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Title: Introduction to âThe Unknown Revolutionâ Author: Anarcho Date: June 25, 2020 Language: en Topics: Russian Revolution Source: Retrieved on 24th April 2021 from https://anarchism.pageabode.com/?p=1141 Notes: This is my introduction to the 2019 PM Press edition of The Unknown Revolution by Voline. It is a classic anarchist analysis of why the Russian Revolution failed by an active participant, seeking to ensure future revolutions do not make the same mistakes. The book is available, so please consider buying it from the publisher.
David Berry, Andrew Flood, Michael Harris and Lucien van der Walt for
their comments on previous versions of this introduction.
But in the Peopleâs State of Marx there will be, we are told, no
privileged class at all. All will be equal.... At least this is what is
promised ... but there will be a government and, note this well, an
extremely complex government. This government will not content itself
with administering and governing the masses politically.... It will also
administer the masses economically, concentrating in the hands of the
State the production and division of wealth.... There will be a new
class, a new hierarchy ... and the world will be divided into a minority
ruling in the name of knowledge, and an immense ignorant majority. And
then, woe unto the mass of ignorant ones!
âMichael Bakunin[1]
The Unknown Revolution is a classic anarchist account of the Russian
Revolution, and its title gave the libertarian movement a new way of
describing history from below.[2] Its author, Voline (1882â1945), was
well placed to both describe and analyse these world-shaking events,
being a Russian anarchist who took an active part in the revolution once
he returned from exile in 1917.[3] Active in radical circles from the
earliest years of the twentieth century, he participated in the 1905
near revolution as a member of the populist Social Revolutionary Party,
before becoming an anarchist after fleeing the bloody repression of a
Tsarist regime fighting for its very existence.[4]
You have in your hands a book written by both an active participant in
events (when not, of course, imprisoned by the Bolsheviks) and someone
knowledgeable about anarchism.[5] It provides an eyewitness account of
the defining period of the twentieth century and seeks to draw
appropriate conclusions to help revolutionaries avoid its errors. As
Voline puts it in the âPrefaceâ:
A fundamental problem has been bequeathed to us by the revolutions of
1789 and 1917. Opposed to a large extent to oppression, animated by a
powerful breath of liberty, and proclaiming liberty as their essential
purpose, why did these revolutions go down under a new dictatorship,
exercised by a new dominating and privileged group, in a new slavery for
the mass of the people involved? What will be the conditions which will
permit a revolution to avoid this sad end? Will this end, for a long
time still, be a sort of historical inevitability, or is it due to
passing factors, or simply to errors and faults that can be avoided from
now on? And in the latter case, what will be the means of eliminating
the danger which already threatens the revolutions to come? Is it
permissible to hope to avert or surmount it?
This is the aim of the work, and to achieve this goal Voline discusses
what has been hidden from the usual accounts of the Russian Revolution.
As such, The Unknown Revolution is an example of history from below,
from the perspective of the working classes and our struggle for freedom
from class society. However, like any work it can hardly cover every
aspect of the revolution nor can it discuss work that appeared after its
publication. Here we will attempt to uncover more of the Unknown
Revolution and seek to show where subsequent research has confirmed
Volineâs classic. Along the way we will seek to address some of the many
distortions and myths inflicted on those seeking to understand the
failures of Bolshevism by those seeking to defend itâbut who will only,
if they are listened to, repeat history rather than learn from it.[6]
Before discussing the events of 1917 and after, we need to present some
theoretical background. Neither Bolsheviks nor anarchists took part in
the revolution without having some idea of what to do. Both were
long-standing movements that had clashed over how best to fight for
socialism and, equally important, what a socialist society would be like
in its immediate post-revolution features. For while there was agreement
over the end goalâa stateless, communist societyâthere was much
disagreement on how to get there.
While the first person to self-proclaim as an anarchist, Pierre-Joseph
Proudhon, had critiqued the socialists of his time (namely, âutopian
socialistsâ like Charles Fourier and Jacobin socialists like Louis
Blanc), the defining clash between libertarian and authoritarian
socialism took place between Michael Bakunin and Karl Marx in the
International Working Menâs Association. Between approximately 1868 and
1873, these two great thinkers opposed each other both in terms of
tactics for the labour movement and for social revolution.[7]
Given how Bakuninâs ideasâlike anarchism in generalâare usually
systematically distorted by Marxist accounts, some space is needed to
discuss both thinkers. As Lenin draws on the writings of Marx and Engels
against anarchism in his The State and Revolution, this is no academic
taskâparticularly as the issues and solutions raised are relevant to
what happened during the Russian Revolution. In short, ideas
matterâparticularly the ideas of a ruling party seeking to implement
them.
In contrast to Marx, who sought to organise working-class political
parties that would run for election (âpolitical actionâ), Bakunin
advocated what would later be termed a syndicalist strategy.[8] While
Marxists âbelieve it necessary to organise the workersâ forces in order
to seize the political power of the State,â anarchists âorganise for the
purpose of destroying itâ by âthe development and organisation of the
non-political or anti-political power of the working classes.â Bakunin
saw this in terms of creating new organs of working-class power in
opposition to the state, organised âfrom the bottom up, by the free
association or federation of workers, starting with the associations,
then going on to the communes, the region, the nations, and, finally,
culminating in a great international and universal federation.â In other
words, a system of workersâ councils or unions creating âa real forceâ
that âknows what to do and is therefore capable of guiding the
revolution in the direction marked out by the aspirations of the people:
a serious international organisation of workersâ associations of all
lands capable of replacing this departing world of states.â To Marxâs
argument that workers should send their representatives to parliament
and municipal councils, Bakunin realised this would mean the ânew worker
deputies, transplanted into a bourgeois environment, living and soaking
up all the bourgeois ideas and acquiring their habits, will cease being
workersâ and âbecome converted into bourgeois, even more bourgeois-like
than the bourgeois themselves.... Because men do not make positions;
positions, contrariwise, make men.â[9]
Likewise, their views of revolutionary transformation differed. While
Marx would use state power to nationalise property, Bakunin argued
instead that after a successful revolt âworkersâ associations would then
take possession of all the tools of production as well as all buildings
and capital, arming and organising themselves into regional sections
made up of groups based on streets and neighbourhood boundaries. The
federally organised sections would then associate themselves to form a
federated commune.â The communes themselves would federate and âorganise
the common defence and propaganda against the enemies of the Revolution,
and develop practical revolutionary solidarity with its friends in all
lands.â[10] So it must be stressedâparticularly given Leninâs argument
in The State and Revolutionâthat Bakuninâs opposition to Marxâs
âdictatorship of the proletariatâ was not based on an unawareness that a
revolution needed to be organised and defended. Likewise, it is a
Marxist myth that anarchists think an anarchist society will be created
overnight.[11]
All this is reflected in Volineâs book, with its excellent discussion of
the anarchist alternatives to Bolshevik state-building and the role of
vanguard elements (Book II, Part I, Chapter 1). In this and his analysis
of the state, he follows the path laid by Bakunin and Peter
Kropotkinâparticularly the latter, as he effectively paraphrases
Kropotkinâs arguments:
[W]hat means can the State provide to abolish this [capitalist and
landlord] monopoly that the working class could not find in its own
strength and groups? ... [W]hat advantages could the State provide for
abolishing these same [capitalist and landlord] privileges? Could its
governmental machine, developed for the creation and upholding of these
privileges, now be used to abolish them? Would not the new function
require new organs? And these new organs would they not have to be
created by the workers themselves, in their unions, their federations,
completely outside the State?[12]
The state and its characteristic features did not arise by chance but
rather evolved to secure minority rule. Thus, the bourgeoisie âworked to
establish its authority in the place of the authority of the royalty and
nobility which it demolished systematically. To this end the bourgeois
struggled bitterly, cruelly if need be, in order to establish a
powerful, centralised State, which absorbed everything and secured their
property ... along with their full freedom to exploit.â The state
âcannot take this or that form at will,â for it âis necessarily
hierarchical, authoritarianâor it ceases to be the State.â So âthe
existence of a power placed above society, but also of a territorial
concentration and a concentration of many functions in the life of
societies in the hands of a fewâ inevitably resulted in a structure that
would be âliterally inundated by thousandsâ of issues, which, in turn,
take âthousands of functionaries in the capitalâmost of them
corruptibleâto read, classify, evaluate all these, to pronounce on the
smallest detail,â while âthe flood [of issues] always rose!â Marxism
would âkill all freedom by concentrating production into the hands of
functionaries of the State,â and so âas long as the statist socialists
do not abandon their dream of socialising the instruments of labour in
the hands of a centralised State, the inevitable result of their
attempts at State Capitalism and the socialist State will be the failure
of their dreams and military dictatorship.â[13]
Anarchists, in contrast, aim âto find new forms of organisation for the
social functions that the State apportioned between its functionariesâ
based on âindependent Communes for the territorial groupings, and vast
federations of trade unions for groupings by social functions,â both
âinterwoven and providing support to each [other] to meet the needs of
society,â including âmutual protection against aggression, mutual aid,
territorial defence.â The new world would be created while fighting the
old one for, as with Bakunin, Kropotkin advocated âan
economic-revolutionary struggle,â namely, the âdirect struggle of the
workers unions against the capitalism of the bossesâ and opposed
involvement âin an electoral, political, and Parliamentary movement,â
where the workersâ forces âcould only wither and be destroyed.â[14]
The rise of Marxist social democracy proved the validity of this
critique, with the party constantly plagued by âopportunismâ and
ârevisionismââthat is, the arguments of those members who wished the
partyâs rhetoric to match it increasingly reformist practice. This came
to a head in 1914 when almost all the social democratic parties
supported their states in the imperialist conflict that was the First
World War.
This confirmation of Bakuninâs warnings is the context for Leninâs The
State and Revolution, a work much praised by Leninists to this day,
which is easy to understand, for like Marxâs The Civil War in France it
is one of the most libertarian works of mainstream Marxism. Yet its
account of anarchism is simply a joke as it completely distorts the real
differences between libertarian and authoritarian socialism, a
distortion that Voline clearly felt the need to rebutâparticularly as
The State and Revolution also presents a far more appealing picture than
the grim reality of Leninâs regime.[15]
Let us now compare the reality to the rhetoric.
Volineâs book is a combination of eyewitness account, political
analysis, and discussion of alternatives. He seeks to present a wide
overview of the revolution and the roots of its failure in Marxist
ideology. However, he concentrates on two main eventsâthe Makhnovist
movement and Kronstadt rebellion. Here we seek to provide details of
others to flesh out Volineâs account and show its continued relevance.
Given the sweep of the revolution, it is impossible to cover all aspects
of it. There is a need to be selective and concentrate on key issues.
For Voline, it was clear that combating the notion that Leninism
produced a âsuccessfulâ revolution was the focus, along with showing
that there was an alternative. Indeed, most of Book II contrasts
anarchism to Marxism in order to help revolutionaries today avoid the
mistakes made in Russia.[16] This is still a pressing need, for the fact
that the Bolsheviks seized power and remained there seems of the utmost
importance to many so-called revolutionaries now as then and provides
the basis for claims that it was a successful revolution and an example
that should be followed.
Needless to say, we focus primarily on the events after October when the
rhetoric of the party met reality. Events and ideas that predate the
October Revolution are discussed when they help to clarify subsequent
developmentsâfor, as Voline suggests, Marxist prejudices and dogmas
played their role in how the revolution degenerated. Unsurprisingly,
Marxist accounts are usually good on the summer of 1917 but less so on
both the February Revolution and popular movements post-October. This is
understandable, given that the former saw the Bolsheviks oppose the
street protests and strikes that led to the abdication of the Tsar,
while the latter were against the so-called âworkersâ state.â It is
between these events, when the unknown revolution started, that todayâs
Leninists are happiest in recounting history from below. They are less
keen to explore how the Bolshevik state undermined that unknown
revolution, and most accounts of the revolution are little more than
hagiology praising the party leadership and its willingness to make the
âhardâ decisions required to âsaveâ the revolution.
For, as Voline stressed, Stalin did not âfall from the moon,â and the
roots of the Stalinist nightmare can be traced back to the dreams of
Lenin in 1917, and even further, including the works of Marx and
Engels.[17] After all, long before the revolution, Lenin had argued that
within the party it was a case of âthe transformation of the power of
ideas into the power of authority, the subordination of lower Party
bodies to higher ones.â âBureaucracy versus democracy,â Lenin stressed,
âis in fact centralism versus autonomism; it is the organisational
principle of revolutionary Social-Democracy as opposed to the
organisational principle of opportunist Social-Democracy. The latter
strives to proceed from the bottom upward, and, therefore, wherever
possible ... upholds autonomism and âdemocracy,â carried (by the
overzealous) to the point of anarchism. The former strives to proceed
from the top downward.â[18] Such visions of centralised organisation
were the model for the revolutionary state, and once in power the
Bolsheviks did not disappoint: âfor the leadership, the principle of
maximum centralisation of authority served more than expedience. It
consistently resurfaced as the image of a peacetime political system as
well.â[19] Sadly, they singularly failed to comprehend how this
perspective when applied in practice simply produced an ever growing
alienation of the masses from âtheirâ party and state, along with an
ever expanding bureaucracy.
As would be expected from someone who was imprisoned and nearly shot by
the regime, saw his comrades murdered, and experienced the hopes of the
revolution being crushed by party dictatorship, Voline is harsh on
Lenin, Trotsky and Marxism in general. There is a tendency in the book
to focus on the role of Bolshevik ideology, almost to the point of
ignoring other factors. This led Maurice Brinton to suggest his account
was âan over-simplified analysis of the fate of the revolution.â[20] Yet
this in itself seems simplistic, given the negative impact of Bolshevik
ideology in, say, the economic crisis and, as Brinton himself proved,
the elimination of workersâ economic power.
Given this, even with exaggerations, Volineâs focus on Marxist ideology
is important. As Marxist accounts of the rise of Stalinismâstarting with
Trotskyâfocus purely on what they call âobjective circumstancesâ (civil
war, economic crisis, isolation, etc.), Volineâs account was a necessary
corrective. Yet both factors need to be considered and the interaction
of reality and ideology understood. Once that is done it becomes clear
that Voline is closer to the truth, even with his at times overwrought
rhetoricâit is as if the Bolsheviks were providing a case study in how
not to conduct a revolution.
Before discussing the reality of the new regime, we should sketch the
rhetoric. For it is the rhetoric of 1917 that is still used by Leninists
today to convince people to join their parties and seek to repeat the
Bolshevik seizure of power. This is understandable, for if you consider
the degeneration of the revolution into Stalinism as being the product
purely of âobjective circumstancesââsuch as civil war, economic crisis,
isolation through the failure of revolutions in the West, the economic
backwardness of Russia, declassing of the proletariat, amongst
others[21]âand unrelated to Bolshevik ideology, then there are no
lessons to be learnt from itâother than the hope the revolution takes
place in a more advanced country, is not isolated, is not subject to a
lengthy civil war nor foreign intervention.
So what were the promises of 1917?
Lenin uses Marxâs writings on the Paris Commune to argue for a new kind
of state. He quotes Marx on how âthe working class cannot simply lay
hold of the ready-made state machinery and wield it for its own
purposes,â that the communeâs council âwas to be a working, not a
parliamentary, body, executive and legislative at the same time,â with
âthe suppression of the standing army, and its replacement by the armed
people.â The Commune, Lenin summarised, âreplaced the smashed state
machine âonlyâ by fuller democracy: abolition of the standing army; all
officials to be elected and subject to recallâ and âwas ceasing to be a
state since it had to suppress, not the majority of the population, but
a minority (the exploiters). It had smashed the bourgeois state machine.
In place of a special coercive force the population itself came on the
scene. All this was a departure from the state in the proper sense of
the word.â For the state is âa power which arose from society but places
itself above it and alienates itself more and more from itâ and
âconsists of special bodies of armed men having prisons, etc., at their
command.â The public power ââdoes not directly coincideâ with the armed
population, with its âself-acting armed organisation.ââ[22]
This new regime would be âan immense expansion of democracy, which for
the first time becomes democracy for the poor, democracy for the peopleâ
that âimposes a series of restrictions on the freedom of the oppressors,
the exploiters, the capitalists. We must suppress them in order to free
humanity from wage slavery, their resistance must be crushed by force.â
Yet, the âmore democratic the âstateâ which consists of the armed
workers, and which is âno longer a state in the proper sense of the
word,â the more rapidly every form of state begins to wither away.â A
republic of soviets of workersâ and soldiersâ deputies would be the form
of this new state, âa centralised organisation of forceâ that would
âoppose conscious, democratic, proletarian centralism to bourgeois,
military, bureaucratic centralism.â[23]
While the political structures created by capitalism would be smashed,
the economic ones had to be used as the âeconomic foundationâ for
socialism. Indeed, âthe postal service [is] an example of the socialist
economic system.â It is currently âa business organised on the lines of
state-capitalist monopoly.... But the mechanism of social management is
here already to hand. Once we have overthrown the capitalists ... we
shall have a splendidly-equipped mechanism, freed from the âparasite,â a
mechanism which can very well be set going by the united workers
themselves.â This âis a concrete, practical task which can immediately
be fulfilled in relation to all trusts, a task whose fulfilment will rid
the working people of exploitation.â The Bolshevikâs âimmediate aimâ was
to âorganise the whole economy on the lines of the postal serviceâ and
âon the basis of what capitalism has already createdâ with âthe
establishment of workersâ control over the capitalists ... exercised not
by a state of bureaucrats, but by a state of armed workers.â[24] And so:
All citizens are transformed into hired employees of the state.... All
citizens become employees and workers of a single countrywide state
âsyndicate.â All that is required is that they should work equally, do
their proper share of work, and get equal pay; the accounting and
control necessary for this have been simplified by capitalism to the
utmost and reduced to the extraordinarily simple operations ... of
supervising and recording, knowledge of the four rules of arithmetic,
and issuing appropriate receipts.... The whole of society will have
become a single office and a single factory, with equality of labour and
pay.[25]
So socialism would be an extension of democracy but also highly
centralised. It would turn everyone into employees (wageworkers) of the
state based on the economic institutions of capitalism. The problems
with this are clear from an anarchist perspective, which is a class
analysis based on the historic and current role of state. Lenin, like
Marxists in general, viewed centralism, a key characteristic of the
state, as neutral, as easily utilised by the working class as by
minority classes like the bourgeoisie. Anarchists, in contrast,
recognised that a centralised, top-down social organisation did not
evolve by accident but was structured that way to secure minority rule
and so could not be used to achieve socialism, for recreating that
structure would also recreate a minority class around it. New functions
needed new organs.
The anarchist analysis was confirmed after October, as we will now show.
Volineâs account of the centralising nature of Bolshevism (Book II, Part
III, Chapter 1) is very much to the point. Given that Lenin had
consistently stressed the need for the Bolsheviks to seize power and the
centralised nature of that new power, the anarchistsâ 1917 warning that
the soviets would be marginalised proved prescient. Yet Voline gives no
account of âsoviet powerâ and its onslaught on the soviets. We will
correct this omission now.[26]
The Bolshevikâs marginalisation of the soviets started immediately after
the October Revolution in 1917, when they created a government superior
to the soviets in the shape of the Council of Peopleâs Commissars
(Sovnarkom) above the Central Executive Committee (VTsIK) elected by the
All-Russian Congress of Soviets. Given that Lenin had argued for the
fusing of executive and legislative powers in the hands of the soviets,
his promises did not last the night. Four days later the Sovnarkom
unilaterally gave itself legislative power, making clear the partyâs
pre-eminence over the soviets.[27]
So the highest organ of soviet power was turned into little more than a
rubber stamp for a Bolshevik executive, aided by the activities of its
Bolshevik dominated presidium that was converted âinto the de facto
centre of power within VTsIK.â It âbegan to award representations to
groups and factions which supported the government. With the VTsIK
becoming ever larger and more unwieldy by the day, the presidium began
to expand its activitiesâ and was used âto circumvent general meetings.â
The Bolsheviks were able âto increase the power of the presidium,
postpone regular sessions, and present VTsIK with policies which had
already been implemented by the Sovnarkom. Even in the presidium itself
very few people determined policy.â[28] This reflected a similar process
elsewhere, as â[e]ffective power in the local soviets relentlessly
gravitated to the executive committees, and especially their presidia.
