Lies concerning the history of the Soviet
Union
From
Hitler to Hearst, from Conquest to Solzhenitsyn.
The
history of the millions of people who were allegedly incarcerated and died in
the labour camps of the Soviet Union and as a result of starvation during
Stalin’s time.
In this world we
live in, who can avoid hearing the terrible stories of suspected death and murders
in the gulag labour camps of the
But where in fact
do these stories, and these figures, come from?
Who is behind all this?
And another
question: what truth is there in these stories?
And what information is lying in the archives of the
The following
article shows us where these stories of millions of deaths through hunger and
in labour camps in Stalin’s Soviet Union originated and who is behind them.
The present
author, after studying the reports of the research which has been done in the
archives of the Soviet Union, is able to provide information in the form of
concrete data about the real number of prisoners, the years they spent in
prison and the real number of those who died and of those who were condemned to
death in Stalin’s Soviet Union. The truth is quite different from the myth.
The present
arthor, Mario Sousa is a member of the Comunist Party in
There is a direct
historical link running from: Hitler to Hearst, to Conquest, to Solzhenitsyn. In 1933 political change took place in
The
At Hitler’s side
in the German leadership was Goebbels, the Minister of Propaganda, the man in
charge of inculcating the Nazi dream into the German people. This was a dream of a racially pure people
living in a Greater Germany, a country with broad lebensraum, a wide space in which to live. One part of this lebensraum, an area to the east of
The conquest of
the
William Hearst – Friend of Hitler
William Randolph
Hearst is the name of a multi-millionaire who sought to help the Nazis in their
psychological warfare against the
This was also the
start of the Hearst newspaper empire, an empire which strongly influenced the
lives and thinking of North Americans.
After his father died, William Hearst sold all the mining industry
shares he inherited and began to invest capital in the world of journalism. His first purchase was the New York Morning Journal, a traditional
newspaper which Hearst completely transformed into a sensationalist rag. He bought his stories at any price, and when
there were no atrocities or crimes to report, it behoved his journalists and
photographers to ‘arrange’ matters. It is
this which in fact characterises the ‘yellow press’: lies and ‘arranged’
atrocities served up as truth.
These lies of
Hearst’s made him a millionaire and a very important personage in the newspaper
world. In 1935 he was one of the richest
men in the world, with a fortune estimated at $200 million. After his purchase of the Morning Journal, Hearst went on to buy
and establish daily and weekly newspapers throughout the
William Hearst’s
outlook was ultra-conservative, nationalist and anti-communist. His politics were the politics of the extreme
right. In 1934 he travelled to
After his visit
to Hitler, Hearst’s sensationalist newspapers were filled with ‘revelations’
about the terrible happenings in the Soviet Union – murders, genocide, slavery,
luxury for the rulers and starvation for the people, all these were the big
news items almost every day. The
material was provided to Hearst by the Gestapo, Nazi Germany’s political
police. On the front pages of the
newspapers there often appeared caricatures and falsified pictures of the
The myth concerning the famine in the
One of the first
campaigns of the Hearst press against the Soviet Union revolved round the
question of the millions alleged to have died as a result of the
This great class
struggle, involving directly or indirectly some 120 million peasants, certainly
gave rise to instability in agricultural production and food shortages in some
regions. Lack of food did weaken people,
which in turn led to an increase in the number falling victim to epidemic
diseases. These diseases were at that
time regrettably common throughout the world.
Between 1918 and 1920 an epidemic of Spanish flu caused the death of 20
million people in the
The Hearst press
articles asserting that millions were dying of famine in the
The Hearst mass media empire in 1998
William Hearst
died in 1951 at his house in
52 years before the truth emerges
The Nazi
disinformation campaign about the
When Reagan was
elected to the US Presidency and began his 1980s anti-communist crusade,
propaganda about the millions who died in the
Nevertheless the
millions said to have died of starvation in the
The Hearst press,
having a monopolist position in many States of the
Robert Conquest at the heart of the myths
This man, who is
so widely quoted in the bourgeois press, this veritable oracle of the
bourgeoisie, deserves some specific attention at this point. Robert Conquest is one of the two authors who
has most written on the millions dying in the
The style of
Conquest’s books is one of violent and fanatical anti-communism. In his 1969 book, Conquest tells us that
those who died of starvation in the Soviet Union between 1932-1933 amounted to
between 5 million and 6 million people, half of them in the
The fact is that
there is nothing strange in it at all, coming as it does from a man who has
spent his entire life living off lies and fabrications about the Soviet Union
and Stalin – first as a secret service agent and then as a writer and professor
at Stamford University in California.
