Title: From Revolution of Russia
11917 - 1924
- From Revolution of Russia Communism of Soviet
Union
2The All-Russian Congress 1917
- The Bolsheviks remained a significant minority
within the broad group of Communists Social
Revolutionaries. The All-Russian Congress of
Soviets (June 1917) showed the following
breakdown
3August-November 1917Total Revolution
- Failing Provisional Government
- Due to deeply-unpopular shortages, combined with
the continuing sacrifices, at home and at the war
front, The Provisional Govt. began to lose its
grip on control of the newly-democratic, yet
highly-unstable Russia. - Lvov appoints Kerensky in August.
- Kerensky formed a unpopular coalition government
of Liberals Moderate Socialists.
- Bolsheviks Seize Power
- October 25th Bolsheviks seized principal
buildings of Petrograd. - Seized the Winter Palace HQ of Kerenskys
Provisional Government. -
- Lenin installed as Chairman of the new Bolshevik
Russian Government. - Lenin Bolsheviks still only controlled area
around Petrograd. - November 7th on Gregorian Calendar
4Lenins Russia
- Over the next 6 years, Russia would be
transformed through a series of strategies
events - Consolidating Bolshevik supremacy in Russia
- Lenin the Treaty of Brest Litovsk
- The Russian Civil War 1918 1921
- Lenins War Communism
- The Kronstadt Rebellion
- The Comintern
- The New Economic Policy
5The First Days of Leninism
- Lenin believed that Western Europe would soon be
swept by International Communism. In fact, this
was a goal of the Bolsheviks. (Comintern) - Therefore, he concluded that Peace was the
priority cause Peace, Land, Bread - In order to achieve peace, Lenin had to withdraw
all Russian forces from World War I. He
personally drove through the harsh terms of the
Treaty of Brest-Litovsk. - Bolsheviks were still a minority within the
larger family of Communists Social
Revolutionaries.
6Treaty of Brest-Litovsk (March 1918)
- Trotsky (negotiating for Russia) initially
walked out on excessive German demands No
Peace, No War - Russia ceded Poland her Baltic lands to Germany
Austria-Hungary. - Russia also recognised the independence of the
Ukraine Finland. - Trotsky resented these severe losses, but in
Lenins mind, it mattered little and he insisted
on Russias acceptance. Russia lost - 30 of agricultural land
- 30 of population
- 50 of industry
7 Consolidating Bolshevik Control 1918
1920
Consolidating Political Power
Consolidating Economic Control
- Once in power, Lenin the Bolsheviks began
seizing businesses, banks property. - They nationalised all these private entreprises
assets. - Church property nobles land was seized. All
private property was abolished. - Land was given to the peasants.
- Elections, scheduled by the Provisional Govt.
were allowed to go ahead. However, the Bolsheviks
only gained 175 seats out of 700. - Lenin closed the democratic Assembly after one
day in January 1918. - The new Bolshevik secret police Cheka -
arrested executed all those who protested or
criticised Lenin and/or Bolsheviks who now
called themselves Communists - After a failed assassination attempt on Lenin,
Bolshevik forces launched a Red Terror campaign
in late 1918, rooting out all resistance to
Bolshevik control. - Women got the vote.
Dictatorship of the Proletariat?
8Russian Civil War 1918 - 1920Reds v. Whites
- The Reds were the Bolsheviks (Communists) and
believed in revolution through armed insurrection
coupled with political organisation. Their
single-handed closing down of all democratic
assemblies crushing of opposition through the
Red Terror, while introducing Nationalisation,
served to provoke a massive backlash from other
groups in opposition to them. - The Whites were mainly the Mensheviks who
believed in slow, gradual peaceful
transformation of society. They opposed bitterly
the methods and single-handed rule of the Reds
and were joined by Tsarists Social
Revolutionaries in a bid to oust the new
Bolshevik (Communist) Government. - They would receive outside aid (money armies)
from the - USA, France, Britain Japan.
-
Whites associated with being anti-Russian
foreign aid intervention
9 Russian Civil War 1918 - 1920
Lenins War Communism
Whites Confusion
- Lenin introduced War Communism during the Civil
War struggle. Bolsheviks effectively controlled
only Petrograd Moscow at beginning of Civil
War. - This involved seizing food for factory workers to
feed factory workers in Petrograd Moscow. The
Red Guards were central to this State requisition
(requisition squads system of forced
quotas.) - Red Guards seized food from agricultural
peasants, but in 1920 a famine occurred after
they refused to grow food.
- Efforts by the Whites were confused due to their
different backgrounds and aims - Tsarists Return to Tsar Rule?
- Cadets Return to Liberal Democracy?
