming in Russia a
political study of Soviet kolkhozy. Lawrence
University of Kansas Publications, 1958.
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Russian by Charles Malamuth. Stalin an appraisal
of the man and his influence. London MacGibbon
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255p. - McAuley, Mary. Soviet politics 1917-1991. Oxford
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1963. - McNeal, R. H. The Bolshevik tradition Lenin,
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1963. - McNeal, R. H., ed. Lenin, Stalin, Khrushchev
voices of Bolshevism. - Englewood Cliffs, N.J.,
1963. - McNeal, R. Stalin man and ruler. -New York,
1988. - Medvedev Roj Aleksandrovic. On Stalin and
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Wayland New York Putnam, 1972. 128p. - Milovan Djilas, translated from the Serbo-Croat
by Michael B. Petrovich. Conversations with
Stalin. ?Harmondsworth, England Penguin
Harcourt, Brace World, 1962. 171p.
40Literature to the topic 4
- Nicholas V.Riasanovsky. A history of Russia.
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1964. - Nutter, W. The growth of industrial production in
the Soviet Union. Princeton Princeton University
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New York Oxford University Press, 1965.
Reprinted with corrections, 1972. 80p. maps. (The
Changing World). - Ponomarev, Boris Nikolaevic. A short history of
the Communist party of the Soviet Union. ?Moscow,
1970. - Raack Richard Charles. Stalins drive to the
West, 1938-1945. The origins of the Cold War.
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York Oxford Univ. P., 1993. - Ringmar Erik. The international politics of
recognition Soviet Russia in world Affairs,
1917-1939. ?Stockholm, 1996. - Robert C. Tucker. Stalin in power the revolution
from above, 1928-1941. New York, London Norton,
1990. 707p. bibliog.
41Literature to the topic 4
- Robert Conquest. Stalin Breaker of nations.
?London Weidenfeld Nicolson, 1991. 346p.
bibliog. - Robert H. McNeal. Stalin man and ruler.
?Basingstoke, England Macmillan in association
with St. Antony?s College, Oxford, 1988. 389p.
map. bibliog. - Robert Payne. The rise and fall of Stalin.
?London W. H. Allen, 1966. 767p. bibliog. - Ronald Hingley. Joseph Stalin man and legend.
?London Hutchinson, 1974. xxii482p. - Roy A. Medvedev, translated by A. D. P. Briggs.
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and consequences of Stalinism. ?New York
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Thomas P. Whitney (vols 1 2) and H. T. Willetts
(vol. 3). The Gulag archipelago, 1918-1956 an
experiment in literary investigation. London
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42Literature to the topic 4
- Treadgold, D. Twentieth-century Russia. ?Chicago,
Illinois Rand McNally, 1971. 3rd ed. 563p. - Treadgold, Donald W. Twentieth century Russia.
?Chicago Rand McNally, 1964. - Trotsky, L. Stalin An appraisal of the man and
his influence. - New York, 1941. - Trotsky, L. The revolution betrayed. -New York,
1937. - Tucker, R.C. Stalin as revolutionary, 1879-1929
a study in history and personality. - New York,
1973. - Ulam, A. Expansion and coexistence a history of
Soviet foreign policy, 1917-1967. - New York,
1968. - Ulam, A.B. Stalin The man and his era. - New
York, 1973. - Van Hagen, M. Soldiers in proletarian
dictatorship the Red Army and the Soviet
socialist state, 1917-1930. ? Ithaca, New York
London Cornell University Press, 1990. 369p.
bibliog. - Viola Lynne. Peasant rebels under Stalin
collectivization and the culture of peasant
resistance. ?New York, 1996. - Von Laue, T.H. Why Lenin? Why Stalin? -
Philadelphia and New York, 1964. - Walter Laqueur. Stalin the glasnost revelations.
?London, Sydney, Wellington Unwin Hyman, 1990.
382p. bibliog. - Wheatly, Dennis. Red Eagle the story of the
Russian Revolution and of Klementy Efremovich
Voroshilov. ?London, 1938.