Conquest’s past was exposed by the Guardian
of 27 January
Robert Conquest
worked for the IRD from when it was set up until 1956. Conquest’s ‘work’ there was to contribute to
the so-called ‘black history’ of the Soviet Union fake stories put out as fact
and distributed among journalists and others able to influence public opinion. After he had formally left the IRD, Conquest continued
to write books suggested by the IRD, with secret service support. His book ‘The Great Terror’, a basic
right-wing text on the subject of the power struggle that took place in the
Alexander Solzhenitsyn
Another person
who is always associated with books and articles on the supposed millions who lost
their lives or liberty in the
Solzhenitsyn
began in 1962 to publish books in the
In the
But it is clear
that the main thrust of Solzhenitsyn’s speeches was always the dirty war
against socialism - from the alleged execution of several million people in the
Soviet Union to the tens of thousands of Americans supposedly imprisoned and
enslaved, according to Solzhenitsyn, in
Support for Franco’s fascism
After Franco died
in 1975, the Spanish fascist regime began to lose control of the political
situation and at the beginning of 1976, events in
At this most
important moment in Spanish political history, Alexander Solzhenitsyn appears
in Madrid and gives an interview to the programme Directísimo one Saturday night, the 20th of March, at
peak viewing time (see the Spanish newspapers, ABC and Ya of 21 March
1976). Solzhenitsyn, who had been
provided with the questions in advance, used the occasion to make all kinds of
reactionary statements. His intention
was not to support the King’s so-called liberalisation measures. On the contrary, Solzhenitsyn warned against
democratic reform. In his television
interview he declared that 110 million Russians had died the victims of
socialism, and he compared ‘the slavery to which Soviet people were subjected
to the freedom enjoyed in
Nazis, the police and the fascists
So these are the
most worthy purveyors of the bourgeois myths concerning the millions who are
supposed to have died and been imprisoned in the
The archives demonstrate the propaganda lies
The speculation
about the millions who died in the Soviet Union is part of the dirty propaganda
war against the
Fraudulent methods give rise to millions of dead
Conquest,
Solzhenitsyn, Medvedev and others used statistics published by the
In numbers, what
were the final conclusions of the ‘critics’?
According to Robert Conquest (in an estimate he made in 1961) 6 million
people died of starvation in the
Again according
to Conquest, a million political prisoners were executed between 1937 and 1939,
and another 2 million died of hunger.
The final tally resulting from the purges of 1937-39, then, according to
Conquest, was 9 million, of whom 3 million would have died in prison. These figures were immediately subjected to
‘statistical adjustment’ by Conquest to enable him to reach the conclusion that
the Bolsheviks had killed no fewer than 12 million political prisoners between
1930 and 1953. Adding these figures to
the numbers said to have died in the famine of the 1930s, Conquest arrived at
the conclusion that the Bolsheviks killed 26 million people. In one of his last statistical manipulations,
Conquest claimed that in 1950 there had been 12 million political prisoners in
the
Alexander Solzhenitsyn
used more or less the same statistical methods as Conquest. But by using these
pseudo-scientific methods on the basis of different premises, he arrived at
even more extreme conclusions.
Solzhenitsyn accepted Conquest’s estimate of 6 million deaths arising
from the famine of 1932-33.
Nevertheless, as far as the purges of 1936-39 were concerned, he
believed that at least 1 million people died each year. Solzhenitsyn sums up by telling us that from
the collectivisation of agriculture to the death of Stalin in 1953, the
communists killed 66 million people in the
Gorbachev opens the archives
The collection of
fantasy figures set out above, the product of extremely well paid fabrication,
appeared in the bourgeois press in the 1960s, always presented as true facts
ascertained through the application of scientific method.
