Title: The Triumph of Bolshevism: Russia, 191829
1The Triumph of Bolshevism Russia, 1918-29
2Consolidation of Power, 1918
- Lacked a plan
- Used existing structures State Capitalism
- Authority existed in Moscow and Petrograd alone
- Problems-
- Industrial production 2/3 1914 levels
- Inflation rocketed
- Transport crippled
- 13m tons short of grain
3Consolidation of Power, 1918
- Decree on Land need for food
- Decree on Workers Control
- Largely legalised what was already happening
- Vesenkha took control of economic life
- Nationalised banks and railways
- Cancelled foreign debt
- Result serious fall in production
4Consolidation of Power, 1918
- Abolished all titles comrade became standard
greeting - Creation of Cheka (called GPU after 1922)
- Red Army founded
- Marriage Code gave married women equal rights
with husbands - Schools brought under State control
5Consolidation of Power, 1918
- Constituent Assembly dissolved at gun-point
- Bolsheviks gained barely a ¼ of seats
- Lenin dismissed democracy as bourgeois
- Criticism from Noam Chomsky and Rosa Luxemburg
- Reasons
- Hold on power was precarious
- Lenin argued that Soviets already existed
- Lenin claimed SRs and Kadets had rigged elections
6Consolidation of Power, 1918
- Treaty of Brest Litovsk
- WWI had been an imperial war
- Lost vital grain producing land Ukraine
- Lenin faced stiff opposition
- Allies funded Bolsheviks enemies
- Treaty null and void in Nov. 1918
7Civil War, 1918-20
- Causes
- Dissolution of Constituent Assembly Whites
- Bolsheviks were a minority party
- Lenin welcomed a show down
- Greens (Ukrainians / Georgians) believed
Bolsheviks were imposing Russian rule on the rest
of the country - Struggle for food (Petrograd bread ration reduced
to 50 grams per day and population of city went
from 3m to 2m migration to countryside) - SRs attempted a coup in Moscow (2 failed
assassination attempts on Lenin in July and
August bullet lodged in neck)
8Civil War, 1918-20
- 40,000 Czech troops still in Russia marching to
Vladivostok to meet up with Allies - SRs organised uprisings in central Russia
- White volunteer army led by General Denikin in
Caucuses (south) - Czech legion encouraged White army under Admiral
Kolchak in Siberia (north) - In Estonia, ex-Trasist General Yudenich encourage
White resistence army (east)
9Civil War, 1918-20
- White weaknesses
- Fought in separate detachments
- Unwilling to sacrifice individual differences
- Widely scattered geographically
- Made up of socialists, liberals and conservatives
- Only common purpose was hatred of Bolshevism
- Too reliant on overseas aid
- Whites imposed reign of terror on areas they
controlled - Lacked quality leaders like Trotsky
10Civil War, 1918-20
- Reds strengths
- Controlled central Russia and maintained supply
lines - Controlled two major cities Moscow and Petrograd
- Controlled railway network
- Controlled industrial areas access to munitions
- Could claim that Whites were in league with
foreign interventionists - Had driving sense of purpose
- Brilliantly organised and led by Trotsky
11Civil War, 1918-20
- Foreign intervention (Britain France USA
Japan) - After Treaty of Brest Litovsk wanted to prevent
war supplies getting into German hands - French especially wanted to recover Russian debt
- Occupied major ports of Murmansk, Archangel,
Odessa and Vladivostok - Allies wanted to prevent spread of communism,
e.g. - Sparticist uprising in Berlin, 1918
- Communist republic in Bavaria, 1918-19
- Hungary Bela Kun, 1918
12Civil War, 1918-20
- Estonian, Latvian, Lithuanian, Polish troops also
occupied Russia to gain independence - Reasons for withdrawal
- Little co-operation between the occupiers
- Threats of mutiny in French and British regiments
- War-weary
- Allies withdrew by 1920 Japan by 1922
- Lenin portrayed as saviour of nation
13Red Terror
- Chief instrument Cheka (renamed GPU in 1922)
- Destroy counter-revolution and sabotage
- Led by Felix Dzerzhinsky (Polish intellectual
aristocrat) - Law unto itself answerable only to Lenin
- Granted unlimited powers of arrest, detention and
torture - July 1918 at Ekaterinburg murdered Romanovs
- Climate of Civil War justified the terror