Plenary sessions became increasingly symbolic and ineffectual.â[29]
As Bolsheviks lost influence post-October, workers started to vote for
non-Bolshevik parties and âin many places the Bolsheviks felt
constrained to dissolve Soviets or prevent re-elections where Mensheviks
and Socialist Revolutionaries had gained majorities.â[30] Indeed, for
all the provincial soviet elections in the spring and summer of 1918 for
which data is available, there was an âimpressive success of the
Menshevik-SR block,â followed by âthe Bolshevik practice of disbanding
soviets that came under Menshevik-SR control.â The âsubsequent wave of
anti-Bolshevik uprisingsâ were repressed by force.[31] The Mensheviks
and Right SRs were both banned, even though the formerâs official policy
was for peaceful change by winning soviet elections and to expel any
member who took part in armed conflict against the Bolsheviks.[32]
As well as forcibly disbanding elected soviets with non-Bolshevik
majorities, the Bolsheviks also took to packing soviets to ensure their
majority. For example, in Petrograd the Bolsheviks faced âdemands from
below for the immediate re-electionâ of the soviet, but before the
election in June 1918 the existing Bolshevik-controlled soviet confirmed
new regulations âto help offset possible weaknessesâ in their âelectoral
strength in factories.â The âmost significant change in the makeup of
the new soviet was that numerically decisive representation was given to
agencies in which the Bolsheviks had overwhelming strength, among them
the Petrograd Trade Union Council, individual trade unions, factory
committees in closed enterprises, district soviets, and district
non-party workersâ conferences.â This ensured that â[o]nly 260 of
roughly 700 deputies in the new soviet were to be elected in factories,
which guaranteed a large Bolshevik majority in advance.â Clearly, the
Bolsheviks had âcontrived a majorityâ in the new Soviet long before
gaining 127 of the 260 factory delegates. Then there is âthe nagging
question of how many Bolshevik deputies from factories were elected
instead of the opposition because of press restrictions, voter
intimidation, vote fraud, or the short duration of the campaign.â The SR
and Menshevik press, for example, were reopened âonly a couple of days
before the start of voting.â Moreover, âFactory Committees from closed
factories could and did elect soviet deputies (the so-called dead
souls), one deputy for each factory with more than one thousand workers
at the time of shutdown,â while the electoral assemblies for unemployed
workers âwere organised through Bolshevik-dominated trade union election
commissions.â Overall, then, the Bolshevik election victory âwas highly
suspect, even on the shop floor.â[33]
This was also the case at the Fifth All-Russian Congress of Soviets held
in early July 1918, where âelectoral fraud gave the Bolsheviks a huge
majority of congress delegates.â In reality, âthe number of legitimately
elected Left-SR delegates was roughly equal to that of the Bolsheviks.â
The Left SR expected a majority but did not count on the âroughly 399
Bolsheviks delegates whose right to be seated was challenged by the Left
SR minority in the congressâs credentials commission.â Without these
dubious delegates, the Left SRs and SR Maximalists would have
outnumbered the Bolsheviks by around thirty delegates. This ensured âthe
Bolshevikâs successful fabrication of a large majority in the Fifth
All-Russian Congress of Soviets.â[34] This gerrymandering deprived the
Left SRs of their democratic majority, and as a result they assassinated
the German ambassador in the hope of provoking a ârevolutionary warâ
with Germany. This, in turn, allowed the Bolsheviks to outlaw them for
organising an âuprisingâ against âsoviet power.â
By July 1918, the Bolshevik regime was a de facto party dictatorshipâa
fact soon reflected in party ideology.[35] Anarchist-turned-Bolshevik
Victor Serge recounted that when he arrived in Petrograd in January 1919
he read an article by Zinoviev, a leading Bolshevik, on the monopoly of
power by the Bolshevik Party.[36] He then joined the party and spent
some time seeking to convince anarchists of this necessity for party
dictatorship.[37] At the Second Congress of the Communist International
held in 1920âwhen âthe counter-revolution was defeatedâ[38]âZinoviev
introduced the discussion of the role of the party with these words:
Today, people like Kautsky come along and say that in Russia you do not
have the dictatorship of the working class but the dictatorship of the
party. They think this is a reproach against us. Not in the least! We
have a dictatorship of the working class and that is precisely why we
also have a dictatorship of the Communist Party. The dictatorship of the
Communist Party is only a function, an attribute, an expression of the
dictatorship of the working class ... the dictatorship of the
proletariat is at the same time the dictatorship of the Communist
Party.[39]
Lenin made similar comments in the work Left-Wing Communism, written for
that Congress,[40] while Trotsky, as we will see, made identical
comments and arguments.
Trotsky was rewriting history when he claimed in the mid-1930s that
â[i]n the beginning, the party had wished and hoped to preserve freedom
of political struggle within the framework of the Sovietsâ but that the
civil war âintroduced stern amendments into this calculation,â for
rather than being âregarded not as a principle, but as an episodic act
of self-defence,â the opposite is the caseâparty dictatorship was held
up as a principle. So while Trotsky was right to state that âon all
sides the masses were pushed away gradually from actual participation in
the leadership of the country,â he was utterly wrong to imply that this
process happened after the end of the civil war rather than before its
start and that the Bolsheviks did not ideologically justify it.[41]
Finally, we must note the attitude of the Bolsheviks to the soviets in
1905, as this throws light on post-October developments. As Trotsky
recounted, the St. Petersburg Bolsheviks were âfrightened at first by
such an innovation as a non-partisan representation of the embattled
masses, and could find nothing better to do than to present the Soviet
with an ultimatum: immediately adopt a Social-Democratic program or
disband.â[42] The Bolsheviks were convinced that âonly a strong party
along class lines can guide the proletarian political movement and
preserve the integrity of its program, rather than a political mixture
of this kind, an indeterminate and vacillating political organisation
such as the workers council represents and cannot help but
represent.â[43] In other words, the soviets could not reflect workersâ
interests because they were elected by the workers![44]
In 1905, the St. Petersburg soviet ignored the vanguard yet the
implications of this perspective became clear in 1918. Yet Bolshevik
activities in 1905 and 1918 did not spring from nowhere, for both have
obvious roots in Leninâs argument in What is to be Done? (written in
1902) that âthere could not have been Social-Democratic consciousness
among the workers,â as it must âbe brought to them from without. The
history of all countries shows that the working class, exclusively by
its own effort, is able to develop only trade union consciousness.â The
âtheory of socialism, however, grew out of the philosophic, historical,
and economic theories elaborated by educated representatives of the
propertied classes, by intellectuals.â This meant âthere can be no talk
of an independent ideology formulated by the working masses themselves
in the process of their movement, the only choice isâeither bourgeois or
socialist ideology. There is no middle courseâ and so âto belittle the
socialist ideology in any way, to turn aside from it in the slightest
degree means to strengthen bourgeois ideology. There is much talk of
spontaneity. But the spontaneous development of the working-class
movement leads to its subordination to bourgeois ideology.â[45]
This places the party in a privileged position as regards the class and,
worse, turns class consciousness into a question of the degree to which
the workers concur with the party. As Voline indicated, this cannot but
help prejudice the party against autonomous working-class self-activity
and instil an authoritarian perspective that, once in power, had
totalitarian results. Unsurprisingly, while the party is mentioned only
in passing (and even then ambiguously) in Leninâs The State and
Revolution, in other writings during 1917 he was very clear that his
party âcan and must take state power into their own handsâ and the
âBolsheviks must assume power.â[46] The soviets were simply seen as the
best means to that end.
Significantly, in 1907 Lenin had argued that âSocial-Democratic Party
organisations [i.e., the Bolsheviks] may, in case of necessity,
participate in inter-party Sovietsâ (âon strict Party linesâ) and
âutiliseâ such organs âfor the purpose of developing the
Social-Democratic movement.â He then noted that the party âmust bear in
mind that if Social-Democratic activities among the proletarian masses
are properly, effectively and widely organised, such institutions may
actually become superfluous.â[47] As, indeed, they did post-October,
even if they formally continued to exist.
As well as undermining political democracy, the new regime also
systematically destroyed economic democracy. During 1917, workers
started to form factory committees and these tended to move from
supervising the bosses to increasingly managing the workplace (a move
often driven by necessity as bosses fled the country). Strangely, given
the role anarchists played in this movement (exercising an influence
much greater than their numbers would suggest), Voline mentions the
issue of workersâ control only in passing. He rightly contrasts the
Bolshevik position in 1917 of workersâ supervision to the anarchist one
of workersâ self-management (Book II, Part II, Chapter 3) but does not
go into details.[48]
It must be stressed that unlike anarchists who had argued for workers
self-management of production since Proudhonâs What is Property? written
in 1840,[49] the Bolshevik Party âhad no position on the question of
workersâ control prior to 1917.â The factory committees âlaunched the
slogan of workersâ control of production quite independently of the
Bolshevik party. It was not until May that the party began to take it
up.â However, Lenin used âthe term [workersâ control] in a very
different sense from that of the factory committees,â and his proposals
were âthoroughly statist and centralist in character, whereas the
practice of the factory committees was essentially local and
autonomous.â While those Bolsheviks âconnected with the factory
committees assigned responsibility for workersâ control of production
chiefly to the committeesâ this ânever became official Bolshevik party
policy.â In fact, âthe Bolsheviks never deviated before or after October
from a commitment to a statist, centralised solution to economic
disorder. The disagreement betweenâ the Mensheviks and Bolsheviks âwas
not about state control in the abstract, but what kind of state should
co-ordinate control of the economy: a bourgeois state or a workersâ
state?â They âdid not disagree radically in the specific measures which
they advocated for control of the economy.â Lenin ânever developed a
conception of workersâ self-management. Even after October, workersâ
control remained for him fundamentally a matter of âinspectionâ and
âaccountingâ ... rather than as being necessary to the transformation of
the process of production by the direct producers. For Lenin, the
transformation of capitalist relations of production was achieved at
central state level, rather than at enterprise level. Progress to
socialism was guaranteed by the character of the state and achieved
through policies by the central stateânot by the degree of power
exercised by workers on the shop floor.â[50]
Unsurprisingly, once in power the Bolsheviks sought to implement their
traditional perspectives on âsocialism.â During the first months of
Soviet power the factory committee leaders âsought to bring their model
into being,â but âthe party leadership overruled them. The result was to
vest both managerial and control powers in organs of the state which
were subordinate to the central authorities, and formed by them.â[51]
This does not mean that lip service was not paid to the aspirations
belatedly championed in the summer of 1917, as Lenin issued a âDraft
Decree on Workersâ Controlâ in November of that year, but as Maurice
Brinton notes:
These excellent, and often quoted, provisions in fact only listed and
legalised what had already been achieved and implemented in many places
by the working class in the course of the struggles of the previous
months. They were to be followed by three further provisions, of ominous
import. It is amazing that these are not better known. In practice they
were soon to nullify the positive features of the previous provisions.
They stipulated (point 5) that âthe decisions of the elected delegates
of the workers and employees were legally binding upon the owners of
enterprisesâ but that they could be âannulled by trade unions and
congressesâ (our emphasis). This was exactly the fate that was to befall
the decisions of the elected delegates of the workers and employees: the
trade unions proved to be the main medium through which the Bolsheviks
sought to break the autonomous power of the Factory Committees.
The Draft Decree also stressed (point 6) that âin all enterprises of
state importanceâ all delegates elected to exercise workersâ control
were to be âanswerable to the State for the maintenance of the strictest
order and discipline and for the protection of property.â Enterprises
âof importance to the Stateâ were defined (point 7)âand this has a
familiar tone for all revolutionariesâas âall enterprises working for
defence purposes, or in any way connected with the production of
articles necessary for the existence of the masses of the populationâ
(our emphasis). In other words practically any enterprise could be
declared by the new Russian State as âof importance to the State.â The
delegates from such an enterprise (elected to exercise workersâ control)
were now made answerable to a higher authority. Moreover if the trade
unions (already fairly bureaucratised) could âannulâ the decisions of
rank-and-file delegates, what real power in production had the rank and
file? The Decree on Workersâ Control was soon proved, in practice, not
to be worth the paper it was written on.[52]
The following month saw the Bolsheviks, as Lenin had promised, start to
build from the top-down their system of unified administration based on
the Tsarist system of central bodies that governed and regulated certain
industries during the war. The Supreme Economic Council (Vesenka) was
set up and âwas widely acknowledged by the Bolsheviks as a move towards
âstatisationâ (ogosudarstvleniye) of economic authority.â Vesenka began
âto build, from the top, its âunified administrationâ of particular
industries. The pattern is informative,â as it âgradually took overâ the
Tsarist state agencies such as the Glakvi âand converted them ... into
administrative organs subject to [its] direction and control.â The
Bolsheviks, Brinton summarises, âclearly optedâ for the taking over of
âthe institutions of bourgeois economic power and use[d] them to their
own ends.â This system ânecessarily implies the perpetuation of
hierarchical relations within production itself, and therefore the
perpetuation of class society.â[53] It was a similar process within the
workplace, with Lenin, in April 1918, demanding â[o]bedience, and
unquestioning obedience at that, during work to the one-man decisions of
Soviet directors, of the dictators elected or appointed by Soviet
institutions, vested with dictatorial powers.â[54] In short, capitalist
social relations were imposed within a state-capitalist bureaucracy.[55]
While Brintonâs work is still the best account of Bolshevik attitudes on
workersâ control, its (negative) impact on the revolution and
alternatives to that perspective, he downplays the fact that those most
active in the factory committees were usually Bolsheviks. As one Russian
anarchist suggested, while âthe Russian proletariat was, as a whole,
entirely ignorant of the ideas of Revolutionary Syndicalism,â the
âlabour movement of Russia went along the road of decentralisation. It
chose spontaneously the course of a unique Revolutionary Syndicalism,â
so even though âdominated by the Bolsheviks, the Factory Committees of
that period were carrying out the Anarchist idea. The latter, of course,
suffered in clarity and purity when carried out by the Bolsheviks within
the Factory Committees; had the Anarchists been in the majority, they
would have endeavoured to displace from the work of the committees the
element of centralisation and state principles.â Ultimately, the
âBolsheviks subordinated the Factory Committees, which were federalistic
and anarchistic by their nature, to the centralised trade unionsâ and
âproceeded to strip the Factory Committees of all their functionsâ bar
âthe policing role imposed upon them by the Bolsheviks.â[56] Given that
the factory committees were headed by people who shared the same
prejudices as regards centralisation and statist socialism as Lenin,
this meant they did not have the theoretical power to challengeâor even
successfully questionâthe mainstream Bolshevik position and the dangers
it held for genuine socialism.
That the Bolshevik onslaught on economic democracy was driven in large
part by its vision of socialism can be seen from early 1920. Discussing
how the civil war had ended, Lenin argued that the âwhole attention of
the Communist Party and the Soviet government is centred on peaceful
economic development, on problems of the dictatorship and of one-man
management.... When we tackled them for the first time in 1918, there
was no civil war and no experience to speak of.â So it was ânot only
experience ... but something more profoundâ that has âinduced us now, as
it did two years ago, to concentrate all our attention on labour
discipline.â[57] Social relationships within production were considered
unimportant for the real issue was nationalisation:
The domination of the proletariat consists in the fact that the
landowners and capitalists have been deprived of their property.... The
victorious proletariat has abolished property, has completely annulled
itâand therein lies its domination as a class. The prime thing is the
question of property. As soon as the question of property was settled
practically, the domination of the class was assured.[58]
This perspective could not help but place economic power into the hands
of state officials and replaced private capitalism with state
capitalism.
So as the soviets were marginalised, gerrymandered and packed, a
parallel movement was occurring in the workplace. Yet thisâunlike the
undermining of the sovietsâwas in line with the vision of socialism
Lenin explicitly expounded in 1917. Bolshevik âsocialismâ was built on
the institutions created under capitalism and could do nothing but help
worsen the economic crisis and add to the emerging bureaucracy of the
new state, as we will now sketch.
Lenin had promised a semi-state in which the bureaucracy would be small
and quickly become smaller. Yet the bureaucracy âgrew by leaps and
bounds. Control over the new bureaucracy constantly diminished, partly
because no genuine opposition existed. The alienation between âpeopleâ
and âofficials,â which the soviet system was supposed to remove, was
back again. Beginning in 1918, complaints about âbureaucratic excesses,â
lack of contact with voters, and new proletarian bureaucrats grew louder
and louder.â[59] Within working-class circles there was âthe widespread
view that trade unions, factory committees, and sovietsâ were âno longer
representative, democratically run working-class institutions; instead
they had been transformed into arbitrary, bureaucratic government
agencies. There was ample reason for this concern.â Hence the âgrowing
disenchantment of Petrograd workers with economic conditions and the
evolving structure and operation of Soviet political institutions.â[60]
The growth in state bureaucracy started immediately with the seizure of
power by the Bolsheviks, particularly as the stateâs functions grew to
include economic decisions as well as political ones:
The old stateâs political apparatus was âsmashed,â but in its place a
new bureaucratic and centralised system emerged with extraordinary
rapidity. After the transfer of government to Moscow in March 1918 it
continued to expand.... As the functions of the state expanded so did
the bureaucracy, and by August 1918 nearly a third of Moscowâs working
population were employed in offices. The great increase in the number of
employees ... took place in early to mid-1918 and, thereafter, despite
many campaigns to reduce their number, they remained a steady proportion
of the falling population.[61]
The apparatus of the Vesenka, for example, grew from 6,000 in September
1918 to 26,000 by January 1921âincluding local economic councils, there
were 234,000 functionaries.[62] By the end of 1920 there were 5,800,000
officials of all kinds, five times the number of industrial workers.[63]
Given that the Bolshevik vision of socialism was inherently centralised
and statist, it was inevitable that a âbureaucratic machine is created
that is appalling in its parasitism, inefficacy, and corruption.â[64]
The glavki system âdid not know the true number of enterprises in their
branchâ of industry and was âunable to cope with th[e] enormous tasksâ
given to it. The âshortcomings of the central administrations and glavki
increased together with the number of enterprises under their
control.â[65] Worse:
The most evident shortcoming ... was that it did not ensure central
allocation of resources and central distribution of output, in
accordance with any priority ranking ... materials were provided to
factories in arbitrary proportions: in some places they accumulated,
whereas in others there was a shortage. Moreover, the length of the
procedure needed to release the products increased scarcity at given
moments, since products remained stored until the centre issued a
purchase order on behalf of a centrally defined customer. Unused stock
coexisted with acute scarcity. The centre was unable to determine the
correct proportions among necessary materials and eventually to enforce
implementation of the orders for their total quantity. The gap between
theory and practice was significant.[66]
The âcentreâs information was sketchy at bestâ and it âwas deluged with
work of an ad hoc character.â âDemands for fuel and supplies piled up,â
while âorders from central organs disrupted local production plans,â for
the centre âdrew up plans for developing or reorganising the economy of
a region, either in ignorance, or against the will, of the local
authorities.â[67] All of which confirms anarchist accounts:
In Kharkoff I saw the demonstration of the inefficiency of the
centralised bureaucratic machine. In a large factory warehouse there lay
huge stacks of agricultural machinery. Moscow had ordered them made
âwithin two weeks, in pain of punishment for sabotage.â They were made,
and six months already had passed without the âcentral authoritiesâ
making any effort to distribute the machines to the peasantry.... It was
one of the countless examples of the manner in which the Moscow system
âworked,â or, rather, did not work.[68]
Volineâs account of his visit to an oil refinery (Book II, Part III,
Chapter 5) and Bolshevik opposition to attempts in Kronstadt to
socialise housing (Book III, Part I, Chapter 4) shows in microcosm the
overall Bolshevik perspective and how it hindered the local initiative
needed to solve the problems the revolution faced. Sadly, âthe failure
of glavkism did not bring about a reconsideration of the problems of
economic organisation.... On the contrary, the ideology of
centralisation was reinforced.â[69]
More: given that Bolshevik ideologyâinspired by orthodox Marxism and its
call âto centralise all instruments of production in the hands of the
Stateâ[70]âundermined the factory committees, Lenin simply handed the
economy and so economic power to the emerging bureaucracy, just as he
handed society and so social power to that same body.[71]
So âin the soviets and in economic management the embryo of centralised
and bureaucratic state forms had already emerged by mid-1918.â[72]
The new state machine was not limited to the political and economic, it
extended to the military. On 20 December 1917, the Council of Peopleâs
Commissars decreed the formation of a political police force, the Cheka.
Significantly, its first headquarters were at Gorokhovaia 2, which under
the Tsar housed his notorious security service, the Okhrana.[73] The
Cheka quickly became a key and infamous instrument of state repression.