Behind these
fabrications lurked the western secret services, mainly the CIA and MI5. The impact of the mass media on public
opinion is so great that the figures are even today believed to be true by
large sections of the population of Western countries.
This shameful
situation has worsened. In the Soviet
Union itself, where Solzhenitsyn and other well-known ‘critics’ such as Andrei
Sakharov and Roy Medvedev could find nobody to support their many fantasies, a
significant change took place in 1990.
In the new ‘free press’ opened up
under Gorbachev, everything opposed to socialism was hailed as positive,
with disastrous results. Unprecedented
speculative inflation began to take place in the numbers of those who were
alleged to have died or been imprisoned under socialism, now all mixed up into
a single group of tens of millions of ‘victims’ of the communists.
The hysteria of
Gorbachev’s new free press brought to the fore the lies of Conquest and
Solzhenitsyn. At the same time Gorbachev opened up the archives of the Central
Committee to historical research, a demand of the free press. The opening up of the archives of the Central
Committee of the Communist Party is really the central issue in this tangled
tale, this for two reasons: partly because in the archives can be found the
facts that can shed light on the truth.
But even more important is the fact that those speculating wildly on the
number of people killed and imprisoned in the
The results of
the research carried out on the archives of the Central Committee by Russian
historians Zemskov, Dougin and Xlevnjuk, which began to appear in scientific
journals as from 1990, went entirely unremarked. The reports containing the results of this
historical research went completely against the inflationary current as regards
the numbers who were being claimed by the ‘free press’ to have died or been
incarcerated. Therefore their contents
remained unpublicised. The reports were
published in low-circulation scientific journals practically unknown to the
public at large. Reports of the results
of scientific research could hardly compete with the press hysteria, so the
lies of Conquest and Solzhenitsyn continued to gain the support of many sectors
of the former
What the Russian research shows
The research on
the Soviet penal system is set out in a report nearly 9,000 pages long. The authors of this report are many, but the
best-known of them are the Russian historians V N Zemskov, A
The results of
the Russian research answer a very large number of questions about the Soviet
penal system. For us it is the Stalin
era that is of greatest interest, and it is there we find cause for debate. We will pose a number of very specific
questions and we will seek out our replies in the journals l’Histoire and the American
Historical Review. This will be the
best way of brining into the debate some of the most important aspects of the
Soviet penal system. The questions are
the following:
1.
What did the Soviet penal system consist of?
2.
How many prisoners were there – both political and
non-political?
3.
How many people died in the labour camps?
4.
How many people were condemned to death in the years
before 1953, especially in the purges of 1937-38?
5.
How long, on average, were the prison sentences?
After answering
these five questions, we will discuss the punishments imposed on the two groups
which are most frequently mentioned in connection with prisoners and deaths in
the
Labour camps in the penal system
Let us start with
the question of the nature of the Soviet penal system. After 1930 the Soviet penal system included
prisons, labour camps, the labour colonies of the gulag, special open zones and
obligation to pay fines. Whoever was
remanded into custody was generally sent to a normal prison while
investigations took place to establish whether he might be innocent, and could
thus be set free, or whether he should go on trial. An accused person on trial could either be
found innocent (and set free) or guilty.
If found guilty he could be sentenced to pay a fine, to a term of imprisonment
or, more unusually, to face execution. A
fine could be a given percentage of his wages for a given period of time. Those sentenced to prison terms could be put
in different kinds of prison depending on the type of offence involved.
To the gulag
labour camps were sent those who had committed serious offences (homicide,
robbery, rape, economic crimes, etc.) as well as a large proportion of those
convicted of counter-revolutionary activities.
Other criminals sentenced to terms longer than 3 years could also be
sent to labour camps. After spending
some time in a labour camp, a prisoner might be moved to a labour colony or to
a special open zone.
The labour camps
were very large areas where the prisoners lived and worked under close
supervision. For them to work and not to
be a burden on society was obviously necessary.