14Red Terror
- Feb 1918 Decrees authorising execution of
Bolsheviks opponents - May 1918 Declaration of war on peasant
bourgeoisie - May 1918 creation of grain requisitioning squads
- July 1918 military conscription imposed
- Feb 1919 forced labour camps created
- Dec 1919 Trotsky announced militarisation of
labour and abolished trade unions
15Red Army
- Created by Trotsky Lenin gave him total
confidence - Heavily armed train as military HQ
- Attached political commissars to army
- Death sentence for desertion
- Re-imposed ranks, titles and rigid discipline
- Enforced conscription
- Those of questionable social background used
for backbreaking labour - Elite of w/c troops
16War Communism, 1918-21
- Linked to Red Terror
- Harsh economic measures adopted during Civil War
- Decree on Nationalisation all major heavy
industries under central control - Military needs came first and many industries
were starved of resources - Factories deprived of manpower due to
conscription - Scarcity of goods whilst government continued
printing money led to hyperinflation. By 1920,
rouble fell to 1 of 1914 value - Industrial output at 30 of 1914 levels by 1921
17War Communism, 1918-21
- Claimed Kulaks were hoarding grain, but truth was
that they saw no point in producing grain - Cheka sent to requisition grain
- Lenin ordered merciless suppression of Kulaks
- Results national famine
- By 1921 grain production less than 50 of 1913
levels - Lenin accepted foreign aid, but cancelled it by
1923 - Even though the policy failed some communists
supported it as being true to their values
18Kronstadt Rising, 1921
- War Communism maintained after end of Civil War
- Severity of WC increased Bolshevik unpopularity
- Opposition even developed within the Party
- Alexandra Kollontai led a Workers Opposition
- Petrograd went on strike
- By 1921 thousands of workers crossed from
Petrograd to Kronstadt and linked up with sailors
and dockworkers led by Petrochenko
19Kronstadt Rising, 1921
- Kronstadt Manifesto (inc.)
- Freedom of speech, press, assembly and for trade
unions - Ending of special food rations for party members
- Ending of one-party state
- Withdrawal of political commissars from factories
- Had been great supporters of Bolsheviks in 1917
- Artillery bombardment then 60,000 Red Army troops
sent in. Savage fighting, but all workers killed
and those who escaped were rounded up and shot - Bolsheviks claimed that they were White agents,
but afterwards abandoned WC.
20New Economic Policy, 1921-28
- Serious lack of food
- Replaced force with persuasion.
- Key features
- Central economic control relaxed
- Requisitioning replaced by tax-in-kind
- Peasants allowed to sell surplus for profit
- Public markets restored
- Money reintroduced as a means of trading
21New Economic Policy, 1921-28
- Restored mixed economy
- Lenin stressed it was a temporary concession
- State still controlled large-scale industry,
banking and foreign trade - Disturbed many in party such as Trotsky who
objected to NEPmen - Lenin introduced Ban on Factions to silence
objections
22New Economic Policy, 1921-28
- Bukharin converted to NEP and convinced many
other Bolsheviks to do likewise - Production figures suggested that policy worked,
e.g. factory output and wages more than doubled,
agricultural production also increased - However, industry stagnated and urban
unemployment remained high
23Great Turn, 1928
- Stalins aims
- Abandoned NEP lacked capacity
- Modernisation of economy
- second revolution
- Overtake the West
- Self sufficiency
- Gosplan in charge of central planning
- Collectivisation
- Industrialisation 5 Year Plans
24Leadership Struggle
- Lenin impressed by Stalins organisational
ability - By 1912 Stalin one of six key members
- Stalin helped to found Pravda
- Stalin supported the October Revolution
- Stalin was Georgian very helpful to Lenin and
became Commissar for Nationalities during Civil
War - Brought him into conflict with Trotsky, Commissar
for War
25Leadership Struggle
- But, Stalin had offended Lenin
- Stalin had been rude in discussions with
officials in Georgia whose support Lenin needed - Storm of abuse against Krurskaya, Lenins wife