In addition, in March 1918, Trotsky eliminated the soldierâs committees
and elected officers, stating that âthe principle of election is
politically purposeless and technically inexpedient, and it has been, in
practice, abolished by decree.â[74] In May, the Bolsheviks appointed a
general commissar of the Baltic Fleet, disbanding its elected central
committee. This was part of a general âemasculation and subsequent
destruction of its grass-roots democracy of base committees.â[75]
If, as Lenin argued in 1917, the state is âa power which arose from
society but places itself above it and alienates itself more and more
from itâ and âconsists of special bodies of armed menâ separate from the
people,[76] then by early 1918 the so-called workersâ state had become a
state in the normal sense of the word. As anarchists had predicted:
And, in fact, what do we find throughout history? The State has always
been the patrimony of some privileged class: a priestly class, an
aristocratic class, a bourgeois class. And finally, when all the other
classes have exhausted themselves, the State then becomes the patrimony
of the bureaucratic class and then fallsâor, if you will, risesâto the
position of a machine. But in any case it is absolutely necessary for
the salvation of the State that there should be some privileged class
devoted to its preservation.[77]
Trotskyists usually follow Trotskyâs self-serving 1930s account of the
rise of the bureaucracy in which he lamented how the âdemobilisation of
the Red Army of five million [in 1921] played no small role in the
formation of the bureaucracy. The victorious commanders assumed leading
posts in the local Soviets, in economy, in education, and they
persistently introduced everywhere that regime which had ensured success
in the civil war.â For some reason he failed to mention who had
introduced that regime in the army in the first place, although he felt
able to state, without shame, given that he was the one to abolish it in
early 1918, that the âcommanding staff needs democratic control. The
organisers of the Red Army were aware of this from the beginning, and
considered it necessary to prepare for such a measure as the election of
commanding staff.â[78] As shown, this account is simply falseâthe rise
of bureaucracy predated the formation of the Red Army, never mind its
demobilisation in 1921, and Bolshevik policies like one-man management
had been imposed from April 1918 onward. So when, in 1935, Trotsky
argued that it was in 1928 that the âbureaucracy succeeded ... in
breaking up ... the Soviets ... which were left in name onlyâ and âpower
passed from the masses ... to a centralised bureaucracy,â he was out by
a mere ten years.[79]
All this shows how right Voline wasâechoing the arguments of Bakunin and
Kropotkinâto stress the contradiction between statism and revolution,
that statism creates a privileged caste and reduces the masses to a
passive role in what should be their revolution. (Book II, Part III,
Chapter 2). However, the rise of this new class, the state-party
bureaucracy, was not unchallenged. These special bodies of armed men
were utilised to secure the power of a new ruling class against those it
claimed to represent, the Russian workers and peasants. We now turn to
this popular opposition.[80]
Space precludes an extensive account for working-class resistance to the
emerging new class, so here we present a sketch.[81] This protest took
many forms, from strikes in one or two workplaces up to waves of general
strikes. In response, the party utilised martial law, lockouts, denial
of rations, arrest of âringleaders,â selective rehiring, shootings and
so forth. Unsurprisingly, this mass collective struggle is ignored or
downplayed in Leninist accounts of the revolution, for, first, it is an
embarrassment that the so-called proletarian state repressed workers,
and, second, it is very much at odds with their attempts to defend the
Bolsheviks in terms of an âexhaustedâ or âdisappearedâ working class
necessitating party dictatorship.
Working-class disillusionment with the Bolsheviks appeared quickly, in
part due to the Bolsheviksâ inability to solve the economic crisis,
which they had suggested in 1917 they easily could, but which their
policies made worse. So in âthe first half of 1918, some 100,000 to
150,000 workers across Russia took part in strikes, food riots and other
protests, roughly on a par with labour unrest on the eve of the February
Revolution.â[82] Troops were used to break the protests and strikes in
Petrograd[83] and elsewhereâfor example, in Tula, in June 1918, the
regime declared âmartial law and arrested the protestors. Strikes
followed and were suppressed by violence.â In Sormovo, 5,000 workers
went on strike after a Menshevik-SR paper was closed. Violence was âused
to break the strike.â[84]
Similar waves of protest and strikes took place the following year with
1919, seeing a ânew outbreak of strikes in Marchâ across Russia, with
the âpattern of repression ... repeated.â One strike culminated in the
âclosing of the factory, the firing of a number of workers, and the
supervised re-election of its factory committee.â In Astrakhan, a mass
meeting of 10,000 workers was fired on by Red Army troops, killing 2,000
(another 2,000 were taken prisoner and subsequently executed).[85]
Petrograd saw numerous strikes, including one in March of fifteen
factories involving roughly 35,000 workers, resulting in the promise of
increased rations. When these did not materialise, the strikes were
launched anew. When protesting strikers at the Putilov factory âwere
fired upon by Cheka troops,â more workplaces came out. The strikers were
ordered to return to work or âthe sailors and soldiers would be brought
in,â which they were. More strikes broke out in July and September,
involving around 25,000 workers, and the Cheka was again sent in.[86] As
Vladimir Brovkin argues in his account of the strikes and protests of
1919:
Data on one strike in one city may be dismissed as incidental. When,
however, evidence is available from various sources on simultaneous
independent strikes in different cities an overall picture begins to
emerge. All strikes developed along a similar timetable: February,
brewing discontent; March and April, peak of strikes; May, slackening in
strikes; and June and July, a new wave of strikes.... Workersâ unrest
took place in Russiaâs biggest and most important industrial centres....
Strikes affected the largest industries, primarily those involving
metal: metallurgical, locomotive, and armaments plants.... In some
cities ... textile and other workers were active protesters as well. In
at least five cities ... the protests resembled general strikes.[87]
There were similar waves of strikes and protests in 1920. In fact,
strike action âremained endemic in the first nine months of 1920.â
Soviet figures report a total of 146 strikes, involving 135,442 workers
for the twenty-six provinces covered. In Petrograd province, there were
73 strikes with 85,642 participants. âThis is a high figure indeed,
since at this time ... there were 109,100 workersâ in the province.
Overall, âthe geographical extent of the FebruaryâMarch strike wave is
impressiveâ and the âharsh discipline that went with labour
militarisation led to an increase in industrial unrest in 1920.â[88]
Saratov, for example, saw a wave of factory occupations break out in
June, and mill workers went out in July, while in August strikes and
walkouts occurred in its mills and other factories and these âprompted a
spate of arrests and repression.â In September, railroad workers went
out on strike, with arrests making âthe situation worse, forcing the
administration to accept the workersâ demands.â[89] Likewise, the
âlargest strike in Moscow in the summer of 1920â was by tram workers
over the equalisation of rations. It began on 12 August, when one tram
depot went on strike, quickly followed by others, while workers âin
other industries joined in too.â The tram workers âstayed out a further
two days before being driven back by arrests and threats of mass
sackings.â In the textile manufacturing towns around Moscow âthere were
large-scale strikesâ in November 1920, with a thousand workers striking
for four days in one district, and a strike of five hundred mill workers
saw three thousand workers from another mill joining in.[90]
Strikes continued and â[b]y the beginning of 1921 a revolutionary
situation with workers in the vanguard had emerged in Soviet Russia,â
with âthe simultaneous outbreak of strikes in Petrograd and Moscow and
in other industrial regions.â In February and March, âindustrial unrest
broke out in a nation-wide wave of discontent or volynka. General
strikes, or very widespread unrestâ hit all but one of the countryâs
major industrial regions and âworkersâ protest consisted not just of
strikes but also of factory occupations, âItalian strikes,â[91]
demonstrations, mass meetings, the beating up of communists and so on.â
Rather than admit it was a mass strike, the Bolsheviks âusually employed
the word volynka, which means only a âgo-slow.ââ[92]
As an example, a strike wave in Ekaterinoslavl (in Ukraine) in May, 1921
started in the railway workshops and became âquickly politicised,â with
the strike committee raising a âseries of political ultimatums that were
very similar in content to the demands of the Kronstadt rebels.â The
strike âspread to the other workshopsâ and on 1 June the main large
Ekaterinoslavl factories joined the strike. Trains and telegraph were
used to spread the strike, and soon an area up to fifty miles around the
town was affected. The strike was finally ended by the Cheka, using mass
arrests and shootings. Unsurprisingly, the local communists called the
revolt a âlittle Kronstadt.â[93]
Repression âdid not prevent strikes and other forms of protest by
workers becoming endemic in 1919 and 1920,â while in early 1921 the
Communist Party âfaced what amounted to a revolutionary situation.
Industrial unrest was only one aspect of a more general crisis that
encompassed the Kronstadt revolt and the peasant rising in Tambov and
Western Siberia.â This âindustrial unrest represented a serious
political threat to the Soviet regime.â For from âEkaterinburg to
Moscow, from Petrograd to Ekaterinoslavl, workers took to the streets,
often in support of political slogans that called for the end of
Communist Party rule.â Unsurprisingly, âsoldiers in many of the strike
areas showed themselves to be unreliable [but] the regime was able to
muster enough forces to master the situation. Soldiers could be replaced
by Chekists, officer cadets and other special units where Party members
predominated.â[94]
There was substantial collective action throughout the civil war, but it
was directed against the Bolshevik regime. This shows that attempts by
the defenders of Bolshevism to proclaim that the working class had
âdisintegratedâ and been reduced âto an atomised, individualised mass, a
fraction of its former size, and no longer able to exercise the
collective power that it had done in 1917â have little foundation.[95]
For âif the proletariat was that exhausted how come it was still capable
of waging virtually total general strikes in the largest and most
heavily industrialised cities?â[96]
True, the number of workers in the cities did decline significantly, but
âa sizeable core of veteran urban proletarians remained ... they did not
all disappear.â In fact, âit was the loss of young activists rather than
of all skilled and class-conscious urban workers that caused the level
of Bolshevik support to decline during the Civil War. Older workers had
tended to support the Menshevik Party in 1917.â Given this, âit appears
that the Bolshevik Party made deurbanisation and declassing the
scapegoats for its political difficulties when the partyâs own policies
and its unwillingness to accept changing proletarian attitudes were also
to blame.â It should also be noted that the notion of declassing to
rationalise the partyâs misfortunes was used long before the civil war:
âThis was the same argument used to explain the Bolsheviksâ lack of
success among workers in the early months of 1917âthat the cadres of
conscious proletarians were diluted by nonproletarian elements.â[97]
It must be stressed that the notion of a âdeclassedâ proletariat was
first raised by Lenin in response to this mass working-class protest.
âAs discontent amongst workers became more and more difficult to
ignore,â Lenin âbegan to argue that the consciousness of the working
class had deteriorated,â workers âhad become âdeclassed.ââ However,
there âis little evidence to suggest that the demands that workers made
at the end of 1920,â when Lenin first formulated this excuse,
ârepresented a fundamental change in aspirations since 1917.â[98] So
while the âworking class had decreased in size and changed in
composition,â the âprotest movement from late 1920 made clear that it
was not a negligible force and that in an inchoate way it retained a
vision of socialism which was not identified entirely with Bolshevik
power.â Thus, Leninâs argument âon the declassing of the proletariat was
more a way of avoiding this unpleasant truth than a real reflection of
what remained, in Moscow at least, a substantial physical and
ideological force.â[99]
Given these waves of proletarian unrest, the next usually more powerful
than the last, there was a social base for a collective response to the
problems of the revolution as anarchists argueâbut the Bolsheviks could
not base themselves on it because it was directed against them and their
pretentions to know better than the workers what their interests really
were. An âatomisedâ class does not need martial law to tame its general
strikes. In such circumstances, it is easy to see how the state became
increasingly independent from the working classâit had to in order to
maintain Bolshevik rule over the workers. This empowered the already
emerging bureaucracy and so paved the way for Stalinism.
Given this repression of workers by the so-called workersâ state, it is
ironic to read one Leninist argue that the rise of Stalinism was
achieved âby administrative terror, not by the more normal means of
counter-revolutionary seizure of power.... No wider use of force was
necessary, no martial law, no curfew or street battles.â[100] He forgets
that all these had been used against striking and protesting workers by
Lenin and Trotsky, and if there was âatomisation of the working classâ
this had been achieved in 1921 by their methods of martial law, curfews
and so on.[101]
Ultimately, Lenin was right to argue that âit is clear that there is no
freedom and no democracy where there is suppression and where there is
violence.â If the working class is being suppressed by âthe vanguard of
the oppressedâ then there is âno freedom and no democracyâ for the
working class and it cannot be âthe ruling class.â The party and its
state is.[102]
The standard response to these points is that we have failed to discuss
the Russian Civil War, the White Armies and imperialist intervention.
There is a reason for thisâall of the (negative) developments that
latter-day Leninists from Trotsky onward blame on the civil war started
before it. The path to state-capitalist party dictatorship was well trod
before the Czech Legion rebelled in May 1918âand the repression did not
end with the final defeat of the Whites in November 1920.
So from âthe first days of Bolshevik power there was only a weak
correlation between the extent of âpeaceâ and the mildness or severity
of Bolshevik rule, between the intensity of the war and the intensity of
proto-war communist measures.... Considered in ideological terms there
was little to distinguish the âbreathing spaceâ (AprilâMay 1918) from
the war communism that followed.â Unsurprisingly, then, âthe breathing
space of the first months of 1920 after the victories over Kolchak and
Denikin ... saw their intensification and the militarisation of labourâ
and, in fact, âno serious attempt was made to review the aptness of war
communist policies.â Ideology âconstantly impinged on the choices made
at various points of the civil war,â so âBolshevik authoritarianism
cannot be ascribed simply to the Tsarist legacy or to adverse
circumstances.â[103]
Bolshevik ideology played a key role in the degeneration of the
revolutionâas can be seen in the structures favoured and how socialism
was envisioned. These interacted, for a perspective favouring
centralised, top-down organisations creates such structures and these,
in turn, shape the views and actions of those placed into power within
these hierarchies. The partyâs âmentality was more than just a
mentality: after the seizure of power, it almost immediately became a
part of the real social situation. ... If it is true that peopleâs real
social existence determines their consciousness, it is from that moment
illusory to expect the Bolshevik Party to act in any other fashion than
according to its real social situation.â[104] It acted as every ruling
class has because it had become a new master class.
To secure its rule, the party had to build a state machine separate from
the masses, so it did. Its vision of socialism and its privileged role
for the party played their part. Yet a political master class without an
economic base is weak and, unsurprisingly, the party quickly merged with
the bureaucracy. The conflicts between Trotskyism and Stalinism
represented a conflict between the wings of the bureaucracyâthe latter
embracing its true nature, while the former denied it and were
imprisoned, driven into exile or murdered as a result, suffering the
fate it had inflicted on oppositional groupings outside the party while
it had been in power.[105]
The invocation of the civil war as the rationale for Bolshevik
authoritarianism rings hollow, particularly as anarchists were not as
naive as Lenin suggested in The State and Revolution. The libertarian
critique of the so-called âdictatorship of the proletariatâ has nothing
to do with failing to see the necessity of defending a revolution.
Likewise, regardless of Leninâs lecturing, anarchists had seen long
before 1917 that federations of working-class organisations would be the
framework of a free society. Again, notwithstanding Leninâs assertion in
1917, anarchists do not believe in âovernightâ revolutions. Anarchist
âimpatience with the Bolshevik regimeââas Emma Goldman arguedâis not
down to a âbelief that a revolution Ă la Bakunin would have brought more
constructive results, if not immediate anarchism. Yet as a matter of
fact the Russian Revolution had been Ă la Bakunin, but it had since been
transformed Ă la Karl Marx. That seemed to be the real trouble. I had
not been naive enough to expect anarchism to rise phoenix-like from the
ashes of the old. But I did hope that the masses, who had made the
Revolution, would also have the chance to direct its course.â[106]
Indeed, Bolshevism simply confirmed anarchist predictions:
The anarchists consider ... that to hand over to the State all the main
sources of economical lifeâthe land, the mines, the railways, banking,
insurance, and so onâas also the management of all the main branches of
industry, in addition to all the functions already accumulated in its
hands ... would mean to create a new instrument of tyranny. State
capitalism would only increase the powers of bureaucracy and capitalism.
True progress lies in the direction of decentralisation, both
territorial and functional, in the development of the spirit of local
and personal initiative, and of free federation from the simple to the
compound, in lieu of the present hierarchy from the centre to the
periphery.[107]
The question is whether this is armchair theorising or whether there
were libertarian alternatives to Leninism. The answer is yes, there were
libertarian alternatives.
As noted, soviet democracy did not die a natural death, the soviets were
systematically marginalisedâdisbanded, if need beâby the Bolsheviks in
favour of party power. For example, after the civil war ânon-party
workers were willing and able to participate in political processes,
but, in the Moscow soviet and elsewhere, were pushed out of them by the
Bolsheviks.â[108] Indeed, as the substantial working-class protest
already sketched shows, there was substantial collective action upon
which soviet democracy could have been based before, during and after
the civil war.
Economically, anarchists argued that workersâ unions or federations of
factory committees should manage production and it should be noted that
rates of âoutput and productivity began to climb steadily afterâ January
1918: âIn some factories, production doubled or tripled in the early
months of 1918,â and â[m]any of the reports explicitly credited the
factory committees for these increases.â In Petrograd, they ensured
âindustry did not completely collapseâ and fuel was ârationally and
equitablyâ shared, while in the Urals the economy âwas maintained
throughout the winter and spring of 1918 on the basis of workersâ
self-management.â They âachieved a notable degree of organisation and
coordination,â thereby âhelping to maintain production and the exchange
of scarce resources.â[109] There is âevidence that until late 1919, some
factory committees performed managerial tasks successfully. In some
regions factories were still active thanks to their workersâ initiatives
in securing raw materials.â[110] While this may be dismissed as
speculation based on a few examples, we cannot avoid recognising that
turning the economy over to the bureaucracy coincided with the deepening
of the economic crisis.
Alternatives existed, and Voline discusses two in detailâthe Kronstadt
uprising of 1921 and the Makhnovist movement of 1918â1921.[111] Here we
supplement his account by addressing some of the attacks Leninists
subject these movements to. We will also cover Bolshevik oppositional
tendencies and compare these to the libertarian ones to better evaluate
both and see which ones were genuinely utopian.
Sadly, the defenders of Bolshevism habitually selectively quote, distort
the facts and slander those movements that presented an alternativeânot
least the Makhnovists and Kronstadt. While we cover some of the most
important myths here, we cannot cover everything. Another issue is the
ideological blindness of Bolshevism. For example, Trotskyist John G.
Wright argued the following in his defence of the Bolshevik crushing of
Kronstadt:
The supposition that the soldiers and sailors could venture upon an
insurrection under an abstract political slogan of âfree sovietsâ is
absurd in itself. It is doubly absurd in the view of the fact [!] that
the rest of the Kronstadt garrison consisted of backward and passive
people who could not be used in the civil war. These people could have
been moved to an insurrection only by profound economic needs and
interests. These were the needs and interests of the fathers and
brothers of these sailors and soldiers, that is, of peasants as traders
in food products and raw materials.[112] In other words the mutiny was
the expression of the petty bourgeoisieâs reaction against the
difficulties and privations imposed by the proletarian revolution.
Nobody can deny this class character of the two camps.[113]
Ignoring his dismissal of working-class people whoâeven after years of
revolutionâapparently cannot exceed a trade union consciousness nor act
in their own interests, Wright fails to recognise the obvious: that
there were more than âtwo camps.â As well as urban and rural workers
(proletarians and peasants), there was also the state with its
interests. Moreover, there was also the ideology of the ruling party
that had long argued for the necessity of party dictatorship and the
dangers of working-class democracy. The notion of two classes or two
camps is absurd in the face of the actual factsâthe new class of
bureaucrats and commissars needs to be factored in to fully understand
the situation and the alternatives to it.
That these alternatives share many of the features proclaimed by the
Bolsheviks in 1917 makes the orthodox Leninist position strange, to say
the least. Here we seek to address some of the distortions and show why
genuine socialists should embrace these alternatives, which remained
true to the spirit of 1917, unlike the various oppositions within the
Bolshevik Party.
Voline was active in the Makhnovist movement, and while the bulk of his
account (Book III, Part II) consists of extracts from fellow anarchist
Peter Arshinovâs earlier account, he adds useful additional commentary
indicating its importance; here we have a mass movement, operating in
the same (arguably worse) âobjective circumstancesâ as the Bolshevik
regime but producing remarkably different outcomes.[114]
While the Bolsheviks systematically destroyed soviet, economic and
military democracy, repressed the freedom of association, speech and
assembly of the working classes and ideologically justified party
dictatorship, the Makhnovists did the opposite. They encouraged soviet,
economic and military self-management, as well as ensuring freedoms for
workers and peasants. Indeed, they came into conflict with the
Bolsheviks twice in 1919 precisely because they had the gall to involve
the working masses in the fate of the revolution. Their importance is
summarised by the Makhnovistsâ response to a Bolshevik commanderâs
proclamation banning a conference called to do precisely that:
Have you the right, you alone, to label as counter-revolutionaries
upwards of one million workers who have, with their horny hands, cast
off the shackles of slavery and henceforth look to themselves for the
reshaping of their lives as they see fit.... If you be a genuine
revolutionary, you must help them in their struggle against the
oppressors and in the building of a new and free life. Can it be that
laws laid down by a handful of individuals, describing themselves as
revolutionaries, can afford them the right to declare outside of the law
an entire people more revolutionary than themselves? ... Is there some
law according to which a revolutionary is alleged to have the right to
enforce the harshest punishment against the revolutionary mass on whose
behalf he fights, and this because that same mass has secured for itself
the benefits that the revolutionary promised them ... freedom and
equality? Can that mass remain silent when the ârevolutionaryâ strips it
of the freedom which it has just won? ... What interests should the
revolutionary defend? Those of the party? Or those of the people at the
cost of whose blood the revolution has been set in motion?[115]
The strange thing is that the Makhnovists were seeking to keep to the
ideals that Leninists say they subscribe to. Yet their hatred of the
movement knows few bounds and their attacks little more than inventions
parroted from previous inaccurate Leninist attacks or, when footnotes
are used, selective quoting of the most shameful kind.[116] All this
rather than admit the facts; all this rather than admit the elemental
truth articulated by Makhno, as quoted by Voline:
Conquer or dieâsuch is the dilemma which faces the Ukrainian peasants
and workers at this historic moment.... But we will not conquer in order
to repeat the errors of the past years, that of putting our fate into
the hands of new masters. We will conquer in order to take our destinies
into our own hands, to conduct our lives according to our own will and
our own conception of the truth.