No healthy person got by without working. It is possible that these days people may
think this was a terrible thing, but this is the way it was. The number of labour camps in existence in
1940 was 53.
There were 425
gulag labour colonies. These were much
smaller units than the labour camps, with a freer regime and less
supervision. To these were sent
prisoners with shorter prison terms – people who had committed less serious criminal
or political offences. They worked in
freedom in factories or on the land and formed part of civil society. In most cases the whole of the wages he
earned from his labour belonged to the prisoner, who in this respect was
treated the same as any other worker.
The special open
zones were generally agricultural areas for those who had been exiled, such as
the kulaks who had been expropriated during collectivisation. Other people found guilty of minor criminal
or political offences might also serve their terms in these areas.
454,000 is not 9 million
The second
question concerned how many political prisoners there were, and how many common
criminals. This question includes those
imprisoned in labour camps, gulag colonies and the prisons (though it should be
remembered that in the labour colonies there was, in the majority of cases,
only partial loss of liberty). The Table
below shows the data which appeared in the American
Historical Review, data which encompass a period of 20 years beginning in 1934,
when the penal system was unified under a central administration, until 1953,
the year Stalin died.
Table
- The American Historical Review
Costodial |
Gulag |
|
|
|
|
|
|
Gulag |
Prisons |
Total |
population |
Working |
Contrare- |
Contra- |
Died |
Died |
Freed |
Esca- |
Labor |
|
|
januari 1 |
Camps |
volution. |
rev.% |
|
% |
|
ped |
Colonies |
|
|
1934 |
510 307 |
135 190 |
26,5 |
26 295 |
5,2 |
147 272 |
83 490 |
|
|
510 307 |
1935 |
725 438 |
118 256 |
16,3 |
28 328 |
3,9 |
211 035 |
67 493 |
240 259 |
|
965 697 |
1936 |
839 406 |
105 849 |
12,6 |
20 595 |
2,5 |
369 544 |
58 313 |
457 088 |
|
1 296 494 |
1937 |
820 881 |
104 826 |
12,8 |
25 376 |
3,1 |
364 437 |
58 264 |
375 488 |
|
1 196 369 |
1938 |
996 367 |
185 324 |
18,6 |
90 546 |
9,1 |
279 966 |
32 033 |
885 203 |
|
1 881 570 |
1939 |
1 317 195 |
454 432 |
34,5 |
50 502 |
3,8 |
223 622 |
12 333 |
355 243 |
350 538 |
2 022 976 |
1940 |
1 344 408 |
444 999 |
33,1 |
46 665 |
3,5 |
316 825 |
11 813 |
315 584 |
190 266 |
1 850 258 |
1941 |
1 500 524 |
420 293 |
28,7 |
100 997 |
6,7 |
624 276 |
10 592 |
429 205 |
487 739 |
2 417 468 |
1942 |
1 415 596 |
407 988 |
29,6 |
248 877 |
18 |
509 538 |
11 822 |
360 447 |
277 992 |
2 054 035 |
1943 |
983 974 |
345 397 |
35,6 |
166 967 |
17,0 |
336 135 |
6 242 |
500 208 |
235 313 |
1 719 495 |
1944 |
663 594 |
268 861 |
40,7 |
60 948 |
9,2 |
152 113 |
3 586 |
516 225 |
155 213 |
1 335 032 |
1945 |
715 506 |
283 351 |
41,2 |
43 848 |
6,1 |
336 750 |
2 196 |
745 171 |
279 969 |
1 740 646 |
1946 |
600 897 |
333 833 |
59,2 |
18 154 |
3,0 |
115 700 |
2 642 |
956 224 |
261 500 |
1 818 621 |
1947 |
808 839 |
427 653 |
54,3 |
35 668 |
4,4 |
194 886 |
3 779 |
912 794 |
306 163 |
2 027 796 |
1948 |
1 108 057 |
416 156 |
38,0 |
27 605 |
2,5 |
261 148 |
4 261 |
1 091 478 |
275 850 |
2 475 385 |
1949 |
1 216 361 |
420 696 |
34,9 |
15 739 |
1,3 |
178 449 |
2 583 |
1 140 324 |
|
2 356 685 |
1950 |
1 416 300 |
578 912 |
22,7 |
14 703 |
1,0 |
216 210 |
2 577 |
1 145 051 |
|
2 561 351 |
1951 |
1 533 767 |
475 976 |
31,0 |
15 587 |
1,0 |
254 269 |
2 318 |
994 379 |
|
2 528 146 |
1952 |
1 711 202 |
480 766 |
28,1 |
10 604 |
0,6 |
329 446 |
1 253 |
793 312 |
|
2 504 514 |
1953 |
1 727 970 |
465 256 |
26,9 |
5 825 |
0,3 |
937 352 |
785 |
740 554 |
|
2 468 524 |
From the above
Table, there are a series of conclusions which need to be drawn. To start with we can compare its data to those
given by Robert Conquest. The latter
claims that in 1939 there were 9 million political prisoners in the labour
camps and that 3 million others had died in the period 1937-1939. Let the reader not forget that Conquest is
here talking only about political prisoners!