called her a whore - After this, Lenin dictated his Testament
- Accused Stalin of being rude and encouraged
others to remove him from his positions of
authority
26Leadership Struggle
- Stalin lacked brilliance, but was willing to
undertake laborious administrative work - As government grew certain posts became more
important. Stalins jobs - Commissar for Nationalities appointed regional
officials - Liaison Officer could monitor policy and
personnel - Head of Workers Inspectorate oversee work of
all departments - General Secretary could build up personal files
on all party members - The indispensable link in the chain of command
27Leadership Struggle
- Stalin was in charge of the Lenin Enrolment,
1923-25. Crammed party with his own loyal
supporters. - Stalin also benefited from Ban on Factions
- Stalin very effectively capitalised on Lenins
legacy - Cult of Lenin
- Lenins Funeral
- Suppression of Lenins Testament
28Leadership Struggle
- Trotsky was own worst enemy
- Brilliant, but no power base in the party
- Until 1917, Trotsky had been a Menshevik
- Sometimes arrogant and sometimes diffident
- Inhibited by his Jewishness
- Other leading Bolsheviks such as Kamenev and
Zinoviev were determined to prevent him becoming
leader. - Trotsky seen as the Napoleon figure
29Leadership Struggle
- Bureaucratisation vs party democracy
- NEP Left Communists vs Right Communists
- Permanent Revolution vs.
- Encourage worldwide revolution for w/c
- Individual nations did not matter
- To protect communism in Russia
- .Socialism in One Country
- Russia to become self-sufficient
- Survival and modernisation of Russia was the
priority - Invasion of Poland in 1920 showed limits of Perm.
Rev.
30Leadership Struggle
- Stalin, Kamenev, Zinoviev vs Trotsky
- 1925 Trotsky relieved of his position as
Commissar for War Stalin could deliver the
votes at Party Congress - In 1927 Trotsky was exiled
- Stalin then turned on Kamenev and Zinoviev (Left)
over the issue of the NEP. He was backed by
Rykov, Tomsky and Bukharin (Right)
31Leadership Struggle
- Stalin then defeated Right through Great Turn
- Stalin believed in forced modernisation through
collectivisation and industrialisation - The Rights ideas appeared timid by late-1920s
and they were poorly organised and supported
compared to Stalin - By 1929, Stalin had emerged as supreme leader
32Religion
- Marx opium of the people
- No place for organised religion (Orthodox Church
Judaism Islam) - Decree on Separation of Church and State
- Church properties confiscated
- Clergy no longer paid salaries
- Church organisations disbanded
- Religious teaching forbidden in schools
- 300 priests executed 10,000 exiled by 1924 (Show
Trials) - Monasteries and Churches looted and desecrated
- Propaganda campaign to ridicule the Church
- Union of the Militant Godless
- Bolshevism became the new religion, e.g Red
Weddings
33Women and the Family
- Wanted to free women from slavery of marriage
- Legalised divorce
- Recognised illegitimate children as full citizens
- Legalised abortion
- State responsibility for raising of children
- Helped women into work and political activity
- Alexandra Kollontai believed in free love, but
Lenin was unimpressed by her brand of feminism - However, policy was strongly resisted and had
many negative side-effects, e.g abandoned
pregnant women and children
34The Arts
- Create new type of human being Homo
Sovieticus - Proletcult workers movement to create new
Russian culture, but really led by a small elite
(ended in 1922) - Writers and artists would express values of new
Soviet Russia - Writers circles
- Amateur dramatic groups
- Art studios
- Poetry societies
- Many of these based in factories literacy
increased 20 - Cheka (GPU) imposed strict censorship
35Education
- Combined education and political propaganda
- Religious education replaced by communist values
and atheism - Schools placed under Commissariat for
Enlightenment - Authority of teachers and discipline reduced in
favour of greater freedom for students - Traditional teaching methods abandoned
- Although literacy improved, overall standards
declined - Youth groups Pioneers for Children and Komsomol