1. ANOTHER LIE.
Nashe Vremya, 97, evening edition,1 prints a dispatch from its own correspondent giving the text of a German wireless message from Constantinople which alleges that "the Bolsheviks, having received strong reinforcements from Turkestan and Astrakhan, passed to the offensive and, notwithstanding heroic Moslem resistance, captured the city of Baku."
I publicly declare that this provocative message is devoid of all truth.
Baku recognized the power of the Soviets from the first days of the revolution and recognizes it now. There was no Bolshevik attack on Baku nor could there have been. There was merely an adventurist attack of a handful of Tatar and Russian landlords and generals who suffered a complete fiasco because of the detestation they are held in by the Moslem and Russian workers and peasants. There was no fight between Bolsheviks and Moslems nor could there have been. The Baku Soviet power was and remains the power of the workers and peasants of all the nationalities of Baku and the Baku area and, above all, the power of the Moslem people.
People's Commissar
J. Stalin
2. LETTER TO V. I. LENIN.
To Comrade Lenin.
I am hurrying to the front and writing only on business.
1) The railway south of Tsaritsyn has not yet been restored. I am firing or telling off all who deserve it and I hope we shall have it restored soon. You may rest assured that we shall spare nobody, neither ourselves nor others, and we shall deliver the grain in spite of everything.
If our military "experts" (bunglers!) had not been asleep or loafing about, the line would not have been cut, and if the line is restored it will not be thanks to, but in spite of, the military.
2) Large quantities of grain have accumulated on rail south of Tsaritsyn. As soon as the line is cleared we shall be sending you grain by through trains.
3) I have received your communication.1 Everything will be done to forestall possible surprises. You may rest assured that our hand will not flinch...
4) I have sent a letter by messenger to Baku.2
5) Things in Turkestan are bad; Britain is operating through Afghanistan. Give somebody (or me) special authority (military) to take urgent measures in South Russia before it's too late.
Because of the bad communications between the border regions and the centre someone with broad powers is needed here on the spot so that urgent measures can be taken promptly. If you appoint someone (whoever it is) for this purpose, let us know by direct wire and send his credentials also by direct wire.
Otherwise we risk having another Murmansk.3
I send you a telegraphic tape on Turkestan.
That is all for the present.
Yours,
Stalin
Tsaritsyn,
July 7, 1918
3. LETTER TO V. I. LENIN.
Comrade Lenin,
Just a few words.
1) If Trotsky is going to hand out credentials right and left without thinking—to Trifonov (Don region),1 to Avtonomov (Kuban region),2 to Koppe (Stavropol),3 to members of the French Mission (who deserve to be arrested), etc.—it may be safely said that within a month everything here in the North Caucasus will go to pieces and we shall lose this region altogether.
Trotsky is behaving as Antonov did at one time. Knock it into his head that he must make no appointments without the knowledge of the local people, otherwise the result will be to discredit the Soviet power.4
2) If you don't let us have airplanes and pilots, armoured cars and 6-inch guns, the Tsaritsyn Front cannot hold out and the railway will be lost for a long time.
3) There is plenty of grain in the South but to get it we need a greased chain of command that can handle troop trains, army commanders and so on. The military must assist the food agents since the supply of food is naturally bound up with the military's well-being.
For the good of the work I need military powers. I have already written about this, but have gotten no reply. Very well, in that case I shall myself, without any formalities, dismiss army commanders and commissars who are ruining the work. The interests of the work dictate this and of course not having a paper from Trotsky is not going to deter me.5
Yours,
J. Stalin
Tsaritsyn,
July 10, 1918
Trifonov's harmony with Trotsky's intelligence made him suspect in the eyes of Stalin, Molotov, Voroshilov and Ordzhonikidze, so he was arrested, accused of Trotskyism and executed.The first anniversary of the Nazi dictatorship is approaching.
All the tendencies of the regime have had time to solidify. The "socialist" revolution envisaged by the petty-bourgeois masses as a needed supplement to the national revolution is officially liquidated and condemned. The brotherhood of classes found its apex on a day especially appointed by the government that witnessed the haves forswear the hors d'oeuvre and the dessert in favor of the have-nots. The fight against unemployment is reduced to the splitting of semi-starvation doles in two. The rest is the task of uniformed statistics. "Planned" autarky [national economic self-sufficiency and independence] is simply a novel stage of economic disintegration.
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The more impotent the Nazi police regime is in the field of the national economy, the more it is forced to shift its energy to the field of foreign policy. This corresponds fully to the internal dynamics of German capitalism, aggressive through and through.