Apart from these, says Conquest, there were also common criminals who,
according to him, were much greater in number than the political
prisoners! In 1950 there were, according
to Conquest, 12 million political prisoners!
Armed with the true facts, we can readily see what a fraudster Conquest
really is. Not one of his figures
corresponds even remotely to the truth.
In 1939 there was a total in all the camps, colonies and prisons of
close to 2 million prisoners. Of these
454,000 had committed political crimes, not 9 million as Conquest asserts. Those who died in labour camps between 1937
and 1939 numbered about 160,000, not 3 million as Conquest asserts. In 1950 there were 578,000 political
prisoners in labour camps, not 12 million. Let the reader not forget that Robert Conquest
to this day remains one of the major sources for right-wing propaganda against
communism. Among right-wing
pseudo-intellectuals, Robert Conquest is a godlike figure. As for the figures cited by Alexander Solzhenitsyn
– 60 million alleged to have died in labour camps – there is no need for
comment. The absurdity of such an
allegation is manifest. Only a sick mind
could promote such delusions.
Let us now leave
these fraudsters in order that we may ourselves concretely analyse the
statistics relating to the gulag. The
first question to be asked is what view we should take about the sheer quantity
of people caught up in the penal system?
What is the meaning of the figure of 2.5 million? Every person that is put in prison is living
proof that society was still insufficiently developed to give every citizen
everything he needed for a full life.
From this point of view, the 2.5 million do represent a criticism of the
society.
The internal and external threat
The number of
people caught up in the penal system requires to be properly explained. The
Another factor to
be taken into account is that the
During this very
difficult time, the
More prisoners in the US
In the
In a rather small
news item appearing in the newspapers of August 1997, the FLT-AP news agency
reported that in the
As far as the
Soviet labour camps were concerned, it is true that the regime was harsh and
difficult for the prisoners, but what is the situation today in the prisons of
the
An important factor – the lack of medicines
Let us now
respond to the third question posed. How
many people died in the labour camps?
The number varied from year to year, from 5.2% in 1934 to 0.3% in
1953. Deaths in the labour camps were
caused by the general shortage of resources in society as a whole, in
particular the medicines necessary to fight epidemics. This problem was not confined to labour camps
but was present throughout society, as well as in the great majority of
countries of the world. Once antibiotics
had been discovered and put into general use after the Second World War, the
situation changed radically. In fact,
the worst years were the war years when the Nazi barbarians imposed very harsh
living conditions on all Soviet citizens.
During those 4 years, more than half a million people died in the labour
camps – half the total number dying throughout the 20-year period in
question. Let us not forget that in the
same period, the war years, 25 million people died among those who were
free. In 1950, when conditions in the
Let us turn now
to the fourth question posed. How many
people were sentenced to death prior to 1953, especially during the purges of
1937-38? We have already noted Robert
Conquest’s claim that the Bolsheviks killed 12 million political prisoners in
the labour camps between 1930 and 1953.