Ultimately, for all its failings and faults, the Makhnovist movement
shows that the libertarian ideas of Bakunin and Kropotkin were a viable
alternative to Marxist notions of revolution. So it is understandable
that Marxists seek to discredit it by any means available.
The main line of attack on the Makhnovists by Leninists is expressed by
Victor Serge in 1920 when he was a loyal functionary, namely that the
Makhnovists âspeculated on the spirit of small land-ownership of the
peasants, on their nationalism, even on anti-Semitism, all of which had
dreadful consequences.â[117] These claims are often supplemented by
other charges, such as the Makhnovists being âkulaksâ (wealthy peasants
who hired labour), joining the Whites and being anti-working-class. All
these claims are easy to refute. We will start by quoting Serge from
1938 when he had reclaimed his independence somewhat:
Makhnoâs Black Army was often accused of anti-Semitism. There were
anti-Semitic excesses carried out by all parties in Ukraine, but not
where the Blacks were truly masters of their movements, as Soviet
authors were forced to recognise. In communist publications they
denounced this as a movement of well-off peasants. This is not true.
Conscientious research carried out under the aegis of the Historical
Commission of the Communist Party of the USSR established that poor and
middle peasants formed the majority of Makhnoâs troops.[118]
The charge of anti-Semitism is refuted in some detail by both Arshinov
and Voline (the latter of Jewish origin, like many of the troops and
anarchists involved with the Makhnovists) and serious research has
always confirmed their conclusions.[119] The only people today who
repeat the charge in the face of this evidence are orthodox Trotskyists
who also ignore the documented fact that Red Army troops carried out
pogroms.[120]
As for the claim it was a movement of âkulaks,â this seem to forget that
there had been a revolution in the countryside that had equalised wealth
considerably[121] and that âthe Makhnovist movement could hardly have
lasted four years supported by, at most, 20 per cent of the
population.â[122] This is confirmed by Trotsky himself who once opined
that âMakhnovism has not been liquidated with the liquidation of Makhno:
it has its roots in the ignorant masses.â[123] As one historian notes,
âMakhno and his associates brought sociopolitical issues into the daily
life of the people, who in turn supported his efforts, hoping to
expedite the expropriation of large estates because they feared that
âthe revolution would be destroyed, and we would again remain without
land.ââ[124] In terms of specific policies, a Makhnovist organised
congress passed the following resolution:
[I]n the interests of socialism and the struggle against the
bourgeoisie, all land should be transferred to the hands of the toiling
peasants. According to the principle that âthe land belongs to nobodyâ
and can be used only by those who care about it, who cultivate it, the
land should be transferred to the toiling peasantry of Ukraine for their
use without pay according to the norm of equal distribution.[125]
It should also be stressed that those who attack the Makhnovists as
âkulaksâ usually fail to mention that Bolshevik land policy was a
complete disaster and caused endless conflict with all the peasantry
(indeed, the âpoorer the areas, the more dissatisfied were the peasants
with the Bolshevik decreesâ[126]). This, in turn, worsened the food
supply problems for the towns. You would think avoiding such a complete
failure would have been something in the Makhnovistsâ favour,
particularly when the Bolsheviks finally introduced a land policy
similar to that of the Makhnovists in early 1920.
In terms of working with the Whites, no such thing ever occurred. As
Serge acknowledged, there were âstrenuous calumnies put out by the
Communist Partyâ against Makhno âwhich went so far as to accuse him of
signing pacts with the Whites at the very moment when he was engaged in
a life-and-death struggle against them.â[127] Indeed, the Makhnovists
played the key role in the defeat of both Denikin and Wrangel.
The conflict between the Bolsheviks and the Makhnovists was driven by
politicsâthe driving necessity of the former to maintain its monopoly on
power and the latter seeking to promote popular self-government whenever
they could. This conflict in turn resulted in the counter-revolution
taking advantage of the situation. For example:
Once Trotskyâs Red Army had crushed Iudenich and Kolchak and driven
Denikenâs forces back upon their bases in the Crimea and the Kuban, it
turned upon Makhnoâs partisan forces with a vengeance ... in mid-January
1920, after a typhus epidemic had decimated his forces, a re-established
Central Committee of the Ukrainian Communist Party declared Makhno an
outlaw. Yet the Bolsheviks could not free themselves from Makhnoâs grasp
so easily, and it became one of the supreme ironies of the Russian Civil
War that his attacks against the rear of the Red Army made it possible
for the resurrected White armies ... to return briefly to the southern
Ukraine in 1920.[128]
If anyone was âobjectivelyâ pro-White, it was the Bolsheviks and their
refusal to allow the Makhnovists the right to apply their own ideas, a
right they had won by fighting and defeating the Whites.
Nor let us forget the circumstances in which these Bolshevik betrayals
took place. The country was, as Leninists constantly remind us, in a
state of economic collapse. Indeed, the defenders of Bolshevism
habitually blame the anti-working-class and dictatorial actions and
policies of the Bolsheviks on the chaos caused by the civil war. Yet
here are the Bolsheviks prolonging this very civil war by turning on
their allies after the defeat of the Whites. Resources that could have
been used to aid the economic rebuilding of Russia and Ukraine along
with the talents and energy of the Makhnovists were either destroyed or
wasted in pointless conflict.
Should we be surprised? Bolshevik politics and ideology played a key
role in all these decisions. They were not driven by terrible objective
circumstances (indeed, they made those circumstances worse). They were
driven by an ideology that by that time was committed to party
dictatorship.
For Trotsky, the âanarchist ideas of Makhno (the ignoring of the State,
non-recognition of the central power) corresponded to the spirit of this
kulak cavalry as nothing else could. I should add that the hatred of the
city and the city worker on the part of the followers of Makhno was
complemented by a militant anti-Semitism.â[129] We have debunked the
assertions of anti-Semitism and the kulak nature of the movement, here
we address the issue of âhatredâ of city workers.
It is true that the Makhnovists were predominantly a peasant movement,
although it must be remembered that Makhnoâs home, Gulyai Polye, is
often described as a village in spite of boasting around twenty-five
thousand inhabitants in 1917. There was industrial production in the
region and, for example, Makhno was both a wage-worker on a farm and in
a foundry in his youth. Indeed, once returned home from prison in 1917,
he organised a peasantsâ union and was asked for help by unionised metal
workers during a (successful) strike in 1917.[130] More, as
communist-anarchists, Makhno and his comrades recognised that a
successful revolution required the co-operation of both peasants and
proletariansâparticularly in a country predominantly peasant in
nature.[131] As such, the Makhnovist programme included ideas tailored
to both groups of toilers as summed up by the slogan sewn onto their
black flags: âThe Land to the Peasants, the Factories to the Workers.â
As their draft declaration put it:
[H]aving scrupulously examined the idea and the results of state
take-over (nationalisation) of the means and instruments of worker
production (the mines, communications, workshops, factories, etc.) as
well as of the workersâ organisations themselves (trades unions, factory
and workshop committees, cooperatives, etc.), we can announce with
certainty that there is one genuine and fair solution to the workersâ
question: the transfer of all the means, instruments and materials of
labour, production and transportation, not to the complete disposal of
the stateâthis new boss and exploiter which uses wage-slavery and is no
less oppressive of the workers than private entrepreneursâbut to the
workersâ organisations and unions in natural and free association with
one another and in liaison with peasant organisations through the good
offices of their economic soviets.
It is our conviction that only such a resolution of the labour issue
will release the energy and activity of the worker masses, give a fresh
boost to repair of the devastated industrial economy, render
exploitation and oppression impossible ... only the workers, with the
help of their free organisations and unions, will be able to secure
their release from the yoke of State and Capital (private and state
alike), take over the working of mineral and coal reserves, get
workshops and factories back into operation, establish equitable
exchanges of products between different regions, towns and countryside,
get rail traffic moving again, in short, breathe life back into the
moribund shell of our economic organisation.[132]
They also applied these ideas in practice. As Voline recounts, when the
Makhnovists entered a city or town they immediately announced to the
population that the army did not intend to exercise political authority.
The workers and peasants were invited to a congress and urged to manage
their own affairs by setting up free soviets that would carry out the
will of their constituents. Economically, peasants were urged to
expropriate the holdings of the landlords and the state (including all
livestock and goods), while all factories, plants, mines, and other
means of production were to become property of all the workers under
control of their trade unions. Political parties were granted full
freedom to organise and publishâwith the one caveat that they could not
seek to create their own revolutionary authority.
This is in stark contrast to the actions of the Bolsheviks who when
entering a town or city imposed a revkom or ârevolutionary committee.â
If a soviet was created, it was packed with Bolsheviks, and thus
completely subservient to the leadership of the ruling party. Other
parties were generally repressed or at best heavily policed.
Economically, they imposed âone-man managementâ and expected the workers
to obey the orders issued from a distant bureaucracy. Given this, it
would be wise to show how Trotskyâs love of the city worker was
expressed at the time to better compare it to the alleged âhatredâ of
the Makhnovists:
The only solution of economic difficulties that is correct from the
point of view both of principle and of practice is to treat the
population of the whole country as the reservoir of the necessary labour
powerâan almost inexhaustible reservoirâand to introduce strict order
into the work of its registration, mobilisation, and utilisation... the
course we have adopted is unquestionably the right one.[133]
[T]he road to Socialism lies through a period of the highest possible
intensification of the principle of the State.... Just as a lamp, before
going out, shoots up in a brilliant flame, so the State, before
disappearing, assumes the form of the dictatorship of the proletariat,
i.e., the most ruthless form of State, which embraces the life of the
citizens authoritatively in every direction.... No organisation except
the army has ever controlled man with such severe compulsion as does the
State organisation of the working class in the most difficult period of
transition. It is just for this reason that we speak of the
militarisation of labour.[134]
It would consequently be a most crying error to confuse the question as
to the supremacy of the proletariat with the question of boards of
workers at the head of factories. The dictatorship of the proletariat is
expressed in the abolition of private property in the means of
production, in the supremacy over the whole Soviet mechanism of the
collective will of the workers, and not at all in the form in which
individual economic enterprises are administered.... I consider if the
civil war had not plundered our economic organs of all that was
strongest, most independent, most endowed with initiative, we should
undoubtedly have entered the path of one-man management in the sphere of
economic administration much sooner and much less painfully.[135]
[T]he State and the trade unions ... acquire new rights of some kind
over the worker. The worker does not merely bargain with the Soviet
State: no, he is subordinated to the Soviet State, under its orders in
every directionâfor it is his State.[136]
Ignoring the question of the vast and powerful state machine
(bureaucracy) this would need, an obvious question is: Was it âhisâ
state? Did workers run this âmost ruthless form of Stateâ to which they
were âsubordinatedâ? No:
We have more than once been accused of having substituted for the
dictatorship of the Soviets the dictatorship of our party. Yet it can be
said with complete justice that the dictatorship of the Soviets became
possible only by means of the dictatorship of the party. It is thanks to
the clarity of its theoretical vision and its strong revolutionary
organisation that the party has afforded to the Soviets the possibility
of becoming transformed from shapeless parliaments of labour into the
apparatus of the supremacy of labour. In this âsubstitutionâ of the
power of the party for the power of the working class there is nothing
accidental, and in reality there is no substitution at all.... The
dictatorship of the proletariat, in its very essence, signifies the
immediate supremacy of the revolutionary vanguard, which relies upon the
heavy masses, and, where necessary, obliges the backward tail to dress
by the head.[137]
Unsurprisingly, the massive state machine required to order the
subordinated worker around (and to repress them if they objected)
quickly acquired class interests of its own, as anarchists had long
predicted.
As an example of the lack of a Makhnovist programme for urban areas, one
Leninist gave the example of Makhnoâs advice to railway workers in
Aleksandrovsk âwho had not been paid for many weeksâ that they should
âsimply charge passengers a fair price and so generate their own wages.â
He states that this âadvice aimed at reproducing the petit-bourgeois
patterns of the countryside.â[138] Trotsky, in contrast, simply
âplac[ed] the railwaymen and the personnel of the repair workshops under
martial lawâ and âsummarily oustedâ the leaders of the railwaymenâs
trade union when they objected.â The Central Administrative Body of
Railways (Tsektran) he created was run by him âalong strictly military
and bureaucratic lines.â In other words, he applied his ideas on the
âmilitarisation of labourâ in full.[139] It also failed in its own
terms, for a few months after Trotsky imposed this there was a
âdisastrous collapse of the railway network in the winter of
1920â1.â[140]
What better signifies âhatredâ of the city worker? The state-capitalist
social relations imposed on the workers by the Bolshevik Party
dictatorship or the self-managed ones within freely elected soviets
recommended to the workers by Makhno? If the Makhnovist position that
workers had to organise themselves to run their own workplaces was
anti-proletarian, does that mean genuine proletarian policies were those
pursued by the Bolsheviks? Namely, âdictatorialâ one-man management,
militarisation of labour, repression of strikes?[141]
Only an ideologue could suggest that Makhnoâs advice (and it was advice,
not a decree imposed from above as was Trotskyâs) can be considered
worse. Indeed, by being based on workersâ self-management it was
infinitely more socialist than the militarisation of labour of
Bolshevism. It seems paradoxical, to say the least, to proclaim that the
Makhnovists had no working-class support or programme, while at the same
time defending the rule of a party that would have been kicked out if
workers had had genuine soviet democracy.
Those who accuse the Makhnovists in this way fail to understand the
nature of anarchism. Anarchism argues that it is up to working-class
people to organise their own activities. This meant that, ultimately, it
was up to the railway workers themselves (in association with other
workers) to organise their own work and industry. Rather than being
imposed by a few leaders, real socialism can only come from below, built
by working people through their own efforts and their own class
organisations. Anarchists can suggest ideas and solutions, but
ultimately it is up to workers (and peasants) to organise their own
affairs. Thus, rather than being condemned, the Makhnovist position
should be praised, as it was made in a spirit of equality and encouraged
workersâ self-management and self-activity.
Finally, we should comment on the issue of political parties in the
Makhnovist free soviet system. It is sometimes suggested that âMakhno
held elections, but no parties were allowed to participate in
them.â[142] Such claims simply show an ignorance of both the Makhnovists
and the soviet system in Bolshevik Russia and Ukraine. In terms of the
former, Mensheviks, Bolsheviks and Left SRs were elected to Makhnovist
organised congresses and soviets.[143] In terms of the latter, the
soviet system favoured by the Bolsheviks allowed various parties voting
representation in soviet executive committees, members appointed by the
parties and not elected from the soviet assembly. In addition, voting
was conducted by party lists, which meant so-called delegates could be
anyone. Thus, early 1920 saw a chemical factory elect left Menshevik
Julius Martov as its âdelegateâ to the Moscow soviet, defeating that
equally well-known chemical worker Vladimir Lenin by seventy-six votes
to eight.[144] Unsurprisingly, Russian anarcho-syndicalists also opposed
âparty listsâ as these resulted in âpolitical chatterboxes gaining
entryâ to soviets and âturning [them] into a talking-shop.â[145]
In short, members of political parties could be and were elected to
Makhnovist organised congresses and could be and were elected to organs
created by those congresses. They gained their mandate from convincing
those they worked with to elect them rather than, say, being appointed
via the party leadership or as part of a party list. Like the Kronstadt
rebels, the Makhnovists argued for all power to the soviets and not to
parties. This did not mean banning parties but rather ensuring their
proper place and that their presence represented actual popular support
for the delegate.
Ultimately, Leninist attacks on the Makhnovists are no more substantial
than the response of Monty Pythonâs King Arthur to the searing
anarcho-syndicalist critique of monarchy in The Holy Grail: âBloody
peasants!â
As Voline shows, the Makhnovist movement is of note simply because while
fighting a terrible civil war and facing imperialist intervention, it
did not forget its ideas and aims. Indeed, it applied them to a degree
that has few parallels in the history of revolutions. Strangely, given
Leninistsâ willingness to ignore, rationalise and defend the many
deviations by the Bolsheviks from what their followers say were their
core values, they are far less willing to do so for the Makhnovists.
Then every failure to apply their principles completely is denounced and
proclaimed a reason to reject the movement out of hand. The contrast
could not be more striking.
It should go without saying that no anarchist suggests that the
Makhnovist movement was perfect. Far from itâas would be expected in a
life-and-death struggle against Red and White tyranny, mistakes were
made, injustices occurred, atrocities were committed, and principles
were violated.[146] Anarchists no more hold the Makhnovists to an
impossible standard than we do the Bolsheviks. The issue is whether the
movement was protecting working-class autonomy and freedoms or
destroying them, whether it was clearing the way for future socialist
development or leading the revolution into a new class system.[147] On
this criterion, the Makhnovists show that there were alternatives
available and that ideologyâBolshevik ideologyâwas an important factor
in the rise of Stalinism.
Finally, it would be remiss not to comment upon the Russian anarchist
movement. If Ukraine showed the potential of an anarchism
well-understood and well-organised, Russia showed the opposite. There
the movement was divided and disorganised, essentially built during the
summer of 1917 and without long-term links with the labour movement.
These features hindered the spread of anarchist influence in 1917, and
while it did grow, as Voline indicates, it did not reach its full
potential before the Bolsheviks repressed it. So as well as showing the
importance of politicsâlibertarian versus authoritarianâon the outcome
of the revolution, the Makhnovists show the importance of a
well-organised, labour-orientated anarchist movement.[148]
The Kronstadt uprising of early 1921 was a key moment in the
revolution.[149] While the revolution had been pushed in an
authoritarian direction since early 1918, the crushing of this revolt
for soviet democracy marked the end of the revolutionâthis was the point
when the new class secured its final victory over the Unknown
Revolution. More, it was the final straw for many libertarians who had
come to Russia with the hope of aiding the revolutionânot least,
Alexander Berkman and Emma Goldman.
The revolt is covered well by Voline (Book III, Part I).[150] Here we
sketch some of the latter-day attacks on the rebels that Volineâs
account does not cover. It is important to stress that the revolt broke
out in solidarity with a general strike in Petrograd. This is often
downplayed in Leninist accounts of the uprising, while Trotsky argued
that from âthe class point of viewâ it is âextremely important to
contrast the behaviour of Kronstadt to that of Petrograd in those
critical daysâ for the âuprising did not attract the Petrograd workers.
It repelled them. The stratification proceeded along class lines. The
workers immediately felt that the Kronstadt mutineers stood on the
opposite side of the barricadesâand they supported the Soviet power. The
political isolation of Kronstadt was the cause of its internal
uncertainty and its military defeat.â[151] This is easy to refute:
He omits the most important reason for the seeming indifference of the
workers of Petrograd. It is of importance, therefore, to point out that
the campaign of slander, lies and calumny against the sailors began on
the 2^(nd) March, 1921.... In addition, Petrograd was put under martial
law.... Under these iron-clad rules it was physically impossible for the
workers of Petrograd to ally themselves with Kronstadt, especially as
not one word of the manifestoes issued by the sailors in their paper was
permitted to penetrate to the workers in Petrograd. In other words, Leon
Trotsky deliberately falsifies the facts.[152]
The lies include claims that the revolt was a White plot organised by a
Tsarist general (who had been appointed by Trotsky!). We will not bother
with these, as no evidence has ever been presented by the Bolsheviks or
their latter-day defenders to support these claims.[153] Here we
concentrate on the key Leninist positions that have hardly moved since
Trotsky was first forced to address the issue in the 1930s. First, that
the revolt had to be crushed due to the danger of the counter-revolution
and, second, that the rebel sailors of 1921 were not the heroic sailors
of 1917.
So what of the sailors in 1921? Had they been there since 1917? The
short answer is yes.