- Social Revolutionaries/ Mensheviks Pure
Socialism?
By 1920, the skill of Leon Trotsky had
transformed the Red Guards into the Red Army,
which was highly-motivated, unified well-fed.
The Civil War was effectively won.
10War Communism Civil War Kronstadt Rebellion
(March 3, 1921)
Roots of Kronstadt Rebellion
- The harshness of the Bolsheviks towards the
peasants especially during the Civil War, left
many people wondering just what kind of social
justice they had supported in revolution. Also,
the Bolsheviks were the smallest group of
reformers at the All-Russian Congress of 1917.
Legitimacy? - The effects of War Communism on the peasants
especially aroused anger in otherwise supportive
groups, such as the Russian sailors. - The closing of the new democratic Assembly in
January 1918 aroused deep anger suspicion
amongst many peasants, soldiers sailors. - While most peasants, soldiers sailors supported
vast reforms of the old Tsar system, they were
afraid of replacing one tyrant with another.
The Petropavlovsk
The famed rebellion of the battleship Potemkin
during the 1905 Revolution was an uncomfortable
comparison for the Bolsheviks while they
attempted to suppress the Kronstadt Rebellion,
led by Stephan Petrichenko
http//www-personal.umich.edu/mhuey/TOC/KRN.frame
.html
11Kronstadt Naval Base
Tuchachevskys Approach (March 16th)
55 kms
St Petersburg/Petrograd/Leningrad
12Kronstadt Rebellion
- "I am simultaneously giving orders to prepare for
the suppression of the rebellion and the
subjugation of the sailors by armed force. All
responsibility for the harm that may be suffered
by the peaceful population will rest entirely on
the heads of the White Guard mutineers. This
warning is final. - L.Trotsky, L.Kamenev, Ultimatum to Kronstadt.
- "We have one answer to all that All power to the
Soviets! Take your hands off them - the hands
that are red with the blood of the martyrs of
freedom who fought the White Guards, the
landowners and the bourgeoisie! - - Kronstadt Izvestiya, No.6.
- Note the reference by Trotsky Kamenev to the
..White Guard mutineers. -
- Note also the response by the Kronstadt rebels
All Power to the Soviets. Take your hands off
them the hands that are red with the blood of
martyrswho fought the White Guards, the
landowners and the bourgeoisie - Both sides accused the other of being enemies of
the people and of the broad revolution in 1917. -
- Kronstadt Naval base had a long and chequered
reputation of being independent
revolutionary. The famous 1905 incident of the
Potemkin was probably the most memorable incident
of anti-Tsar revolt during that period, later to
be immortalised in the film The Potemkin
(1925). - During the 1917 Revolution, naval ships had
participated in crushing General Kornilovs
failed retrograde attack on Petrograd.
13 Kronstadt Rebellion True
Communism or Counter-Revolution?
Demands of Kronstadt Sailors A Broader Consensus
- On February 27, 1921, the Petrograd Strike
Committee had issued the following demands to
Lenins Bolshevik Government - The whole policy of the government must undergo
a thorough change, and first and foremost the
workers and peasants must have their freedom.
They do not want to follow Bolshevist leaders
they want to decide their own lot for themselves.
You must therefore put forward the following
demands urgently and in an organized way - The release of all socialist and non-party
workers who have been arrested. - The abolition of the state of siege.
- Freedom of speech, the press, and meeting for
all working classes. - Free voting in new elections for the factory
committees, trade unions and Soviets.
- Kronstadt Naval base was only the most prominent
centre of anti-Bolshevism during the early years
of the new Russia. - The Petrograd Soviet had issued a damning
indictment (only 5 days before the Kronstadt
Rebellion) of Lenins War Communism but more
importantly, had openly criticised Lenin for the
abolition of democratic rights institutions.
14Kronstadt Postscript
- Lenin the Bolsheviks eventually crushed the
mutiny in Kronstadt on the night of March 16th,
1921. Conspirators, sailors fishermen were
executed for their part in the mutiny. - This represented the last significant effort to
oust Bolshevism or alter its excessively
dictatorial position and ideology. - Showed the deep division contrast between the
popular uprising of the February Revolution of
1917, the more limited revolution of October 1917
ultimately the narrow, despotic rule of
Bolshevism during the Russian Civil War
Kronstadt Mutiny. - The policies of War Communism, the closing of
the National Assembly in January 1918 and
suppression of democratic rights by the Cheka
had all contributed to the mutiny in Kronstadt.