The sudden turn of the Nazi leaders toward peaceful declarations may deceive utter simpletons alone. What other method is there at Hitler's disposal but to blame the domestic distress on external enemies and to build via the dictatorship's press the explosive force of nationalism? This part of their program, outlined publicly before coming to power, is being implemented presently with iron logic before the eyes of the world.
The date of the new European catastrophe will be determined by the time required for the arming of Germany. It is not a question of months but neither is it a question of decades. It will be but a few years before Europe is again plunged into war unless Hitler is forestalled in time by the domestic forces of Germany.
(Leon Trotsky, 1933: "Postscript to What is National Socialism?" Leon Trotsky Internet Archive [www.marxists.org] 2008)
Stalin's outstanding trait is his manner of handling telegrams from Moscow forwarding instructions. When Trotsky, alarmed by the obliteration of the managing organizations which had been created with so much toil, sent a telegram stressing the need to restore the General Staff and the Commissariat to their previous fabric and to offer them the possibility of work, Stalin wrote down on the margin this stark and telltale note, "To be ignored."
And that's exactly what happened. All the artillery commanders and a portion of the General Staff remained captive on a barge in Tsaritsyn.
(K. Y. Voroshilov, 1939. Stalin and the Red Army. Moscow: Foreign Language Publications. Tsaritsyn, pp. 9-10)
4. LETTER TO V. I. LENIN.
Dear Comrade Lenin,
The fight is on [against Denikin] for the South and the Caspian. In order to keep all this area (and we can keep it!) we need several light destroyers and a couple of submarines (ask Artyom about the details).
I implore you, break down all obstacles and facilitate the immediate delivery of what we request.2 Baku, Turkestan and the North Caucasus will be ours (unquestionably!) if our demands are met immediately.
Things at the front are going well. I have no doubt that they will go even better (the Cossacks are becoming completely demoralized).
Warmest greetings, my dear and beloved Ilyich.3
Yours,
J. Stalin
You speak of your "devotion" to me. Perhaps it was just a chance phrase. Perhaps... But if the phrase was not accidental I would advise you to discard the "principle" of devotion to people. It's not the Bolshevik way. Be devoted to the working class, its Party, its state. That is a fine and useful thing. But do not confuse it with devotion to persons, this vain and useless babble of weak-minded intellectuals.
(Letter to Comrade Shatunovsky, August 1930)
And you want me to keep silent on the ground that you, it appears, cherish a "biographical tenderness" for me! How naive you are and how little you know the Bolsheviks.
(Excerpts from a letter to Comrade Demyan Bedny, December 12, 1930)
5. TELEGRAM TO SVERDLOV, CHAIRMAN OF THE ALL-RUSSIAN CENTRAL EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE.
Having learned of the villainous attempt of the hirelings of the bourgeoisie on the life of Comrade Lenin, the world's greatest revolutionary and the tried and tested leader and teacher of the proletariat, the Military Council of the North Caucasian Military Area is answering this vile attempt at assassination by instituting open and systematic mass terror against the bourgeoisie and its agents.
Stalin
Voroshilov
Tsaritsyn,
August 31, 1918
6. TELEGRAM TO V. I. LENIN.
Following the capture of Krasnaya Gorka, Seraya Loshad has been taken.1 Their guns are in perfect order. A rapid check of all the forts and fortresses is under way.
Naval experts assert that the capture of Krasnaya Gorka from the sea runs counter to naval science. I can only deplore such so-called science. The swift capture of Gorka was due to the grossest interference in the operations by me and civilians generally, even to the point of countermanding orders on land and sea and imposing our own.
I consider it my duty to declare that I shall continue to act in this way in future, despite all my reverence for science.
Stalin
June 16, 1919
7. LETTER TO V. I. LENIN FROM THE SOUTHERN FRONT.
Comrade Lenin,
About two months ago General Headquarters did not object in principle to the main blow being delivered from west to east through the Donets Basin. General Headquarters rejected it nevertheless on the plea of the "legacy" left by the retreat during the summer: a haphazard distribution of troops in the present South-Eastern Front whose reset would entail a considerable loss of time to Denikin's advantage. It was only for this reason that I did not object to the officially adopted direction of the blow.
But now the situation has changed radically: the Eighth Army (a major force) has moved into the area of the Southern Front directly facing the Donets Basin; Budyonny's Cavalry Corps (another major force) has likewise moved in, and also the Latvian Division, a new force to be replenished within a month and which will also represent a formidable force against Denikin.
You see that the old distribution of troops (the "legacy") no longer exists. What then induces General Headquarters to insist on the old plan? Apparently nothing but obstinacy, or if you prefer, factionalism of the most obtuse and dangerous kind to the Republic, nurtured in General Headquarters by that "strategic" bantam cock, Gusev.
[...]