Academic Evan Mawdsley argues that âit seems reasonable to challenge the
previous interpretationâ that there had been a âmarked change in the
composition of the men in the fleet ... particularly ... at the
Kronstadt Naval Base.â âThe composition of the DOT [Active Detachment],â
he concludes, âhad not fundamentally changed, and anarchistic young
peasants did not predominate there. The available data suggests that the
main difficulty was not ... that the experienced sailors were being
demobilised. Rather, they were not being demobilised rapidly enough.â
The ârelevant point is length of service, and available information
indicates that as many as three-quarters of the DOT ratingsâthe
Kronstadt mutineersâhad served in the fleet at least since the World
War.â The âmajority of men seem to have been veterans of 1917,â and âfor
the DOT as a whole on 1 January 1921, 23.5% could have been drafted
before 1911, 52% from 1911 to 1918 and 24.5% after 1918.â More
specifically, in terms of the two battleships whose sailors played the
leading role in 1921 revolt, the Petropavlovsk and the Sevastopol (both
renowned since 1917 for their revolutionary zeal), he shows that âat the
time of the uprisingâ of the 2,028 sailors, 20.2% were recruited into
the navy before 1914, 59% joined in the years 1914â16, 14% in 1917 and
6.8% in the years 1918â21. So 93.2% of the sailors who launched the
revolt in 1921 had been there in 1917.[154]
Israel Getzler in his excellent account of Kronstadt between 1917 and
1921 investigated this issue and presented identical conclusions. It is
âcertainly the caseâ that the âactivists of the 1921 uprising had been
participants of the 1917 revolutionsâ including the â1,900 veteran
sailors of the Petropavlovsk and the Sevastopol who spearheaded it. It
was certainly true of a majority of the Revolutionary Committee and of
the intellectuals.... Likewise, at least three-quarters of the 10,000 to
12,000 sailorsâthe mainstay of the uprisingâwere old hands who had
served in the navy through war and revolution.â He also quotes a
Bolshevik who visited Kronstadt a few months before the uprising, who,
while concerned that âsooner or later Kronstadtâs veteran sailors, who
were steeled in revolutionary fire and had acquired a clear
revolutionary world-view, would be replaced by inexperienced, freshly
mobilised young sailors,â had concluded that âin Kronstadt the red
sailor still predominates.â[155]
Likewise, Fedotoff-White notes that âa good manyâ of the rebels âhad had
ample experience in organisational and political work since 1917. A
number had long-standing associations with Anarchists and the Socialist
Revolutionaries of the Left.â In addition, the cruiser Rossiia had
joined in the decision to re-elect the Kronstadt soviet and its âcrew
consisted mostly of old seamen.â[156] Moreover, the majority of the
revolutionary committee were veterans of the Kronstadt soviet and the
October Revolution: âGiven their maturity and experience, not to speak
of their keen disillusionment as former participants in the revolution,
it was only natural that these seasoned bluejackets should be thrust
into the forefront of the uprising.â[157]
If we ignore all this evidenceâas Leninists are wont to[158]âwe can
still query the logic of Trotskyâs assertions. Writing in 1937, he
argued that Kronstadt had âbeen completely emptied of proletarian
elementsâ as â[a]ll the sailorsâ belonging to the shipsâ crews âhad
become commissars, commanders, chairmen of local soviets.â So Kronstadt
was âdenuded of all revolutionary forcesâ by âthe winter of 1919â
although he acknowledged that âa certain number of qualified workers and
techniciansâ remained to âtake care of the machinery,â but these were
âpolitically unreliable,â as proven by the fact they had not been
selected to fight in the civil war. As evidence, he mentions that he had
wired a ârequest at the end of 1919, or in 1920, to âsend a group of
Kronstadt sailors to this or that pointââ and they had answered âNo one
left to send.â[159]
It is hard to know what to make of this nonsense, as surely Trotsky
would have thought it unwise for the Communist commissar at Kronstadt to
leave his fortress and its ships totally unmanned? Likewise, did he not
know that troops left to defend Petrograd needed a high level of
technical knowledge and experience to operate the battleships and
defences at Kronstadt? This meant that â[o]ne reason for the remarkable
survival in Kronstadt of these veteran sailors, albeit in greatly
diminished numbers, was precisely the difficulty of training, in wartime
conditions, a new generation competent in the sophisticated technical
skills required of Russiaâs ultra-modern battleships, and, indeed, in
the fleet generally.â This did not mean no one left, just that
significant numbers had to remain through necessity. Moreover, âby the
end of 1919 thousands of veteran sailors, who had served on many fronts
of the civil war and in the administrative network of the expanding
Soviet state, had returned to the Baltic Fleet and to Kronstadt, most by
way of remobilisation.â[160] Thus the idea that the sailors left and did
not come back is not valid.
The available evidence shows that most of the sailors of 1921 had been
there since 1917. This is also reflected in the politics raised during
the uprising. Kronstadt in 1917 was never dominated by the Bolsheviks. A
âradical populist coalition of Maximalists and Left SRs held sway,
albeit precariously, within Kronstadt and its Soviet,â even if
âexternally Kronstadt was a loyal stronghold of the Bolshevik regime.â
At the time of the October Revolution, the majority of the soviet were
Left SRs and SR Maximalists, and while the Bolshevik representation
increased to 46 per cent in January 1918, it fell back to 29 per cent in
April (compared to 21 per cent and 22 per cent for the Left and
Maximalist SRs). Anarchists had a significant influence at the
grassroots, as well as a few delegates in the sovietâindeed, the
Kronstadt soviet voted to denounce the Bolshevik attack on the
anarchists in April 1918.[161]
The politics of Kronstadt in 1917â1918 were radical populist, for the
Maximalists occupied âa place in the revolutionary spectrum between the
Left SRâs and the anarchists while sharing elements of both.â They
âpreached a doctrine of total revolutionâ and called for a ââtoilersâ
soviet republicâ founded on freely elected soviets, with a minimum of
central state authority. Politically, this was identical with the
objective of the Kronstadters [in 1921], and âPower to the soviets but
not the partiesâ had originally been a Maximalist rallying-cry.â
Economically, the parallels âare no less striking.â They demanded that
âall the land be turned over to the peasants.â For industry they
rejected the Bolshevik theory and practice of âworkersâ controlâ over
bourgeois administrators in favour of the âsocial organisation of
production and its systematic direction by representatives of the
toiling people.â They opposed nationalisation and centralised state
management in favour of socialisation and workersâ self-management of
production. Indeed, â[o]n nearly every important point the Kronstadt
program, as set forth in the rebel Izvestiia, coincided with that of the
Maximalists.â[162]
So we should not be surprised that Kronstadtâs soviet was first
disbanded by the Bolsheviks on July 9, 1918, in the wake of the Left SR
ârevolt.â As in March 1921, the Left SR and Maximalist SR controlled
soviet was replaced by a Bolshevik revolutionary committee.[163]
The statistical information we have presented was unavailable when
anarchists wrote their accounts of the uprising. All they could go on
were the facts of the uprising itself and the demands of the rebels.
Based on these, it is little wonder they stressed the continuity between
the Red Kronstadters of 1917 and the rebels of 1921ânot least because,
as Emma Goldman notes, the sailors âdid in 1921 what they had done in
1917. They immediately made common cause with the workers [on strike in
Petograd]. The part of the sailors in 1917 was hailed as the red pride
and glory of the Revolution. Their identical part in 1921 was denounced
to the whole world as counter-revolutionary treasonâ by the Bolsheviks.
Little wonder that from when she arrived in Russia in January 1920
âuntil Kronstadt was âliquidatedâ the sailors of the Baltic fleet were
held up [by all] as the glorious example of valour and unflinching
courage.â[164] As the evidence shows, those who did soâincluding leading
Communist Party members, it must be stressedâwere right. The Kronstadt
rebels included many of those who took part in the 1917 revolution.
Still this line of defence by Leninists does have a political
impactârather than discussing what the uprising meant for the
revolution, we have substituted a trawl through the archives of the
Soviet state.
Ultimately, this line of defence is both meaningless and insulting.
Meaningless, for what if the rebels were recent recruits rather than the
seasoned sailors they actually were? They rose in solidarity with
striking workers and raised a political and economic programme
reflective of the aspirations of 1917, a programme that showed a clear
awareness of the problems facing the revolution and a clear solution
that rejected wage-labour (whether private or state) in favour of
working-class self-activity. That, surely, should be enough?
Particularly given that no Trotskyist asks how long workers have been
employed in a firm or for evidence on when their ancestors left the
countryside before supporting their strikes.
Insulting, for it assumes working peopleâwhether proletarian or
peasantâcannot learn from experience and draw their own conclusions as
to what is in their interests. After all, the sailors in 1905 and 1917
had been ânew recruitsâ at one stage, but they gained political
experience and class consciousness. Ironically, during 1917, âMenshevik
critics were fond of carping that most Bolshevik newcomers were young
lads fresh from the villages and wanting in long experience of
industrial life and political activity.â[165] And, indeed, it was
usually these industrial âraw recruitsâ of 1917 (as in 1905) who helped
organise soviets, strikes and demonstrations, as well as formulating
demands and raising slogans that were to the left of the Bolsheviks,
ensuring that âthe masses were incomparably more revolutionary than the
Party, which in turn was more revolutionary than its committeemen.â[166]
Does this process somehow stop just because the Bolsheviks are in power?
While some Trotskyists to this day play the statistics game, either by
assertion or by invention, others take a more sophisticated approach.
This is logical, for the first Leninist defence for crushing Kronstadt
makes the second meaninglessâif there were a danger of White attack then
surely it makes not a jot of difference whether the rebels were veterans
of 1917 or not? It is to this defence of the Bolsheviks that we now
turn, as summarised by Trotskyâs final words on its repression being âa
tragic necessityâ[167]
Were the Whites a threat? The Kronstadt revolt broke out months after
the end of the civil war in western Russia, when Wrangel fled from the
Crimea in November 1920. The Bolsheviks were so unafraid of White
invasion that by early 1921 they had demobilised half the Red Army (some
2,500,000 men).[168] Wrangelâs forces were âdispersed and their morale
saggingâ and it would have taken âmonths ... merely to mobilise his men
and transport them from the Mediterranean to the Baltic.â A second front
in the south âwould have meant almost certain disaster.â Indeed, in a
call issued by the Bolshevik Petrograd Defence Committee on 5 March,
they asked the rebels: âHavenât you heard what happened to Wrangelâs
men, who are dying like flies, in their thousands of hunger and
disease?â The call goes on to add: âThis is the fate that awaits you,
unless you surrender within 24 hours.â The French government, while
feeding Wrangelâs troops on humanitarian grounds, urged him âto
disband,â while the United States, Britain and France refused to
interfere.[169]
Lenin himself argued on 16 March that âthe enemiesâ around the Bolshevik
state were âno longer able to wage their war of interventionâ and so
were launching a press campaign around the revolt âwith the prime object
of disrupting the negotiations for a trade agreement with Britain, and
the forthcoming trade agreement with America.â[170]
There was no immediate military threat from the Whites or the
imperialists. There were various peasant uprisings and mass strikes, but
as these were driven by Bolshevik dictatorship they can hardly be used
to justify it. Which leaves the question of what would have happened if
Kronstadtâs demand for soviet democracy had been granted. Victor Serge
gives the sophisticated Leninist response:
After many hesitations, and with unutterable anguish, my Communist
friends and I finally declared ourselves on the side of the Party. This
is why. Kronstadt has right on its side. Kronstadt was the beginning of
a fresh, liberating revolution for popular democracy.... However, the
country was exhausted, and production practically at a standstill; there
were no reserves of any kind, not even reserves of stamina in the hearts
of the masses. The working-class elite that had been moulded in the
struggle against the old regime was literally decimated. The Party,
swollen by the influx of power-seekers, inspired little confidence....
Soviet democracy lacked leadership, institutions, and inspiration; at
its back there were only masses of starving and desperate men.
The popular counter-revolution translated the demand for freely-elected
soviets into one for âSoviets without Communists.â If the Bolshevik
dictatorship fell, it was only a short step to chaos, and through chaos
to a peasant rising, the massacre of the Communists, the return of the
emigres, and in the end, through the sheer force of events, another
dictatorship, this time anti-proletarian.[171]
Some modern-day Leninists follow this line of reasoning and want us to
believe that the Bolsheviks were defending the remaining gains of the
revolution. What gains, exactly? The only gains that remained were
Bolshevik power and nationalised industryâboth of which excluded the
real gains of the Russian Revolution, namely soviet democracy, the right
to independent unions and to strike, freedom of assembly, association
and speech for working people, the beginnings of workersâ
self-management of production and so on. Indeed, both âgainsâ were the
basis for the Stalinist bureaucracyâs power.
Thus, the core problem with Sergeâs account is the notion that the
Bolshevik dictatorship was not âanti-proletarian.â This is hard to
square with the reality of the regimeâunless we are talking of idealised
proletarians âsympathising instinctively with the party and carrying out
the menial tasks required by the revolutionââas Serge put in it
1920ârather than real ones.[172] Yes, the country was âexhausted,â but
that was, in part, because of the struggles workers had to wage against
the regime and the state repression they were met with. Likewise,
production was at a standstill in part due to the bureaucratic regime
the Bolsheviks were defending. Indeed, it took the Kronstadt revolt to
move away from what was later termed âwar communism,â but was then just
called âcommunism,â and the economy revived quickly under the New
Economic Policy.[173] So the potential was thereâthe revolt saw
precisely the renewal of activity and hope within both the town and the
naval base that Serge proclaimed did not exist in Russia.
Could Kronstadtâs demand for soviet democracy have indirectly produced
counter-revolution? Perhaps, for no revolution can be guaranteed to
succeed. However, what is certain is that the revolution had been
defeated in 1921 and the degeneration became worse. The regime did not
self-reformâcould not self-reform given the policy of its leadership.
The repression of Kronstadt meant the repression of the only political
and economic programme that could have saved the revolutionâfor a
ârevolutionaryâ regime that oversaw the suppression of the soviet
democracy and the elimination of workers from the management of industry
already signified the death of the revolution.
The notion that the Bolsheviks could have encouraged some kind of
proletarian âdemocracyâ while maintaining party dictatorship is the
logical conclusion of Sergeâs position. Yet this hope was utopian as can
be seen from the fate of the ânon-Party workersâ and peasantsâ
conferencesâ along with Soviet Congresses that Lenin pointed to in his
1920 diatribe against left-wing communism. Ignoring the awkward fact
that if the congresses of soviets were âdemocratic institutions, the
like of which even the best democratic republics of the bourgeois have
never knownâ then the Bolsheviks would have no need to âsupport, develop
and extendâ non-Party conferences âto be able to observe the temper of
the masses, come closer to them, meet their requirements, promote the
best among them to state posts,â[174] how the Bolsheviks met âtheir
requirementsâ is extremely significantâthey disbanded them, just as they
had with soviets with non-Bolshevik majorities in 1918. This was because
â[d]uring the disturbancesâ of late 1920, âthey provided an effective
platform for criticism of Bolshevik policiesâ and they âwere
discontinued soon afterward.â[175] So even advisory forums were too much
for the party, for they gave the masses a limited collective voice.
Benevolent dictatorships do not existâeven if the word âproletarianâ is
invoked. To support the regime whose policies helped create the
circumstances invoked to rationalise this decision is hardly convincing.
Even less convincing is the notion that a party dictatorship marked by a
massive and growing bureaucracy could reform itself, yet this is Sergeâs
position. As the rise of Stalin showed, this was far more utopian than
the hopes of the Kronstadt sailors.
The events of early 1921 cast a stark light on the nature of Bolshevism.
Here we have a movement demanding what was promised in 1917 and being
answered by bullets and cannons. Faced with a choice between soviet
democracy and party power, the partyâas it had since early
1918âpreferred the latter and destroyed the former to secure it.
The idea of a dictatorship of the party was Bolshevism at the time and
had been for a number of years. For example, the leading German
Communist Karl Radek argued in an article written on 1 April 1921 that
he was âconvinced that in the light of the events at Kronstadt, the
Communist elements which have so far not understood the role of the
Party during the revolution, will at last learn the true value of these
explanations.â For âthe full benefit of this lessonâ is that âeven when
that uprising bases itself on working-class discontentâ it must âbe
realised that, if the Communist Party can only triumph when it has the
support of the mass of workers, there will nevertheless arise situations
in the West where it will have to, for a certain period, keep power
using solely the forces of the vanguard.â He quoted an earlier article
of his from 1919:
And the mass ... may well hesitate in the days of great difficulties,
defeats, and it may even despair of victory and long to capitulate. The
proletarian revolution does not bring with it an immediate relief of
poverty, and in certain circumstances, it may even temporarily worsen
the situation of the proletariat. The adversaries of the proletarian
will take advantage of this opportunity to demand the government of the
workers themselves; it is for this reason that it will be necessary to
have a centralised Communist Party, powerful, armed with the means of
the proletarian government and determined to conserve power for a
certain time, even only as the Party of the revolutionary minority,
while waiting for the conditions of the struggle to improve and for the
morale of the masses to rise ... there can arise situations where the
revolutionary minority of the working class must shoulder the full
weight of the struggle and where the dictatorship of the proletariat can
only be maintained, provisionally at least, as the dictatorship of the
Communist Party.
The partyâs âfirm decision to retain power by all possible meansâ is
âthe greatest lesson of the Kronstadt events, the international lesson.â
Radek, needless to say, is just repeating the Bolshevik position in
words with more than usual clarity, while
âprovisionallyââunsurprisinglyâcame to be measured in decades and was
only ended by mass revolt.[176]
The lesson of Kronstadt for Bolshevism was the confirmation that soviet
democracy and revolution were incompatible, that party dictatorship was
an essential requirement for a âsuccessfulâ revolution. Lenin did not
stress this aspect of the âdictatorship of the proletariatâ in 1917,
limiting himself to talk of the âorganised control over the
insignificant capitalist minorityâ and âover the workers who have been
thoroughly corrupted by capitalism.â[177] Sadly, he did not find the
space to indicate that the word âcorruptedâ meant how much the workers
disagreed with the party. A more circular justification for elite rule
would be hard to find.
That Bolshevik authoritarianism predates the civil war indicates the
flaw in another Leninist argument about the degeneration of the
revolution, namely, isolation. If, we are informed, a revolution had
been successful elsewhereâspecifically, in Germanyâthen the Soviet
regime could have drawn upon the resources of an advanced industrial
power with a large proletariat. This would have meant the promises of
October could have been saved.[178]
Yet this is unconvincing for numerous reasons. First, as indicated, the
promises of October had been undermined from the start. Second, any
revolution in Germany would have almost certainly been dominated by
mainstream Marxism and also built the same centralised, hierarchical,
top-down structures favoured in Russia.[179] As such, it too would have
produced a new state bureaucracy (along with the bureaucracies of the
centralised social democratic party and trade unions). Third, the
revolution in Germany saw an economic collapse of relatively the same
size as in Russia. If, as the defenders of the Bolsheviks argue, the
economic crisis meant retreat in Russia then it would surely have meant
the same in Germany.[180] Fourth, the Bolsheviks had concluded that any
revolution needed to follow the same pathânamely centralised state
capitalism and party dictatorshipâand informed the worldâs
revolutionaries of these necessities. This is why Radek was peddling
this Bolshevik orthodoxy in Germany in 1919, while the Hungarian
Revolution saw the short-lived Communist Government of BĂ©la Kun apply
this perspective when it voided the election of anarchists and
syndicalists to the Budapest Council of Workersâ and Soldiersâ Deputies
in April that year.[181] If, as Trotsky and his followers had hoped, the
German revolution had succeeded in 1923 (or earlier), then the Russian
bureaucracy would not have been weakened but simply joined by a German
one.[182]
Actions speak louder than words. Yet it will still be argued that the
Bolsheviks were only reacting to events and were violating their real,
genuine core valuesâand their modern-day adherents would never dream of
doing likewise, even if their eagerness in defending the crushing of
Kronstadt suggests otherwise. It exposes those âsocialistsâ who proclaim
their opposition to Stalinism by arguing that socialism has to be
democratic to be socialist: that they make an exception when the right
peopleâLenin and Trotskyâare the dictators suggests that not only do
they not have a grasp of what socialism is, they would likewise destroy
the revolution in the name of âsavingâ itâor at least their own power,
which they equate with the revolution.
While ignoring or dismissingâwhen not slanderingâworking-class (whether
proletarian or peasant) opposition to the Bolshevik regime, Marxists
point to oppositional movements within the party as alternatives. As
Voline mentions some of these in passing, it would be useful to sketch
their positions and indicate their limitations. We concentrate on three
here: the Left Communists of 1917â1918, the Workersâ Opposition of
1920â1921 and the Left Opposition of the 1920s. All show the same
privileging of the party over the class. All would have produced a new
class system.
Voline mentions in passing meeting Nikolai Bukharin during the
negotiations over peace with Germany in 1918. At the time, he was a
leading member of the Left Communists in the Bolshevik Party, opposed to
many of Leninâs policies beyond just the peace of Brest-Litovsk. These
focused on how to build socialism, correctly objecting to Leninâs calls
in early 1918 to copy the âstate capitalismâ of Imperial Germany and
arguing for a socialism built by workersâ organisations.[183] Lenin
reacted sharply to criticism and defended his position, not least by
noting he had given his ââhighâ appreciation of state capitalism ...
before the Bolsheviks seized powerâ in his State and Revolution, so it
was âsignificant that [his opponents] did not emphasise thisâ aspect of
his 1917 ideas.[184] Unsurprisingly, modern-day Leninists do not
emphasise that element of Leninâs ideas either.