15Communist International The Comintern
- The Third International, 1919 1943
- "by all available means, including armed force,
for the overthrow of the international
bourgeoisie and for the creation of an
international Soviet republic as a transition
stage to the complete abolition of the State. - Zinoviev
- Chairman of Comintern
- 1919 -1928
- Aim To spread Communism to other nations,
particularly focusing on western capitalist
countries. - The Comintern assisted and eventually, over a
number of years, began to control the activities
of foreign Communist parties. -
16Lenins New Economic Policy 1921
17 War Communism N.E.P.
- The collapse of the productive forces surpassed
anything of the kind that history had ever seen.
The country, and the government with it, were at
the very edge of the abyss.
-
Leon Trotsky - I ask you, comrades, to be clear that the New
Economic Policy is only a temporary deviation, a
tactical retreat. - - Zinoviev
- The harsh realities of War Communism, coupled
with the real demands of the peasants as
portrayed by the Kronstadt Rebellion, made it
clear to Lenin that War Communism was neither
economically effective nor popular with the
peasants. - In response to this, Lenin sought to rescue both
the economic well-being of the country and
restore confidence in the Bolshevik Party by
introducing a New Economic Policy. It had
elements of quasi-capitalism, allowing for small
businesses to open and allowing peasants to sell
their surplus grain for profit.
18New Economic Policy
- Rationale
- Ostensibly, Lenin wanted to revive the economic
well-being of Russia. In reality, Lenin was aware
of the failure of War Communism and wanted to
appeal to the peasants for continued support. He
also wanted to defuse any lingering discontent
after the death of 1,000 Russian sailors and the
repression by the State in Kronstadt. - New Economic Policy
- Tax on peasants harvests. (lower than the terms
of War Communism) - 2. Peasants allowed to sell excess produce for
profit. - Although state control remained on all
large-scale businesses and banking, small
businesses were allowed to open.
- 4. Foreign trade investment was encouraged in
the hope that it would revive the faltering
Russian economy - 5. Bonuses were introduced in the workplace
(incentives) -
- 6. A state bank was established Lenin
directed the formation of a state economic
planning commission Gosplan to help direct
future funding development of the Russian
economy.
19New Economic Policy
20- Results
- By 1924, 40 of Russian domestic trade was
sourced in private businesses. The economy
flourished with industrial and agricultural
output reaching pre-war levels (see graph). - Consequences
- The end of restrictions on private small
businesses was a blow to die-hard Communists, yet
it reflected the pragmatism of Lenin who realised
Russia could not instantaneously move to pure
Communism. The Communist die-hards saw it as a
betrayal and Lenin faced severe criticism from
some quarters. - This pragmatism however, stabilised Russia
sufficiently in an economic sense to allow Lenin
to pursue the total transformation (politically)
of Russia into the USSR. -
- 3. The first attempt at State Planning was
introduced under the Gosplan although it was
not in anyway truly Communist (foreign trade,
small private businesses) it did allow Russia to
begin catching up on Western countries
prosperity levels.
21 Constructivism A Communist Art Form
22Union of Soviet Socialist Republics (USSR) - 1922
- Treaty of Creation
- of the USSR (1922)
- The following countries/republics were unified
under the title USSR from 1922 onwards -
- Russian, Ukrainian, Byelorussian Transcaucasian
Soviet Republics were all amalgamated into the
USSR in 1922. - More states would be subsumed into the USSR at
later dates. - The Constitution of the USSR codified made
legal the union of soviet socialist republics in
1924.
23 Centralised, Dictatorial Bolshevism of
the USSR Dictatorship of the Proletariat?
- By 1921, it became clear that Lenins ideal was
one of a centralised, authoritarian Bolshevik
government ruling over the entire Russian
territories. - In 1922, Russia became the USSR (Union of Soviet
Socialist Republics), but in reality Russia at
the centre of the Soviet Union, became the
effective principal state of leadership and
authority. - What is To Be Done? - Lenin, 1902.
- In this essay on the future of
revolutionary planning, Lenin does betray his
desire to rule Russia in an authoritarian way. -
- By the time of Lenins death in 1924,
the USSR had been safely founded with the
amalgamation of neighbouring territories into a
larger, unified, politically-centralised economic
power
24Soviet Union in 1924
- After Lenin died in 1924, a power vacuum opened
up over the leadership of the Bolshevik Party
the USSR. - This power vacuum would define the course of
Soviet History for the next thirty to forty
years. The contenders for Lenins position were
mainly two men - Ideological Battle of Leadership in USSR
- Leon Trotsky - a devout believer in
International Socialism head of the Red Army - v.
- Joseph Stalin quiet and introverted, General
Secretary of the Communist Party, he began to
favour what he would eventually call Socialism
in One Country
25Leadership Power Struggle Begins in USSR
http//www.marxists.org/archive/lenin/quotes.htm
- Lenins quotes on Socialism, Communism, the
Proletariat Revolution
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