Precisely for this reason it is essential at once, without loss of time, to drop the old plan, already supplanted in practice, and replace it with a plan under which the main blow will be directed from the Voronezh area through Kharkov and the Donets Basin toward Rostov.1
[...]
In short, the old plan must under no circumstances be galvanized into life. That would be dangerous to the Republic; it would most certainly improve Denikin's position.
It must be replaced by a new plan. Conditions and circumstances warrant it, they imperatively dictate it. In that event the distribution of the regiments will also of course be different.
Without this, my work on the Southern Front will become meaningless, criminal and futile, which will give me the right or rather compel me to go anywhere, even to the devil himself, so as not to remain on the Southern Front.
Yours,
Stalin
Serpukhov,
October 15, 1919
8. SPEECH AT THE OPENING OF THE FOURTH CONFERENCE OF THE COMMUNIST PARTY (B.) OF THE UKRAINE.1
Comrades,
The one basic task confronting you, the Communists of the Ukrainian rear and front, has until now been to halt the advance of the Poles, rout Petliura and drive out Denikin. This task is being carried out successfully, as is now admitted by enemies as well as by friends.
Now that Ukraine has been delivered from the most ferocious enemy of the revolution, Denikin's army, you have another no-less-important and complex task ahead: to rehabilitate the Ukraine's shattered economy. Indubitably you who have coped with Denikin will also cope with the economic disruption and spend all your strength—all that energy which sets Communists apart from other parties—to stem the economic disruption and help your comrades in the North.
There are signs that this very task is underway up North. Labour Army communiqués cite the repair of more and more steam locomotives and railway cars and greater and greater fuel production. The industries of the Urals likewise burgeon and forge ahead. I have no doubt that you too will do as well as our comrades to the North.
The Communists will most assuredly fulfill this task because our Party is solid, united, devoted, and above all because our motto is: "Finish the work begun even if you have to die for it."
It is only through discipline and solidarity that the Party mobilizes thousands of workers to all districts and regions. Discipline and solidarity gave us the victory over imperialism and make us hope now for the victory over our other enemy, the economic disruption.
[...]
9. SPEECH DELIVERED AT A MEETING CALLED BY THE MOSCOW COMMITTEE R.C.P. (B.) ON THE OCCASION OF V. I. LENIN'S FIFTIETH BIRTHDAY.
After the speeches and reminiscences we have heard here, very little remains for me to say. I should only like to mention a trait of Comrade Lenin's not yet cited, namely, his modesty and his courage in acknowledging mistakes.
I recall two occasions when Lenin, that giant, admitted he had been wrong.
The first episode relates to the decision taken in December 1905 at the All-Russian Bolshevik Conference in Tammerfors, Finland, on the question of boycotting the Witte Duma.1
The question of boycotting the Witte Duma had to be decided. A group of seven people—closely associated with Comrade Lenin and on whom we provincial delegates used to bestow all kinds of epithets2—had assured us that Ilyich was opposed to boycotting the Duma and in favour of taking part in the elections. As it turned out later this was actually so,3 but the debate opened and we the pro-boycotters from the provinces, St. Petersburg, Moscow, Siberia and the Caucasus went on the attack.4
What was our surprise when Lenin got up after we had spoken and declared that although he had favoured taking part in the elections he now saw that he had been wrong and presently sided with the provincial delegates.
We were astounded. It had the effect of an electric shock. We cheered him to the echo.
Here is a similar episode. In September 1917 the Democratic Conference had been convened under Kerensky and the Mensheviks and the Socialist-Revolutionaries were contriving the Pre-parliament, a new institution that would pave the way for a transition from the Soviets to a Constituent Assembly.
At that time we of the Central Committee in Petrograd decided to attend the Democratic Conference and to keep building the Soviets for the purpose of convening a Congress of Soviets, start an uprising and make the Congress the organ of state power.
Ilyich who was at that time hiding outside Petrograd did not agree with our decision and wrote that the scum (meaning the Democratic Conference) should be dispersed and arrested right away.
It seemed to us the matter was not quite so simple for we knew that one half or at least a third of the delegates to the Democratic Conference came from the front and arresting and dissolving the Conference might worsen matters and sour our relationship with troops at the front. We the practical workers could discern the bumps and pitfalls ahead far more clearly. Withal Ilyich was a great man; he was not afraid of bumps and pitfalls, he did not fear danger, and he said: "Rise and march straight to the goal!" On the other hand we the practical workers could not see that any good would come out of such a course of action, rather the right thing to do was to maneuver around the obstacles and grab the bull by the horns later. So despite Ilyich's insistence we paid him no heed and kept strengthening the Soviets to the point of us Bolsheviks dominating the Congress of Soviets of October 25, which guaranteed the successful uprising.