While the Left Communistsâ opposition to the state-capitalist aspects of
mainstream Bolshevism is of note, they âdid not comprehend that their
conception of central planning was incompatible with the devolution of
authority to the shop floor that they aspired to.â[185] Likewise,
politically they still prioritised the role and rule of the party. As
one leading member put it, the Left Communists were âthe most passionate
proponents of soviet power, but ... only so far as this power does not
degenerate ... in a petty-bourgeois direction.â[186] The party played
the key role for it was the only true bastion of the interests of the
proletariat, and so âis in every case and everywhere superior to the
soviets.... The soviets represent labouring democracy in general; and
its interest, and in particular the interests of the petty bourgeois
peasantry, do not always coincide with the interests of the
proletariat.â[187] In short, the party had predominance over the soviets
and an ideological perspective that allowed the party to ignore soviet
democracy:
Ultimately, the only criterion that they appeared able to offer was to
define âproletarianâ in terms of adherence to their own policy
prescriptions and ânonproletarianâ by non-adherence to them. In
consequence, all who dared to oppose them could be accused either of
being non-proletarian, or at the very least of suffering from some form
of âfalse consciousnessââand in the interests of building socialism must
recant or be purged from the party. Rather ironically, beneath the
surface of their fine rhetoric in defence of the soviets, and of the
party as âa forum for all of proletarian democracy,â there lay a
political philosophy that was arguably as authoritarian as that of which
they accused Lenin and his faction.[188]
Ultimately, it is hard not to conclude that the âideological
preconceptions of the Left Communists would have spawned a centralised,
bureaucratic system, not an emancipated society in which power was
diffused to the workers.â[189] After all, as Voline noted, Bukharin came
back into the fold and he âcontinued to eulogise the partyâs
dictatorship, sometimes quite unabashedlyâ during and after the civil
war, for the âBolsheviks no longer bothered to disclaim that ... the
dictatorship of the proletariat was the âdictatorship of the partyââ and
âclass immaturity was not a peculiarity of the Russian proletariat, but
a characteristic of proletarian revolutions in general.â[190]
The next oppositional current within the Bolshevik Party, the Workersâ
Opposition, is mentioned in passing by Voline but is probably the best
known of the various civil war era oppositions in the party due to many
works by Alexandra Kollontai being translated into English, not least
the groupâs manifesto. Voline, however, is wrong to suggest Lenin wrote
Left-Wing Communism explicitly against the Workersâ Opposition, his
focus was directed to communist movements elsewhereâin Britain, Holland,
Germany and Italy. It is true, though, that subsequently the German and
Dutch council communists did seek to work with the Workersâ Opposition,
and British anti-parliamentarian communists did publish Kollontaiâs
manifesto.
Kollontai along with Alexander Shlyapnikov championed the cause of the
Workersâ Opposition within the party and its congresses, unsuccessfully
as they, along with all factions, were banned at the Tenth Party
Congress in early 1921. Their arguments are of interest, recognising the
key question of whether âwe [shall] achieve Communism through the
workers or over their heads, by the hands of Soviet officials?â They
answered by arguing for the former and âsee[ing] in the unions the
managers and creators of the communist economy.â They proposed âa system
of self-activity for the masses,â for âthe building of Communism can and
must be the work of the toiling masses themselves.â Yet, as with the
Left Communists, these positive ideas are undermined by the typically
Marxist centralised institutional framework in which industrial unions
âelect the central body directing the whole economic life of the
republic.â[191]
However, while seeking an increase in economic freedom for the masses, a
close reading of Kollontaiâs text shows that her group did not seek
actual workersâ democracy, for the âtask of the Party at its present
crisisâ is to âlend its ear to the healthy class call of the wide
working masses,â but âcorrection of the activity of the Partyâ meant
âgoing back to democracy, freedom of opinion, and criticism inside the
Party.â The struggle was âfor establishing democracy in the party, and
for the elimination of all bureaucracy,â[192] rather than questioning
party dictatorship:
Nor did they in any form criticise the domination of the communist
minority over the majority of the proletariat. The fundamental weakness
of the case of the Workersâ Opposition was that, while demanding more
freedom of initiative for the workers, it was quite content to leave
untouched the state of affairs in which a few hundred thousand imposed
their will on many millions. âAnd since when have we been enemies of
komitetchina [manipulation and control by communist party committees], I
should like to know?â Shlyapnikov asked at the Tenth Party Congress. He
went on to explain that the trade union congress in which, as he and his
followers proposed, all control of industry should be vested would âof
courseâ be composed of delegates nominated and elected âthrough the
party cells, as we always do.â But he argued that the local trade union
cells would ensure the election of men qualified by experience and
ability in place of those who are âimposed on us at presentâ by the
centre. Kollontai and her supporters had no wish to disturb the
communist partyâs monopoly of political power.[193]
Unsurprisingly, Kollontai boasted at the Tenth Party Congress on 13
March 1921 that it was members of the Workersâ Opposition who had been
âthe firstâ to volunteer to attack Kronstadt and so âfulfil our duty in
the name of Communism and the international workersâ revolution.â[194]
Yet if the âwhole essence of bureaucracyâ is that â[s]ome third person
decides your fate,â[195] then this position hardly combated
bureaucratisation. However, even this limited expansion of workersâ
self-activity was too much for Lenin, who (incorrectly) denounced it as
a âsyndicalist deviation.â
So, to varying degrees, the pre-1921 oppositions did recognise problems
were developing but their solutions were primarily economic in nature
and fatally handicapped due to the leading role they gave to the party
and an unawareness of the part centralisation played in the creation of
the bureaucracy they denounced but whose roots they did not comprehend.
This is to be expected, for these were Bolshevik oppositions.
What of the post-1921 oppositions? Space precludes discussion of the
Workersâ Truth and Workersâ Group splits from the party, other than that
these seem to forsake party dictatorship and were the first groups of
party members to be repressed by the state in a way similar to
oppositional groups outside the party.[196] Instead, we will end with
the Left Opposition of 1923â1928, the favoured opposition of most
Leninists who tend to dismiss the previous groups.
The common perspective on the Left Opposition in Leninist circles is
that it reflected the principles of 1917, that it showedâto use the
words of Chris Harman, a leading member of a British Leninist partyâthat
âthere was always an alternative to Stalinismâ based on âreturning to
genuine workersâ democracy and consciously linking the fate of Russia to
the fate of world revolution.â The âhistorical merit of the Left
Oppositionâ was that it âframed a policy along these linesâ and âdid
link the question of the expansion of industry with that of
working-class democracy and internationalism.â[197]
In reality, the Left Opposition did not support working-class democracy
at all and instead denounced the âgrowing replacement of the party by
its own apparatus [that] is promoted by a âtheoryâ of Stalinâs which
denies the Leninist principle, inviolable for every Bolshevik, that the
dictatorship of the proletariat is and can be realised only through the
dictatorship of the party.â[198] Indeed, throughout the 1920s Trotsky
defended the necessity of party dictatorship time and time again.[199]
Yet if disagreements cannot be expressed in soviet elections, then they
will reappear within the ruling party itself in the shape of factions.
Yet if democracy in the soviets was counter-revolutionary, how can it be
revolutionary within the party? Particularly a party subject to an
influx of opportunists seeking power, influence and privileges. Hence
the ending of factions within the party and rule by the
leadershipâwhich, of course, cannot halt the corruption. By 1923,
Trotsky starts to see thisâand urges a purge of the party to cleanse it
so that âworkersâ democracyâ (within the party) can be revived, which
would mean that the bureaucracy could once again be subject to the
party. Would this have worked? It had not in 1921 when Lenin âproclaimed
a purge of the Party, aimed at those revolutionaries who had come in
from other partiesâi.e., those who were not saturated with the Bolshevik
mentality.â This âmeant the establishment within the Party of a
dictatorship of the old Bolsheviks, and the direction of disciplinary
measures, not against the unprincipled careerists and conformist
latecomers, but against those sections with a critical outlook.â[200]
Economically, the Left Opposition did not even have the merit of the
Left Communists or Workersâ Opposition in raising economic reforms. It
argued that ânationalisation of the means of production was a decisive
step toward the socialist reconstruction of that whole social system
which is founded upon the exploitation of man by manâ and that the
âappropriation of surplus value by a workersâ state is not, of course,
exploitation.â However, it also acknowledged that âwe have a workersâ
state with bureaucratic distortionsâ and a âswollen and privileged
administrative apparatus devours a very considerable part of our surplus
valueâ while âall the data testify that the growth of wages is lagging
behind the growth of the productivity of labour.â[201]
So an economic regime marked by one-man management by state-appointed
bosses under a party dictatorship could somehow be without exploitation,
even though someone other than the workers controlled both their labour
and how its product (and any surplus) was used? It is hardly surprising
that the new master class sought its own benefit; what is surprising is
that the Left Opposition could not see the reality of state capitalism.
Rather, it focused its attention on the living standards of the working
class and paid no attention to the relations of production in the
workplace, raising no proposals nor demands about establishing workersâ
control of industry. Given its self-proclaimed role as defender of
Leninist orthodoxy and its social position, perhaps that is not so
surprising after all.
The limitations of this perspective should be clearâbenevolent
dictatorships do not exist, and we would expect appeals to a ruling
bureaucracy to be less exploitative and oppressive would fall on deaf
ears. Still, its believers refused to let reality impact on their faith,
and, as Ante Ciliga recounted, even in the prison camps in the late
1920s and early 1930s, âalmost all the Trotskyists continued to consider
that âfreedom of partyâ would be âthe end of the revolution.â âFreedom
to choose oneâs partyâthat is Menshevism,â was the Trotskyistsâ final
verdict.â[202] Their leader likewise continued to argue this into the
late 1930s:
The revolutionary dictatorship of a proletarian party is for me not a
thing that one can freely accept or reject: It is an objective necessity
imposed upon us by the social realitiesâthe class struggle, the
heterogeneity of the revolutionary class, the necessity for a selected
vanguard in order to assure the victory. The dictatorship of a party
belongs to the barbarian prehistory as does the state itself, but we
cannot jump over this chapter, which can open (not at one stroke)
genuine human history.... The revolutionary party (vanguard) which
renounces its own dictatorship surrenders the masses to the
counter-revolution.... Abstractly speaking, it would be very well if the
party dictatorship could be replaced by the âdictatorshipâ of the whole
toiling people without any party, but this presupposes such a high level
of political development among the masses that it can never be achieved
under capitalist conditions. The reason for the revolution comes from
the circumstance that capitalism does not permit the material and the
moral development of the masses.[203]
As with Kollantai, the term âworkersâ democracyâ was used by Trotsky to
mean only internal party democracy: âWorkersâ democracy means the
liberty of frank discussion of the most important questions of party
life by all members, and the election of all leading party functionaries
and commissions.â[204] As for the workers, as Trotsky explained over a
decade later, the so-called workersâ state was needed to repress them:
The very same masses are at different times inspired by different moods
and objectives. It is just for this reason that a centralised
organisation of the vanguard is indispensable. Only a party, wielding
the authority it has won, is capable of overcoming the vacillation of
the masses themselves ... if the dictatorship of the proletariat means
anything at all, then it means that the vanguard of the proletariat is
armed with the resources of the state in order to repel dangers,
including those emanating from the backward layers of the proletariat
itself.[205]
Of course, everyone is, by definition, âbackwardâ compared to the
vanguard and such a regime cannot exist without a state in âthe proper
sense of the word,â a centralised, top-down structure by which a
minority (in this case, the party leaders) rule the many (as always, the
working class). As âvacillationâ is expressed by elections, we have the
logical basis for party dictatorship. Needless to say, here Trotsky is
simply repeating what he had argued while in power:
The âworkersâ oppositionâ puts forward dangerous slogans which fetishise
the principles of democracy. Elections from within the working class
were put above the party, as if the party had no right to defend its
dictatorship even when this dictatorship was temporarily at odds with
the passing feelings of workersâ democracy.... It is essential to have a
sense ofâso to speakâthe revolutionary-historical primacy of the party,
which is obliged to hold on to its dictatorship, despite the temporary
waverings of the masses ... even of the workers.[206]
We have come a long way from Leninâs assertion that the âworking people
need the state only to suppress the resistance of the exploiters, and
only the proletariat can direct this suppression, can carry it
out.â[207] In reality, the structure of the stateâeven a so-called
âproletarianâ oneâensured that would never come to pass, for it has its
own class interests.
To conclude: all the Bolshevik alternatives are of note by what they
shareânamely, a dominant role for the party and a corresponding
unconcern with working-class freedom and democracy. We need to remember
that the only alternative raised by Leninists was formulated within the
context of party rule: and Leninists like to proclaim anarchism utopian.
Harman, like most Trotskyists, seems ignorant of his own political
tradition, not least when this leading Trotskyist asserted that it was
only after âLeninâs illness and subsequent deathâ that the âprinciples
of October were abandoned one by one.â[208]
No single book can hope to cover all aspects of a seismic event like the
Russian Revolution nor can an introduction. However, both can give
pointers to key events and key areas for further research.
The differences Voline sketches between libertarian and authoritarian
socialism remain true. The authoritarian socialist, while paying lip
service to a very similar vision of revolution, ultimately argues that
the libertarian approach is noble but utopian and doomed to failure as,
by necessity (to quote Lenin from December 1920), âthe Party, shall we
say, absorbs the vanguard of the proletariat, and this vanguard
exercises the dictatorship of the proletariatâ for âin all capitalist
countriesâ the proletariat âis still so divided, so degraded, and so
corrupted in partsâ that the dictatorship âcan be exercised only by a
vanguard.â The lesson of the revolution was clear: âthe dictatorship of
the proletariat cannot be exercised by a mass proletarian
organisation.â[209] If this is the case, the libertarian replies, then
the authoritariansâ so-called workersâ state is also doomed, for
authoritarian methods will simply replace one minority-class state by
another, just as despotic and remote from the people and just as
unwilling to âwither awayâ as its capitalist predecessor. Both logic and
the evidence of history show this.
Voline recounts the differences between libertarian and authoritarian
socialism well, presenting both the theory and practice in a clear
manner even if he only concentrates on two events, albeit two key ones,
along with somewhat sweeping overviews. These may not convince the eager
Leninist who knows the rhetoric of 1917 far better than the grim reality
of 1918 onward and who has read the many apologetics and rationales used
to justify the latterâs divergence from the former. It may, however,
start the process of undermining these illusions and open a wider,
bottom-up, libertarian perspective.
Few become members of a Leninist party (at least, when it is not in
power!) seeking to create a state-capitalist party dictatorship. They
genuinelyâat least initiallyâseek to liberate society from the evils of
class, to see the emancipation of the working class. That the Russian
Revolution started this process cannot be denied but recognition that
the politics of the Bolsheviks ended it will be. Voline will help that
recognition of reality and show that there is an alternative that
embodies the initial hopes and desires of every rebel: anarchism.
Simply put, every Leninist will have what could be called their personal
Kronstadtâthe time when they have to choose between their socialist
aspirations and defending Bolshevism. Then we hope that the class
criteria Voline stresses will be central in their thoughts. Emma Goldman
put it well:
There is another objection to my criticism on the part of the
Communists. Russia is on strike, they say, and it is unethical for a
revolutionist to side against the workers when they are striking against
their masters. That is pure demagoguery practised by the Bolsheviki to
silence criticism.
It is not true that the Russian people are on strike. On the contrary,
the truth of the matter is that the Russian people have been locked out
and that the Bolshevik Stateâeven as the bourgeois industrial
masterâuses the sword and the gun to keep the people out. In the case of
the Bolsheviki this tyranny is masked by a world-stirring slogan: thus
they have succeeded in blinding the masses. Just because I am a
revolutionist I refuse to side with the master class, which in Russia is
called the Communist Party.[210]
The problem is that Leninists seem unable to recognise that there was a
master class in Soviet Russia. That their vision of socialism cannot be
easily distinguished from state capitalism and that their centralised
âsovietâ power could so easily become party dictatorship, show the
poverty and limitations of their politics. Worse, given the apologetics
indulged in by the various defenders of the Bolsheviks, the ritualistic
invoking of âobjective circumstancesâ and the downplaying of ideological
influences on the degeneration of the revolution, we cannot help but
conclude that given the chance they would do exactly the same as their
heroes Lenin and Trotskyâwith exactly the same sorry results.
As in 1917, the issue still remains that which Voline so well explained:
the State or Revolution.
Iain McKay
www.anarchistfaq.org
Daniel Guérin reprinted an extract from the unpublished conclusion of
The Unknown Revolution in his essential anthology of anarchist texts, No
Gods, No Masters (Ni Dieu Ni Maitre) and we include this autographical
sketch here.[211] This translation first appeared in News from Nowhere
(Canada, 1973) before being reprinted in The Cienfuegos Press Anarchist
Review 2 (1977).
In April 1917 I met Trotsky again. (We had known each other in Russia,
and, later in France from which we were both expelled in 1916.) We met
in a print shop which specialised in printing the various publications
of the Russian left. He was then editor of a daily Marxist paper Novy
Mir (New World). As for me, I had been entrusted with editing the last
numbers of Golos Truda (Voice of Labour), the weekly organ of the
anarcho-syndicalist Union of Russian Workers, shortly before it was
moved to Russia. I used to spend one night a week at the print shop
while the paper was being prepared. That is how I happened to meet
Trotsky on my first night there.
Naturally we spoke about the Revolution. Both of us were preparing to
leave America in the near future to return home.
In the course of our conversation I said to Trotsky: âTruly I am
absolutely sure that you, the Marxists of the left, will end up by
seizing power in Russia. That is inevitable, because the Soviets, having
been restored, will surely enter into conflict with the bourgeois
government. The government will not be able to destroy them because all
the workers of the country, both industrial workers and peasants, and
also most of the army, will naturally put themselves on the side of the
Soviets against the bourgeoisie and the government. And once the Soviets
have the support of the people and the army, they will triumph in the
struggle. And once they have won it will be you, the Marxists, who will
inevitably be carried into power. Because the workers are seeking the
revolution in its most advanced form. The syndicalists and anarchists
are too weak in Russia to attract the attention of the workers rapidly
by their ideas. So the masses will put their confidence in you and you
will become âthe masters of the country.â And then, look out anarchists!
The conflict between you and us is unavoidable. You will begin to
persecute us as soon as your power is consolidated. And you will finish
by shooting us like partridges...â
â...Come, come, comrade,â replied Trotsky. âYou have a stubborn and
incorrigible imagination. Do you think we are really divided? A mere
question of method, which is quite secondary. Like us you are
revolutionaries. Like you we are anarchists in the final analysis. The
only difference is that you would like to establish your anarchism
immediately without a preparatory transition, while we, the Marxists, do
not believe it possible to âleapâ in one bound into the libertarian
millennium. We anticipate a transitory epoch in the course of which the
ground for an anarchist society will be cleared and ploughed with the
help of the anti-bourgeois political powers: the dictatorship of the
proletariat exercised by the proletarian party in power. In the end, it
involves only a âshadeâ of difference, nothing more. On the whole we are
very close to one another. We are friends in arms. Remember now: we have
a common enemy to fight. How can we think of fighting among ourselves?
Moreover, I have no doubt that you will be quickly convinced of the
necessity of a temporary proletarian socialist dictatorship. I donât see
any real reason for a war between you and us. We will surely march hand
in hand. And then, even if we donât agree, you are all wrong in
supposing that we, the socialists, will use brutal force against the
anarchists! Life itself and the judgement of the masses will resolve the
problem and will put us in agreement. No! Can you really admit for a
single instant such an absurdity: socialists in power shooting
anarchists? Come, come, what do you take us for? Anyhow, we are
socialists, comrade Voline! We are not your enemies...â
In December 1919, seriously ill, I was arrested by the Bolshevik
military authorities in the Makhnovist region of the Ukraine.
Considering me an important militant, the authorities advised Trotsky of
my arrest by a special telegram and asked for his instructions
concerning me. The reply, also by telegram, arrived quickly, clearly,
laconically: âSHOOT HIM IMMEDIATELYâTROTSKY.â I was not shot, thanks to
a set of circumstances particularly fortunate and entirely fortuitous.
The Unknown Revolution was first published in France as La RĂ©volution
Inconnue in 1947, two years after Volineâs death, and republished in
1969. It appeared in English in the 1950s, when an abridged version was
published in two volumes in 1954 and 1955 by the Libertarian Book Club
(New York City) and by Freedom Press (London). Translated by Holley
Cantine, Nineteen-Seventeen: The Russian Revolution (1954) included
Volineâs preface and Book II (without subsections and some renamed and
merged chapters), while The Unknown Revolution: Kronstadt 1921, Ukraine
1918â21 (1955) included Book III. It was finally published in full in
America by Red and Black / Solidarity in 1974, with the missing sections
translated by Fredy Perlman. It was reprinted by Black Rose books in
1975 (and again in 1990). This edition is a reprint of this last
complete version.