Of these 1 million are supposed to have been killed between 1937 and
1938. Solzhenitsyn’s figures run to tens
of millions supposed to have died in the labour camps – 3 million in 1937-38
alone. Even higher figures have been quoted in the course of the dirty
propaganda war against the
The documents now
emerging from the Soviet archives, however, tell a different story. It is necessary to mention here at the start
that the number of those sentenced to death has to be gleaned from different
archives and that the researchers, in order to arrive at an approximate figure,
have had to gather data from these various archives in a way which gives rise
to a risk of double counting and thus of producing estimates higher than the
reality. According to Dimitri
Volkogonov, the person appointed by Yeltsin to take charge of the old Soviet
archives, there were 30,514 persons condemned to death by military tribunals
between 1 October 1936 and 30 September 1938.
Another piece of information comes from the KGB: according to
information released to the press in February 1990, there were 786,098 people
condemned to death for crimes against the revolution during the 23 years from
1930-1953. Of those condemned, according
to the KGB, 681,692 were condemned between 1937 and 1938. It is not possible to double check the KGB’s
figures but this last piece of information is open to doubt. It would be very odd for so many people to
have been sentenced to death in only two years.
Is it possible that the present-day pro-capitalist KGB would give us
correct information from the pro-socialist KGB?
Be that as it may, it remains to be verified whether the statistics
which underlie the KGB information include among those said to have been
condemned to death during the 23 years in question common criminals as well as
counter-revolutionaries, rather than counter-revolutionaries alone as the
pro-capitalist KGB has alleged in a press release of February 1990. The archives also tend to the conclusion that
the number of common criminals and the number of counter revolutionaries
condemned to death was approximately equal.
The conclusion we
can draw from this is that the number of those condemned to death in 1937-38
was close to 100,000, and not several million as has been claimed by Western
propaganda.
It is also
necessary to bear in mind that not all those sentenced to death in the
Question 5: How
long was the average prison sentence? The
length of prison sentences has been the subject of the most scurrilous
rumour-mongering in Western propaganda.
The usual insinuation is that to be a convict in the
The statistics
reproduced in the American Historical
Review show the actual facts. Common
criminals in the
For 1939 we have
the statistics produced by Soviet courts.
The distribution of prison terms is as follows: up to 5 years: 95.9%;
from 5-10 years: 4%; over 10 years: 0.1%.
As we can see,
the supposed eternity of prison sentences in the
The lies about the
A brief
discussion as to the research reports.
The research
conducted by the Russian historians shows a reality totally different to that
taught in the schools and universities of the capitalist world over the last 50
years. During these 50 years of the cold
war, several generations have learnt only lies about the
The kulaks and the counter-revolution
In the case of
the counter-revolutionaries, it is also necessary to consider the crimes of
which they were accused. Let us give two
examples to show the importance of this question: the first is the kulaks
sentenced at the beginning of the 1930s and the second the conspirators and
counter-revolutionaries convicted in 1936-38.
According to the
research reports insofar as they deal with the kulaks, the rich peasants, there
were 381,000 families, i.e., about 1.8 million people sent into exile. A small number of these people were sentenced
to serve terms in labour camps or colonies.
But what gave rise to these punishments?
The rich Russian
peasant, the kulak, had subjected poor peasants for hundreds of years to
boundless oppression and unbridled exploitation. Of the 120 million peasants in 1927, the 10
million kulaks lived in luxury while the remaining 110 million lived in
poverty. Before the revolution they had
lived in the most abject poverty. The
wealth of the kulaks was based on the badly-paid labour of the poor
peasants. When the poor peasants began
to join together in collective farms, the main source of kulak wealth
disappeared. But the kulaks did not give
up. They tried to restore exploitation by
use of famine. Groups of armed kulaks
attacked collective farms, killed poor peasants and party workers, set fire to
the fields and killed working animals.
By provoking starvation among poor peasants, the kulaks were trying to
secure the perpetuation of poverty and their own positions of power. The events which ensued were not those
expected by these murderers. This time
the poor peasants had the support of the revolution and proved to be stronger
than the kulaks, who were defeated, imprisoned and sent into exile or sentenced
to terms in labour camps.
Of the 10 million
kulaks, 1.8 million were exiled or convicted.