By October 25 Ilyich was already in Petrograd. Smiling and glancing at us slyly, he said: "Yes, it seems you were right." Again we were astonished, Comrade Lenin was not afraid of acknowledging his mistakes.5
His modesty and courage was particularly what captivated us.
(Applause).
10. THE ENTENTE'S NEW CAMPAIGN AGAINST RUSSIA.
It is beyond all doubt that the campaign of the Polish gentry against workers' and peasants' Russia is actually a campaign of the Entente.
The point is not only that the League of Nations—headed by the Entente, Poland a member—has evidently approved Poland's campaign against Russia. The chief points are that without the Entente's support Poland could not have planned her attack and that France in the first place but also Britain and America are doing all they can to aid the offensive with weapons, equipment, money and instructors. Disagreements within the Entente over the Polish question do not affect the matter for they concern only how to support Poland, not the support itself. Nor is the matter eased by Curzon's diplomatic correspondence with Comrade Chicherin or by ostentatious anti-intervention articles in the British press because all this hullabaloo aims only to throw dust in the eyes of naive politicians and to veil the foul work of the actual armed intervention with talk about peace with Russia.
The Entente's present campaign is the third in succession.
The first campaign was launched in the spring of 1919. It foresaw a joint attack by Kolchak, Denikin, Poland, Yudenich and composite Anglo-Russian detachments in Turkestan and Archangel, the main weight of the attack being in Kolchak's area.
At that time the Entente was solid united and stood for open intervention. The weakness of the labour movement in the West, the number of Soviet Russia's enemies and their complete confidence in victory over Russia, enabled the bosses of the Entente to pursue a brazen policy of undisguised intervention.
At that time Russia was in a critical bind because she was cut off from the grain areas (Siberia, the Ukraine, the Northern Caucasus) and from the fuel sources (the Donets Basin, Grozny, Baku) and was forced to fight on six fronts. The Entente realized this and gloated over an anticipated victory. The Times was already rolling the drums.
Nevertheless Russia crossed this crisis safely. Her most powerful enemy, Kolchak, was routed. The point is that Russia's home front and army were firmer and more flexible than her adversaries'.
The Entente's second campaign was launched in the autumn of 1919. It too envisaged a joint attack by Denikin, Poland and Yudenich—Kolchak had been written off the accounts. Now the weight of the attack lay in the South, Denikin's area. Withal the Entente experienced internal quarrels for the first time. It began to moderate its insolent tone, intimated some opposition to overt intervention, held out the possibility of negotiations with Russia and withdrew its troops from the North. The growth of the revolutionary movement in the West and Kolchak's defeat evidently made the previous policy of plain intervention risky. The Entente no longer dared to speak of open intervention.
Despite the victory over Kolchak and the recovery of one grain region (Siberia), Russia was still in a critical condition because Denikin the chief enemy stood at the gates of Tula the main supplier of cartridges, rifles and machine guns for our army. Nevertheless Russia emerged once more victorious for the same old reason: the greater stability and flexibility of our rear and therefore our army.
The Entente's third campaign is being launched in quite a novel format. This campaign unlike the previous ones cannot be called joint, for not only have the Entente's old allies (Kolchak, Denikin, Yudenich) dropped out but no new ones (if there are any) have yet joined in, dismissing ludicrous Petliura and "his" ludicrous "army." Poland is facing Russia alone so far without any serious fighting allies.
[...]
The Russians propose peace. [...] During the night of last Tuesday the Council of People's Commissars sent via radiotelegraph a message to Dukhonin the Chief of Staff ordering him to offer immediately and formally an armistice to all Allied and enemy nations at war.
This message was received at Headquarters yesterday at 5:05 AM ... Simultaneously the same formal armistice proposal was made to all the representatives of the Allies stationed in Petrograd.
Since Dukhonin had not replied by yesterday afternoon, the Council authorized Lenin, Stalin and Krylenko to ask via radiotelegraph the reason for his delay...
The Daily Chronicle reports from Petrograd that the outcome of the local elections to the Constituent Assembly reads as follows.1
The maximalists took first place in Petrograd with more than 400,000 votes. The Cadets came second with almost 250,000 and the Social-Democrats third with 150,000. The remaining sixteen parties that also ran have foundered.
The twelve seats for Petrograd will therefore be distributed as follows: six seats will go to the maximalists, four to the Cadets and two to the Socialist-Revolutionaries.
The six maximalist seats will probably be occupied by Lenin, Kamenev, Kollontai, Stalin, Trotsky and Zinoviev.
The Cadet representatives will be Milyukov, Vinaver, Kutler and Reditchov (?).
The Socialist-Revolutionary deputies will be Chernov and Kamkov.
Right after the October Revolution
(Dates are in Old Style)
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