The various Socialist Parties active during the Russian Revolution can
be split into two broad groupings: Marxist and Populist.
The Marxists were grouped in the Russian Social Democratic Labour Party
(RSDLP), modelled on the German Social Democratic Party, whose main
theoretician was Karl Kautsky. The immediate aim of the RSDLP was to
create a bourgeois republic in order to build capitalism in Russia,
arguing like other Marxists that socialism could only be based upon a
developed capitalist economy. At its Second Conference in 1903, the
party split into two factions ostensibly over minor issues of party
organisation.[212] Those who were in the minority in a crucial vote on
the question of party membership came to be called Mensheviks (from the
Russian word for minority), while the other faction become known as the
Bolsheviks (from the Russian word for majority). The factions became
independent parties in 1912, when a Bolsheviks only party conference in
Prague formally expelled the Mensheviks and created the Russian Social
Democratic Labour Party (bolsheviks) or RSDLP(b), unofficially referred
to as the Bolshevik Party. In 1918, the RSDLP(b) became the Russian
Communist Party (bolsheviks) due to the fact most Social Democratic
Parties had supported their ruling class during the First World War, not
least the German party.
The leading member of the Bolsheviks was Vladimir Lenin, who, in 1917,
won his party over his to the idea of pushing the bourgeois revolution
toward a social revolution (a position previously only advocated by
anarchists during the near revolution of 1905). The leading member of
the Mensheviks was Julius Martov, who persuaded his party to adopt a
left-wing position in 1918 after its disastrous participation in the
Provisional Government during 1917 (not least, supporting its pursuit of
the war effort). With the victory of Martovâs
Menshevik-Internationalists, the party accepted the October Revolution
and opposed attempts to violently overthrow the Bolshevik regime, while
working as the legal opposition to Bolshevik authoritarianism.
The Populists were grouped into the Socialist Revolutionary Party (SRs)
and had an agrarian socialist position. The party had a substantial
peasant support and rejected the Marxist notion that Russia had to go
through a capitalist stage before socialism was possible. Instead, the
populists argued that the peasant commune (Mir) could be the basis of a
socialist transformation. Like both wings of the RSDLP before 1917,
their political aim was the creation of a republic based on a
democratically elected constituent assembly that would be the means to
achieve land reform and wider social transformation.
After the February Revolution of 1917, the SRs shared power with liberal
parties and Mensheviks within the Russian Provisional Government.
However, many members opposed this policy in favour of a social
revolution based on the soviets, opposition to the war and immediate
land reform. With the October Revolution, the party split and those who
supported the Bolshevik revolution formed the Left SRs, led by Maria
Spiridonova. The anti-Bolshevik faction became known as the Right SRs.
The Left SRs worked with the Bolsheviks, entering into a coalition
government with them as a minority partner in December 1917, before
resigning their governmental positions in March 1918 in protest at the
signing and ratification of the Treaty of Brest-Litovsk (although they
objected to numerous other Bolshevik policies, not least those directed
against the peasants). Finally, there was the smaller grouping of SR
Maximalists who were politically between the Left SRs and the
anarchists.
November 1917 saw the SRs gain 380 representatives in the constituent
assembly against 168 Bolsheviks, leading the Bolsheviks to disband the
assembly after its first sitting in January 1918.[213] This went against
the Bolshevikâs long-standing support for the constituent assembly and
their own demands during 1917 that one be called. Lenin justified this
action by pointing to the soviets as being a more democratic form of
state and that the election to the constituent assembly took place on
âthe basis of the election lists of the parties existing prior to the
proletarian-peasant revolution under the rule of the bourgeoisieâ (i.e.,
before the SR split, meaning voters could not express support for the
Left SRs).[214] Considering this a betrayal of both the long-standing
aims of the revolution and democratic norms, the Right SRs took
advantage of the revolt of the Czech Legion in late May 1918 to form the
democratic counter-revolution based around the Committee of Members of
the Constituent Assembly (Komuch) in Samara. Aligning themselves with
Tsarist generals, they were quickly marginalised and replaced by the
Whites who aimed at a restoration of the former autocratic regime. By
early 1919, the civil war was primarily between the Bolshevik state and
the Whites, with most SRs and Mensheviks supporting the former as the
lesser evil.
The soviets (Russian for councils) were created in 1905 as delegates
elected from workplaces to co-ordinate strikes, subject to specific
mandates and recall.[215] These were reformed in 1917 and included
delegates from military units along with appointees from political
parties being included on their executive committees. The first national
soviet congress took place in June 1917, with delegates elected from
local soviets then electing a Central Executive Committee (VTsIK), which
made decisions between congresses.
The Bolsheviks organised an insurrection to coincide with the second
national congress in November 1918 (October, in the Old Style calendar),
which was ratified by a small majority of attendees (basically, the
Bolsheviks and Left SRs delegates). As well as re-electing a new VTsIK,
the congress also elected a sixteen-member Council of Peopleâs
Commissars (Sovnarkom), with Lenin as its chairman. This was an
executive body above the soviet congressâs executive, which functioned
as a government. Avoiding bourgeois terms like cabinet, minister, and
ministry, the new regime had instead council, commissars, and a peopleâs
commissariat.
The All-Russian Congress met quarterly until the Sixth All-Russian
Congress in November 1918, then it was called only in December 1919,
1920 and 1921 (when it was formally agreed that it would meet annually
in the future). The Congress was formed of representatives of urban
soviets (one deputy per twenty-five thousand voters) and provincial
soviets (one deputy for every 125 thousand inhabitants), thereby
building in a one to five weighting of the proletariat against the
peasantry (only members of these two classes had a vote, all other
social classes being denied a ballot). The VTsIK was originally intended
to remain in permanent session, but its meetings gradually declined in
frequency until, in 1921, it was limited to meeting three times a year.
The VTsIK also had a presidium, in theory a small committee elected to
manage its procedural matters. Local soviets were expected to execute
the decisions of the Sovnarkom.[216]
While in theory the VTsIK was the supreme organ of power between the
sovereign national congresses, it was quickly relegated to a mere rubber
stamp for Sovnarkom decrees. It must be stressed that in Bolshevik
circles this was considered perfectly fine and not an unfortunate side
effect of the civil war (indeed, it existed from the first day of the
October Revolution). As Lenin recounted in 1920:
The mere presentation of the questionââdictatorship of the party or
dictatorship of the class; dictatorship (party) of the leaders, or
dictatorship (party) of the masses?ââtestifies to most incredibly and
hopelessly muddled thinking.... To go so far, in this connection, as to
contrast, in general, the dictatorship of the masses with a dictatorship
of the leaders is ridiculously absurd, and stupid.... In Russia today
... the dictatorship is exercised by the proletariat organised in the
Soviets; the proletariat is guided by the Communist Party of
Bolsheviks.... The Party, which holds annual congresses ... is directed
by a Central Committee of nineteen elected at the Congress, while the
current work in Moscow has to be carried on by still smaller bodies,
known as the Organising Bureau and the Political Bureau, which are
elected at plenary meetings of the Central Committee, five members of
the Central Committee to each bureau. This, it would appear, is a
full-fledged âoligarchy.â No important political or organisational
question is decided by any state institution in our republic without the
guidance of the Partyâs Central Committee.... Such is the general
mechanism of the proletarian state power viewed âfrom above,â from the
standpoint of the practical implementation of the dictatorship. We hope
that the reader will understand why the Russian Bolshevik who has known
this mechanism for twenty-five years and has seen it develop out of
small, illegal and underground circles, cannot help regarding all this
talk about âfrom aboveâ or âfrom below,â about the dictatorship of
leaders or the dictatorship of the masses, etc., as ridiculous and
childish nonsense.[217]
Lenin, unlike anarchists, did not bother to view this state power âfrom
below,â from the perspective of the working class in whose name it
claimed to rule. As Volineâs work shows, there are fundamental
differencesâat least for the massesâin a regime organised from the
bottom up and that subject to rule from above by a fewâeven if those few
talk of ultrademocratic soviets alongside a party dictatorship.
[1] Michael Bakunin, Bakunin on Anarchism (Montréal: Black Rose Books,
1980), 318â19.
[2] Sadly, it is necessary to explain what we mean by âlibertarian,â as
this term has been appropriated by the free-market capitalist right.
Socialist use of libertarian dates from 1857 when it was first used as a
synonym for anarchist by communist-anarchist Joseph DĂ©jacque in an Open
Letter to Pierre-Joseph Proudhon and in the following year as the title
for his paper Le Libertaire, Journal du Mouvement Social. This usage
became more commonplace in the 1880s, and by the end of the nineteenth
century libertarian was used as an alternative for anarchist
internationally. The American right knowingly stole the term in the
1950s. See my â160 Years of Libertarian,â Anarcho-Syndicalist Review 71
(Fall 2017).
[3] See the âAppendix: A Bibliographical Sketchâ for a short history of
Volineâs book. For a good account of the book and its author, see Paul
Avrich, âV.M. Eikhenbaum (Volin): The Man and His Book,â in Anarchist
Portraits (Princeton: Princeton University Press, 1988).
[4] See the âAppendix: Russian Revolutionary Partiesâ for a discussion
of the ideas and differences between the populist Social Revolutionary
Party and the Russian Marxist factions (namely, the Mensheviks and
Bolsheviks).
[5] Excellent anarchist eyewitness accounts and analyses of the Russian
Revolution include: Emma Goldman, My Disillusionment in Russia
(London/Zagreb: Active Distribution/Sto Citas, 2017); Alexander Berkman,
The Bolshevik Myth (London/Zagreb: Active Distribution/Sto Citas, 2017);
Emma Goldman and Alexander Berkman, To Remain Silent Is Impossible: Emma
Goldman and Alexander Berkman in Russia, ed. Andrew Zonneveld (Atlanta:
On Our Own Authority!, 2013); Emma Goldman, Living My Life, vol. 2 (New
York: Dover Books, 1970), chapter 52; Emma Goldman et al., Anarchist
Encounters: Russia in Revolution, ed. A. W. Zurbrugg (London: Anarres
Editions, 2017); G.P. Maximoff, The Guillotine at Work: Twenty Years of
Terror in Russia (Chicago: Alexander Berkman Fund, 1940). An overview of
the Russian anarchist movement can be found in Paul Avrich, The Russian
Anarchists (Edinburgh/Oakland: AK Press, 2005).
[6] It mayâand willâbe objected that other things were said by Lenin and
Trotsky. This is true, just as it is true that the same can be applied
to Stalin, as well, but few do so. Rather than being âselective,â it is
case of seeking the ideas and actions of the Bolsheviks that helped
determine the outcome of the revolution. It is far more relevant to look
at reality than repeat rhetoric, however fine it may be.
[7] It is necessary to stress that Bakunin did not âinventâ
revolutionary anarchism. Doubtless he contributed immensely to its
development, but Bakunin gained influence by championing tendencies that
already existed within the European labour movement at the time. These
tendencies, which built upon the rich theoretical contributions of
Proudhon by applying them to the labour movement, existed before Bakunin
joined the International and would have come into conflict with Marx
anyway, but the Russian rebel deepened them and gave them a distinctive
social revolutionary stamp.
[8] The notion that syndicalism by advocating class struggle is
influenced by Marxism cannot be sustained once an awareness of Bakuninâs
actual ideas is gained, as I summarise in âAnother View: Syndicalism,
Anarchism and Marxism,â Anarchist Studies vol. 20, no. 1 (Spring 2012).
[9] Bakunin, Bakunin on Anarchism, 262â3, 270, 174, 171â72.
[10] Bakunin, Bakunin on Anarchism, 179â80.
[11] These and other Marxist myths about anarchism are debunked in my An
Anarchist FAQ, vol. 2 (Edinburgh/Oakland: AK Press, 2012), section H.2.
[12] Peter Kropotkin, Modern Science and Anarchy
(Chico/Oakland/Edinburgh/Baltimore: AK Press, 2018), 164.
[13] Kropotkin, Modern Science and Anarchy, 191, 226â27, 234, 269, 211,
191.
[14] Kropotkin, Modern Science and Anarchy, 169, 164, 165, 130.
[15] See my âThe State and Revolution: Theory and Practice,â
Bloodstained: One Hundred Years of Leninist Counterrevolution, ed.
Friends of Aron Baron (Chico/Oakland/Edinburgh/Baltimore: AK Press,
2017).
[16] There are, of course, more libertarian forms of Marxismâsuch as
council communismâbut mainstream Marxism (whether reformist or
revolutionary) has always been statist and centralised. It must also be
noted that at the time most of this mainstream opposed Bolshevism in the
name of (representative) democracy, such as Karl Kautsky, The
Dictatorship of the Proletariat (Ann Arbor: University of Michigan
Press, 1964), written in 1918, and Julius Martov, The State and
Socialist Revolution (London: Carl Slienger, 1977), written 1919â1923.
[17] See my An Anarchist FAQ, vol. 2, section H for an exploration of
this immense subject.
[18] V.I. Lenin, Collected Works, vol. 7 (Moscow: Progress Publishers,
1961), 367, 396â97.
[19] Thomas F. Remington, Building Socialism in Bolshevik Russia:
Ideology and Industrial Organisation 1917â1921 (London: University of
Pittsburgh Press, 1984), 91.
[20] âThe Bolsheviks and Workersâ Control: The State and
Counter-Revolution,â in For Workersâ Power: The Selected Writings of
Maurice Brinton, ed. David Goodway (Edinburgh/Oakland: AK Press, 2004),
296.
[21] This is in spite of Lenin arguing that every revolution was an
âincredibly complicated and painful processâ that involved civil war
(V.I. Lenin, Collected Works, vol. 26 [Moscow: Progress Publishers,
1964], 118â19). It âwill never be possible to build socialism at a time
when everything is running smoothly and tranquilly,â instead it would
âbe everywhere built at a time of disruption,â not least because civil
war was inherently âdevastatingâ (V.I. Lenin, Collected Works, vol. 27
[Moscow: Progress Publishers, 1965], 520, 517, 264). So, according to
its defenders, Bolshevism failed in the face of âobjective
circumstancesâ they also consider inevitable.
[22] V.I. Lenin, âThe State and Revolution: The Marxist Theory of the
State and the Tasks of the Proletariat in the Revolution,â The Lenin
Anthology, ed. Robert C. Tucker (New York: Princeton University, 1975),
336â37, 339, 357, 316. It must be noted that some Marxists
argueârightly, in my opinion (see An Anarchist FAQ, vol. 2, section
H.3.10)âthat Lenin distorted Marxâs position on seizing political power
by ignoring the many comments by him and Engels on capturing the
existing state and using it to introduce socialism after smashing its
bureaucracy, as discussed by Binay Sarker and Adam Buick,
Marxism-LeninismâPoles Apart (Memari: Avenel Press, 2012).
[23] Lenin, âThe State and Revolution,â 373, 348, 383, 328, 348.
[24] Lenin, âThe State and Revolution,â 345â46, 380.
[25] Lenin, âThe State and Revolution,â 383.
[26] See the âAppendix: The Structure of the Soviet Stateâ for a short
account of the Bolshevik regimeâs various bodies.
[27] Neil Harding, Leninism (Durham, NC: Duke University Press. 1996),
253.
[28] Charles Duval, âYakov M. Sverdlov and the All-Russian Central
Executive Committee of Soviets (VTsIK),â Soviet Studies vol. 31, no. 1
(January 1979): 7â8, 18.
[29] Carmen Sirianni, Workersâ Control and Socialist Democracy: The
Soviet Experience (London: Verso / NLB, 1982), 204. Also see Richard
Sakwa, Soviet Communists in Power: A Study of Moscow during the Civil
War, 1918â21 (Basingstoke: Macmillan, 1987), 166; Donald J. Raleigh,
Experiencing Russiaâs Civil War: Politics, Society, and Revolutionary
Culture in Saratov, 1917â1921 (Princeton: Princeton University Press,
2002), 83, 100.
[30] Israel Getzler, Martov: A Political Biography of a Russian Social
Democrat (Carlton: Melbourne University Press, 1967), 179. Also see
Duval, âYakov M. Sverdlov,â 13â14; Silvana Malle, The Economic
Organisation of War Communism 1918â1921 (Cambridge: Cambridge University
Press, 1985), 366â67; Leonard Schapiro, The Origin of the Communist
Autocracy: Political Opposition in the Soviet State: The First Phase,
1917â1922 (New York: Frederick A. Praeger, 1965), 191; S.A. Smith,
Revolution and the People in Russia and China: A Comparative History
(Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2008), 201.
[31] Vladimir N. Brovkin, The Mensheviks after October: Socialist
Opposition and the Rise of the Bolshevik Dictatorship (Ithaca: Cornell
University Press, 1987), 159.
[32] Getzler, Martov, 182â83; Schapiro, The Origin of the Communist
Autocracy, 193, 355.
[33] Alexander Rabinowitch, The Bolsheviks in Power: The First Year of
Soviet Rule in Petrograd (Bloomington: Indiana University Press, 2007),
248â52. Also see Brovkin, The Mensheviks After October, 240.
[34] Rabinowitch, The Bolsheviks in Power, 396, 288, 442, 308. Also see
Geoffrey Swain, The Origins of the Russian Civil War (London/New York:
Longman, 1996), 176. It must be stressed that this gerrymandering
ignores the over-representation of workers as compared to peasants, with
the former having five times as many representatives as the latter. As
such, the Left SRs had much more popular support across the country than
these figures suggest due to their influence within the peasantry. In
contrast, the Bolsheviks and Mensheviks had little rural support or
influence.
[35] Opposition parties were sometimes toleratedâusually when the White
threat was highest, as they could be counted on to help the regime.
However, when the White threat decreased and workersâ protest against
the regime returned, these parties were again suppressed. The final
suppression, along with the banning of factions within the party,
occurred after the end of the civil war.
[36] Victor Serge, Memoirs of a Revolutionary (New York: New York Review
Books, 2012), 81.
[37] See my âThe Worst of the Anarchists,â Anarcho-Syndicalist Review 61
(Winter 2014).
[38] In the words of attendee anarchist-turned-Bolshevik Alfred Rosmer,
Leninâs Moscow (London: Bookmarks, 1971), 101. He also adds that Wrangel
âcould be ignored,â which in part explains the Bolsheviks turning on the
Makhnovists in 1920, ironically ensuring Wrangel a space to renew the
civil war.
[39] Workers of the World and Oppressed Peoples, Unite! Proceedings and
Documents of the Second Congress of the Communist International, 1920,
vol. 1 (New York: Pathfinder, 1991), 151â52. Also see a similar extract
from a Zinoviev article quoted by Oskar Anweiler, The Soviets: The
Russian Workers, Peasants, and Soldiers Councils 1905â1921 (New York:
Random House, 1974), 239â40.
[40] Lenin, The Lenin Anthology, 567â68, 571â73.
[41] Leon Trotsky, The Revolution Betrayed: What Is the Soviet Union and
Where Is It Going? (London: Faber, 1937), 96, 90.
[42] Leon Trotsky, Stalin: An Appraisal of the Man and His Influence,
vol. 1 (London: Panther History, 1969), 106.
[43] quoted by Anweiler, The Soviets, 77.
[44] In contrast, anarchists viewed the soviets as embryos of the new
social order; see Peter Kropotkin, âLâAction directe et la GrĂšve
gĂ©nĂ©rale en Russie,â Les Temps Nouveaux 2 December 1905. Likewise,
unlike the Bolsheviks who came to this conclusion in 1917, anarchists
argued the revolution had to move further than a mere political change
into a social revolution; see Peter Kropotkin âThe Revolution in
Russia,â âThe Russian Revolution and Anarchismâ and âEnough of
Illusions,â in Direct Struggle against Capital: A Peter Kropotkin
Anthology, ed .Iain McKay ([Edinburgh/Oakland/Baltimore: AK Press,
2014).
[45] Lenin, The Lenin Anthology, 24, 28â29.
[46] Lenin, Collected Works, vol. 26, 19.
[47] V.I. Lenin, Collected Works, vol. 12 (Moscow: Progress Publishers,
1962), 143â44.
[48] âIn English [workersâ control] conveys a much stronger sense of
labour direction and management than it does in Russian. (Its literal
meaning is much closer to âsupervisionâ than âcommandâ)â (William
Rosenberg, âWorkers and Workersâ Control in the Russian Revolution,â
History Workshop: A Journal of Socialist Historians vol. 5, no. 1
[Spring 1978]: 89).
[49] Property is Theft! A Pierre-Joseph Proudhon Anthology, ed .Iain
McKay (Edinburgh/Oakland/Baltimore: AK Press, 2011), 119.
[50] S.A. Smith, Red Petrograd: Revolution in the Factories 1917â1918
(Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1983) 153, 154, 159, 153, 154,
228.