There may have been injustices perpetrated in the course of this massive
class struggle in the Soviet countryside, a struggle involving 120 million
people. But can we blame the poor and
the oppressed, in their struggle for a life worth living, in their struggle to
ensure their children would not be starving illiterates, for not being
sufficiently ‘civilised’ or showing enough ‘mercy’ in their courts? Can one point the finger at people who for
hundreds of years had no access to the advances made by civilisation for not
being civilised? And tell us, when was
the kulak exploiter civilised or merciful in his dealings with poor peasants
during the years and years of endless exploitation.
The purges of 1937
Our second
example, that of the counter-revolutionaries convicted in the 1936-38 Trials
which followed the purges of party, army and state apparatus, has its roots in
the history of the revolutionary movement in Russia. Millions of people participated in the
victorious struggle against the Tsar and the Russian bourgeoisie, and many of
these joined the Russian Communist Party.
Among all these people there were, unfortunately, some who entered the
party for reasons other than fighting for the proletariat and for
socialism. But the class struggle was
such that often there was neither the time nor the opportunity to put new party
militants to the test. Even militants
from other parties who called themselves socialists and who had fought the
Bolshevik party were admitted to the Communist Party. A number of these new activists were given
important positions in the Bolshevik Party, the state and the armed forces,
depending on their individual ability to conduct class struggle. These were very difficult times for the young
Soviet state, and the great shortage of cadres – or even of people who could
read – forced the party to make few demands as regards the quality of new
activists and cadres. Because of these
problems, there arose in time a contradiction which split the party into two
camps – on the one hand those who wanted to press forward in the struggle to
build a socialist society, and on the other hand those who thought that the
conditions were not yet ripe for building socialism and who promoted
social-democracy. The origin of these
ideas lay in Trotsky, who had joined the party in July 1917. Trotsky was able over time to secure the
support of some of the best known Bolsheviks.
This opposition united against the original Bolshevik plan provided one
of the policy options which were the subject of a vote on 27 December
1927. Before this vote was taken, there
had been a great party debate going on over many years and the result left
nobody in any doubt. Of the 725,000
votes cast, the opposition secured 6,000 – i.e., less than 1% of party
activists supported the united opposition.
As a consequence
of the vote, and once the opposition started working for a policy opposed to
that of the party, the Central Committee of the Communist Party decided to
expel from the party the principal leaders of the united opposition. The central opposition figure, Trotsky, was
expelled from the
Industrial sabotage
The murder in
December 1934 of Kirov, the chairman of the Leningrad party and one of the most
important people in the Central Committee, sparked off the investigation that
was to lead to the discovery of a secret organisation engaged in preparing a
conspiracy to take over the leadership of the party and the government of the country
by means of violence. The political
struggle that they had lost in 1927 they now hoped to win by means of organised
violence against the state. Their main
weapons were industrial sabotage, terrorism and corruption. Trotsky, the main inspiration for the
opposition, directed their activities from abroad. Industrial sabotage caused terrible losses to
the Soviet state, at enormous cost, for example, important machines were
damaged beyond possibility of repair, and there was an enormous fall in production
in mines and factories.
One of the people
who in 1934 described the problem was the American engineer John Littlepage,
one of the foreign specialists contracted to work in the
Littlepage also
wrote that his personal experience confirmed the official statement to the
effect that a great conspiracy directed from abroad was using major industrial
sabotage as part of its plans to force the government to fall. In 1931 Littlepage had already felt obliged
to take note of this, while working in the copper and bronze mines of the Urals
and
Littlepage’s book
also tells us from where the Trotskyite opposition obtained the money that was
necessary to pay for this counter-revolutionary activity. Many members of the secret opposition used
their positions to approve the purchase of machines from certain factories abroad. The products approved were of much lower
quality than those the Soviet government actually paid for. The foreign producers gave Trotsky’s
organisation the surplus from such transactions, as a result of which Trotsky
and his co-conspirators in the
Theft and corruption
This procedure
was observed by Littlepage in
Zinoviev,
Kamenev, Pyatakov, Radek, Tomsky, Bukharin and others much loved by the Western
bourgeois press used the positions entrusted to them by the Soviet people and
party to steal money from the state, in order to enable enemies of socialism to
use that money for the purposes of sabotage and in their fight against
socialist society in the
Plans for a coup
Theft, sabotage
and corruption are serious crimes in themselves, but the opposition’s
activities went much further. A
counter-revolutionary conspiracy was being prepared aimed at taking over state
power by means of a coup in which the whole Soviet leadership would be
eliminated, starting with the assassination of the most important members of
the Central Committee of the Communist Party.
The military side of the coup would be carried out by a group of generals
headed by Marshal Tukhachevsky.
According to
Isaac Deutscher, himself a Trotskyite, who wrote several books against Stalin
and the Soviet Union, the coup was to have been initiated by a military
operation against the Kremlin and the most important troops in the big cities,
such as
Marshal
Tukhachevsky had been an officer in the former Tsarist army who, after the
revolution, went over to the Red Army.
In 1930 nearly 10% of officers (close to 4,500) were former Tsarist
officers. Many of them never abandoned
their bourgeois outlook and were just waiting for an opportunity to fight for
it. This opportunity arose when the opposition
was preparing its coup.
The Bolsheviks
were strong, but the civilian and military conspirators endeavoured to muster
strong friends. According to Bukharin’s
confession in his public trial in 1938, an agreement was reached between the
Trotskyite opposition and Nazi Germany, in which large territories, including
the
The conspirators were
sentenced to death as traitors after a public trial. Those found guilty of
sabotage, terrorism, corruption, attempted murder and who had wanted to hand
over part of the country to the Nazis could expect nothing else. To call them innocent victims is completely
mistaken.
More numerous liars
It is interesting
to see how Western propaganda, via Robert Conquest, has lied about the purges
of the Red Army. Conquest says in his
book The Great Terror that in 1937
there were 70,000 officers and political commissars in the Red Army and that
50% of them (i.e., 15,000 officers and 20,000 commissars) were arrested by the
political police and were either executed or imprisoned for life in labour
camps. In this allegation of Conquest’s,
as in his whole book, there is not one word of truth. The historian Roger Reese, in his work The Red Army and the Great Purges, gives
the facts which show the real significance of the 1937-38 purges for the
army. The number of people in the
leadership of the Red Army and air force, i.e., officers and political
commissars, was
One last
question. Were the 1937-38 Trials fair
to the accused? Let us examine, for
example, the trial of Bukharin, the highest party functionary to work for the
secret opposition. According to the
American ambassador in
Let us learn from history
The discussion of
the Soviet penal system during Stalin’s time, on which thousands of lying
articles and books have been written, and hundreds of films have been made
conveying false impressions, leads to important lessons. The facts prove yet again that the stories
published about socialism in the bourgeois press are mostly false. The right wing can, through the press, radio
and TV that it dominates, cause confusion, distort the truth and cause very
many people to believe lies to be the truth.
This is especially true when it comes to historical questions. Any new stories from the right should be
assumed to be false unless the contrary can be proved. This cautious approach is justified. The fact is that even knowing about the
Russian research reports, the right is continuing to reproduce the lies taught
for the last 50 years, even though they have now been completely exposed. The right continues its historical heritage:
a lie repeated over and over again ends up being accepted as true. After the Russian research reports were
published in the west, a number of books began to appear in different countries
aimed solely at calling into question the Russian research and enabling the old
lies to be brought to public attention as new truths. These are well-presented books, stuffed from
cover to cover with lies about communism and socialism.
The right-wing
lies are repeated in order to fight today’s communists. They are repeated so that workers will find
no alternative to capitalism and neo-liberalism. They are part of the dirty war against
communists who alone have an alternative to offer for the future, i.e.,
socialist society. This is the reason
for the appearance of all these new books containing old lies.
All this places
an obligation on everybody with a socialist world outlook on history. We must take on the responsibility of working
to turn communist newspapers into authentic newspapers of the working classes
to combat bourgeois lies! This is
without doubt an important mission in today’s class struggle, which in the near
future will arise again with renewed force.
Mario Sousa
15 June 1998
mario.sousa@telia.com