[51] Remington, Building Socialism in Bolshevik Russia, 38.
[52] Brinton, For Workersâ Power, 318.
[53] Brinton, For Workersâ Power, 323, 335, 324.
[54] Lenin, Collected Works, vol. 27, 316.
[55] It should be noted that one-man management was first applied on the
railways and the âresult of replacing workersâ committees with one-man
rule ... was not directiveness, but distance, and increasing inability
to make decisions appropriate to local conditions. Despite coercion,
orders on the railroads were often ignored as unworkable.â It got so bad
that âa number of local Bolshevik officials ... began in the fall of
1918 to call for the restoration of workersâ control, not for
ideological reasons, but because workers themselves knew best how to run
the line efficiently, and might obey their own central committeeâs
directives if they were not being constantly countermandedâ (William G.
Rosenberg, âWorkersâ Control on the Railroads and Some Suggestions
Concerning Social Aspects of Labour Politics in the Russian Revolution,â
The Journal of Modern History vol. 49, no. 2 [June 1977]: D1208â9)
[56] Maximoff, The Guillotine at Work, 364, 351, 366â67.
[57] V.I. Lenin, Collected Works, vol. 30 (Moscow: Progress Publishers,
1965), 503â4.
[58] Lenin, Collected Works, vol. 30, 456.
[59] Anweiler, The Soviets, 242.
[60] Rabinowitch, The Bolsheviks in Power, 224, 231.
[61] Richard Sakwa, âThe Commune State in Moscow in 1918,â Slavic Review
46, no. 3â4 (AutumnâWinter, 1987): 437â38.
[62] Remington, Building Socialism in Bolshevik Russia, 154.
[63] Tony Cliff, Trotsky: The Sword of the Revolution 1917â1923 (London:
Bookmarks, 1990), 191.
[64] Alexander Berkman, âThe Russian Tragedy,â in To Remain Silent Is
Impossible, 96.
[65] Malle, The Economic Organisation of War Communism, 232â33, 250.
[66] Malle, The Economic Organisation of War Communism, 233.
[67] Remington, Building Socialism in Bolshevik Russia, 58â59, 61â62,
68â69.
[68] Emma Goldman, âThe Crushing of the Russian Revolution,â in To
Remain Silent is Impossible, 40. Goldman also recounted how food was
âlying at side stations and rotting awayâ (My Disillusionment in Russia,
109) Malle confirms the âinefficiency of central [food] distributionâ
and how it âentailed wasteâ (The Economic Organisation of War Communism,
424â25)
[69] Malle, The Economic Organisation of War Communism, 275.
[70] Karl Marx and Friedrich Engels, âThe Manifesto of the Communist
Party,â in The Marx-Engels Reader, ed. Robert C. Tucker (London & New
York: W.W. Norton & Co., 1978), 490.
[71] We should also note that, as a centralised body, the Bolshevik
Party itself also had its own bureaucracy, a bureaucracy Lenin had to
fight throughout 1917. As Trotsky summarised the âhabits peculiar to a
political machine were already forming in the underground. The young
revolutionary bureaucrat was already emerging as a type,â and in 1917 âa
sharp cleavage developed between the classes in motion and the interests
of the party machines,â which saw Bolshevik Party cadres âinclined to
disregard the masses and to identify their own special interests and the
interests of the machine on the very day after the monarchy was
overthrown. What, then, could be expected of these cadres when they
became an all-powerful state bureaucracy?â (Stalin, 101, 298) However,
it must be stressed that the Bolshevik Party was not in practice the
completely centralised machine of Stalinist and Trotskyist myths.
Substantial local autonomy coexisted with bureaucratic and centralised
tendencies, with the latter finally crushing the former during the civil
war and helping to ensure the degeneration of the revolution; see my An
Anarchist FAQ, vol. 2, section H.5.12, for discussion.
[72] Sakwa, Soviet Communists in Power, 96â97.
[73] Rabinowitch, The Bolsheviks in Power, 85.
[74] How the Revolution Armed: The Military Writings and Speeches of
Leon Trotsky, vol. 1 (London: New Park Publications, 1979), 47.
[75] Israel Getzler, Kronstadt 1917â1921: The Fate of a Soviet Democracy
(Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1983), 190â91.
[76] Lenin, âThe State and Revolution,â 316.
[77] Bakunin, Bakunin on Anarchism, 318.
[78] Trotsky, The Revolution Betrayed, 90, 211. Compare to Trotsky in
1920: âevery class prefers to have in its service those of its members
who ... have passed through the military school ... when a former
regimental commissary returns to his trade union, he becomes not a bad
organiserâ (Terrorism and Communism: A Reply to Karl Kautsky [Ann Arbor:
University of Michigan Press, 1963], 173)
[79] âIntroduction to the Second English Edition,â in Terrorism and
Communism, xliv.
[80] This is not to suggest that the Bolsheviks were happy with all the
bureaucrats they had created. Far from it, as can be seen from their
many words attacking the phenomenon. The problem was that they had no
idea what produced it nor any idea how to solve it. Failing to
understand that their own prejudices in favour of centralisation and
nationalisation were the root causes, their solutions were more of the
sameâthe evils of bureaucracy would be solved by more centralisation, so
producing more bureaucracy. Bodies created to combat bureaucracy
themselves became bureaucratised. These police methods could not
overcome a governmental machine and the vested interests it produced.
[81] See my An Anarchist FAQ, vol. 2, section H.6.3 for more details.
[82] Smith, Revolution and the People in Russia and China, 201.
[83] Rabinowitch, The Bolsheviks in Power, 229â30, 231, 246â47, 254,
259; William G. Rosenberg, âRussian Labour and Bolshevik Power,â in The
Workers Revolution in Russia: The View from Below, ed. Daniel H. Kaiser
(Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1987), 123â27.
[84] Remington, Building Socialism in Bolshevik Russia, 105.
[85] Remington, Building Socialism in Bolshevik Russia, 109.
[86] Mary McAuley, Bread and Justice: State and Society in Petrograd
1917â1922 (Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1991), 250â54.
[87] âWorkersâ Unrest and the Bolsheviksâ Response in 1919,â Slavic
Review 49, no. 3 (Fall 1990): 370.
[88] Jonathan Aves, Workers against Lenin: Labour Protest and the
Bolshevik Dictatorship (London: Tauris Academic Studies, 1996), 69, 70,
80.
[89] Raleigh, Experiencing Russiaâs Civil War, 375.
[90] Simon Pirani, The Russian Revolution in Retreat, 1920â24: Soviet
Workers and the New Communist Elite (New York: Routledge, 2008), 32, 43.
[91] These were strikes in which workers occupied their workplaces and
kept the machines running to waste fuel; Aves, Workers against Lenin,
115.
[92] Aves, Workers against Lenin, 3, 109â12. Also see Remington,
Building Socialism in Bolshevik Russia, 111; Paul Avrich, Kronstadt 1921
(New York: W.W. Norton & Co., 1970), 37â38.
[93] Aves, Workers against Lenin, 171â73.
[94] Aves, Workers against Lenin, 187, 155, 186.
[95] John Rees, âIn Defence of October,â International Socialism 52
(Autumn 1991): 65.
[96] Ida Mett, âThe Kronstadt Commune,â in Bloodstained, 202.
[97] Diane P. Koenker, âUrbanisation and Deurbanisation in the Russian
Revolution and Civil War,â in Party, State, and Society in the Russian
Civil War, ed. Diane P. Koenker, William G. Rosenberg, and Ronald Grigor
Suny (Indiana: Indiana University Press, 1989), 96, 95, 100, 84. Also
see Raleigh, Experiencing Russiaâs Civil War, 348.
[98] Aves, Workers against Lenin, 18, 90â91.
[99] Sakwa, Soviet Communists in Power, 261.
[100] Rees, âIn Defence of October,â 69.
[101] Of the 17,000 camp detainees on whom statistical information was
available on 1 November 1920, peasants and workers constituted the
largest groups, at 39 per cent and 34 per cent respectively. Similarly,
of the 40,913 prisoners held in December 1921 (of whom 44 per cent had
been committed by the Cheka) nearly 84 per cent were illiterate or
minimally educated, clearly, therefore, either peasants or workers.
(George Leggett, The Cheka: Leninâs Political Police [Oxford: Clarendon
Press, 1981], 178).
[102] Lenin, âThe State and Revolution,â 373. Unsurprisingly, Trotsky
argued that the proletariat was the ruling class under Stalin for the
âanatomy of society is determined by its economic relations. So long as
the forms of property that have been created by the October Revolution
are not overthrown, the proletariat remains the ruling class.â (Writings
of Leon Trotsky 1933â34 [New York: Pathfinder Press, 2003], 125).
[103] Sakwa, Soviet Communists in Power, 24, 27, 30.
[104] Cornelius Castoriadis, âThe Role of Bolshevik Ideology in the
Birth of the Bureaucracy,â in Bloodstained, 287â88.
[105] âOutraged by the Opposition, they [the Stalinists] saw it as
treason against them; which in a sense it was, since the Opposition
itself belonged to the ruling bureaucracy.â (Serge, Memoirs of a
Revolutionary, 263)
[106] Goldman, Living My Life, vol. 2, 826.
[107] Kropotkin, Direct Struggle against Capital, 165. In 1920,
Kropotkin said to Emma Goldman that the Bolsheviks had âcreated a
bureaucracy and officialdom which surpasses even that of the old
regime.... All those people were living off the masses. They were
parasites on the social body.... It was not the fault of any particular
individuals: rather it was the State they had created, which discredits
every revolutionary ideal, stifles all initiative, and sets a premium on
incompetence and waste.â (Goldman, My Disillusionment in Russia, 113)
[108] Pirani, The Russian Revolution in Retreat, 4.
[109] Sirianni, Workersâ Control and Socialist Democracy, 109, 113, 115,
129.
[110] Malle, The Economic Organisation of War Communism, 101.
[111] As well as providing key selections from the works of numerous
anarchists, Daniel Guérin, No Gods, No Masters: An Anthology of
Anarchism (Oakland/Edinburgh: AK Press, 2005) also includes texts on and
by both the Makhnovist movement and the Kronstadt rebels.
[112] According to Trotsky, even acting in the interests of their
relatives was beyond them: âThey themselves did not clearly understand
that what their fathers and brothers needed first of all was free
trade.â (V. I. Lenin and Leon Trotsky, Kronstadt [New York: Monad Press,
1986], 92).This is the standard Trotskyist work on the rebellion and
gathers all the related articles by Lenin and Trotsky, as well as
articles by their faithful followers. The Kronstadt ârebels proclaimed
that âKronstadt is not asking for freedom of trade but for genuine power
to the Soviets.â The Petrograd strikers were also demanding the
reopening of the markets and the abolition of the road blocks set up by
the militia. But they too were stating that freedom of trade by itself
would not solve their problemsâ (Ida Mett, âThe Kronstadt Commune,â in
Bloodstained, 197â98). Indeed, striking workers in both Moscow and
Petrograd raised the demand for âfree tradeâ amongst others (Avrich,
Kronstadt 1921, 36, 42).
[113] Lenin and Trotsky, Kronstadt 111â12. It must be stressed that
economic demands number four of the fifteen raised (items 8, 9, 11, 15),
and so the focus of the uprising was political rights. Significantly,
the Petrograd Bolshevik leaders had quickly granted item 8âthe removal
of roadblock troopsâto placate striking workers in Petrograd. (Avrich,
Kronstadt 1921, 49, 75) Unlike the Bolshevik New Economic Policy, items
11 and 15, while demanding artisan and peasant âfreedom of action,â also
explicitly opposed the employment of hired labour. Which means that if
anyone was defending the interests of the kulaks, it was Lenin and
Trotsky.
[114] Peter Arshinov, The History of the Makhnovist Movement (London:
Freedom Press, 2005). See also Alexandre Skirda, Nestor Makhno:
Anarchyâs Cossack: The Struggle for Free Soviets in the Ukraine
1917â1921 (Oakland: AK Press, 2004); Michael Malet, Nestor Makhno in the
Russian Civil War (London: MacMillan Press, 1982); Michael Palij, The
Anarchism of Nestor Makhno, 1918â1921: An Aspect of the Ukrainian
Revolution (Seattle: University of Washington Press, 1976). Makhnoâs
memoirs are now available in English in three volumes, although these
cover only March 1917 to the end of 1918; The Russian Revolution in
Ukraine (Edmonton: Black Cat Press, 2007), Under the Blows of the
Counterrevolution (Edmonton: Black Cat Press, 2009) and The Ukrainian
Revolution (Edmonton: Black Cat Press, 2011).
[115] Quoted by Skirda, Nestor Makhno, 94â95.
[116] See, as an example, Rees, âIn Defence of October,â 57â60. For my
reply to another such attack, see âOn the Bolshevik Myth,â
Anarcho-Syndicalist Review 47 (Summer 2007).
[117] Victor Serge, Anarchists Never Surrender: Essays, Polemics, and
Correspondence on Anarchism, 1908â1938 (Oakland: PM Press, 2015), 169.
[118] Serge, Anarchists Never Surrender, 223.
[119] Paul Avrich, âNestor Makhno: The Man and the Myth,â in Anarchist
Portraits, 122â23; Malet, Nestor Makhno in the Russian Civil War,
168â74.
[120] Of course, this was in spite of the official Bolshevik position
opposing all forms of anti-Semitism. As with the Red Army, while it is
possible that a few troops fighting under the Makhnovist banner (or
claiming to) carried out pogroms on Jews, this was in opposition to
Makhnovist policy (a policy ruthlessly applied). That the Trotskyists do
not apply the same perspective to the Makhnovists is typical of their
double standards. However, this is speculation, as no evidence has been
forthcoming on Makhnovist pogroms, unlike Red Army ones.
[121] Overall, the âredistribution of the land, the stock, and inventory
in the years 1917â1920 resulted in considerable social levelling and an
aggregate downward shift among the peasantry.â (Sirianni, Workersâ
Control and Socialist Democracy, 177); âPeasantsâ economic conditions in
the region of the Makhno movement were greatly improved at the expense
of the estates of the landlords, the church, monasteries, and the
richest peasants.â (Palij, The Anarchism of Nestor Makhno, 214)
[122] Malet, Nestor Makhno in the Russian Civil War, 119. Skirda
presents some statistics on captured Makhnovist troops in 1921, which
show that 208 out 265 had no land or just the minimum needed to support
a household. (Nestor Makhno, 310)
[123] How the Revolution Armed: The Military Writings and Speeches of
Leon Trotsky, vol. 2 (London: New Park Publications, 1979), 302.
[124] Palij, The Anarchism of Nestor Makhno, 71.
[125] Quoted by Palij, The Anarchism of Nestor Makhno, 155.
[126] Palij, The Anarchism of Nestor Makhno, 156.
[127] Serge, Memoirs, 143.
[128]
W. Bruce Lincoln, Red Victory: A History of the Russian Civil War (New
York: Simon and Schuster, 1989), 327.
[129] Lenin and Trotsky, Kronstadt, 80.
[130] Makhno, The Russian Revolution in Ukraine, 34â39.
[131] A good selection of articles written by Makhno in exile is
collected in The Struggle against the State and other Essays
(Edinburgh/San Francisco: AK Press, 1996).
[132] Skirda, Nestor Makhno, 375â76.
[133] Trotsky, Terrorism and Communism, 135â36. Why principle? Perhaps
because Marx and Engels had demanded â[e]stablishment of industrial
armies, especially for agricultureâ in the âCommunist Manifestoâ along
with calls to âcentralise all instruments of production in the hands of
the Stateâ? (The Marx-Engels Reader, 490).
[134] Trotsky, Terrorism and Communism, 169â70.
[135] Trotsky, Terrorism and Communism, 162â63. It should go without
saying that âthe collective will of the workersâ was a euphemism for the
rule (dictatorship) of the party.
[136] Trotsky, Terrorism and Communism, 168.
[137] Trotsky, Terrorism and Communism, 109â10.
[138] Rees, âIn Defence of October,â 59.
[139] Brinton, For Workersâ Power, 361.
[140] Aves, Workers against Lenin, 102.
[141] Also, the Bolshevik state used its control of issuing wages
(whether in kind or in money) to control workers, with the withdrawal of
rations a key meansâalong with the Cheka, army and lockoutsâto break
strikes.
[142] Rees, âIn Defence of October,â 60.
[143] Malet, Nestor Makhno in the Russian Civil War, 111, 124. Skirda
presents minutes of the Second Regional Congress in 1919, which record
anarchist, Left SR and Bolshevik delegates speaking. (Nestor Makhno,
363â68) Voline quotes from the Makhnovists reply to Dybenkoâs attempt to
ban the third regional congress in April 1919: âThe Revolutionary
Military Council ... holds itself above the pressure and influence of
all parties and only recognises the people who elected it. Its duty is
to accomplish what the people have instructed it to do, and to create no
obstacles to any Left Socialist party in the propagation of ideas.
Consequently, if one day the Bolshevik idea succeeds among the workers,
the Revolutionary Military Council ... will necessarily be replaced by
another organisation, âmore revolutionaryâ and more Bolshevik.â
[144] Getzler, Martov, 202.
[145] Quoted by Avrich, The Russian Anarchists, 190.
[146] This applies to individuals involved in the movement itself. We
will not comment on Volineâs claims that Makhno was an alcoholic and
that some of his commanders were rapists, beyond noting that these are
unsubstantiated claims, denied by others active in the movement, and
that his wife and other women were insurgents and were unlikely to have
tolerated such abuse (see Skirda, Nestor Makhno, 302, 305â6).
[147] Goldman, My Disillusionment in Russia, 23â24; Berkman, The
Bolshevik Myth, 275â78.
[148] It should be noted that while both Makhno and Voline agreed on the
need for a well-organised anarchist movement, they differed on how best
create it. In exile during the 1920s Voline favoured a âsynthesisâ
organisation of all anarchist tendencies, while Makhno (along with
Arshinov) argued for a âPlatformâ based on libertarian communism. Space
excludes discussion of the differences, but most of the relevant
documents were gathered by fellow exile G.P. Maximoff in Constructive
Anarchism: The Debate on the Platform (Sydney, AU: Monty Miller Press,
1988). Also see my An Anarchist FAQ, vol. 2, section J.3, for more
details on anarchist organisations and their role.
[149] Good accounts of the rebellion can be found in Avrich, Kronstadt
1921 and Getzler, Kronstadt 1917â1921.
[150] Other libertarian works on Kronstadt include Ida Mett, âThe
Kronstadt Communeâ (in Bloodstained); Berkman, âThe Kronstadt
Rebellion,â (in To Remain Silent Is Impossible); Goldman, âTrotsky
Protests Too Much,â (in To Remain Silent is Impossible); Ante Ciliga,
âThe Kronstadt Revolt,â The Raven: Anarchist Quarterly 8 (October 1989).
[151] Lenin and Trotsky, Kronstadt, 90â91.
[152] Goldman, âTrotsky Protests Too Much,â 241â42. She presents a vivid
eyewitness account of the repression in Petrograd in Living My Life
(872â87) as does Alexander Berkman in The Bolshevik Myth (246â57).
[153] Paul Avrich in his research on the uprising in the 1960s unearthed
a âMemorandumâ by a White group, but concluded it played no part in the
revolt. The uprising was spontaneous and âcaught the emigres off
balance.â (Kronstadt 1921, 111â12, 126â27, 212) We mention this because
some Trotskyists refer to it without, apparently, being able to
understand it. It should also be noted that the Cheka at the time found
no evidence of a conspiracy. (Israel Getzler, ââThe Communist Leadersâ
Role in the Kronstadt Tragedy of 1921 in the Light of Recently Published
Archival Documents,â Revolutionary Russia vol. 15, no. 1 [June 2002],
25).
[154] Evan Mawdsley, âThe Baltic Fleet and the Kronstadt Mutiny,â Soviet
Studies 24, no. 4 (April 1973): 508â10.
[155] Getzler, Kronstadt 1917â1921, 207â8, 226, 207.
[156] Dmitri Fedotoff-White, The Growth of the Red Army (Princeton:
Princeton University Press, 1944), 155, 138.
[157] Avrich, Kronstadt 1921, 91. Avrich did not address the issue of
personal service in his book but noted in a review of Getzlerâs work
that âGetzler draws attention to the continuity in institutions,
ideology, and personnel linking 1921 with 1917. In doing so he
demolishes the allegation of Trotsky and other Bolshevik leaders that
the majority of veteran Red sailors had, in the course of the Civil War,
been replaced by politically retarded peasant recruits.... He shows, on
the contrary, that no significant change had taken place in the fleetâs
political and social composition, that at least three-quarters of the
sailors on active duty in 1921 had been drafted before 1918â (Soviet
Studies 36: 1 [January 1984], 139â40).
[158] As an example, while selectively and misleadingly quoting from
Getzlerâs work to bolster his defence of Bolshevism, Rees fails to
mention the statistical information provided in itâunsurprisingly,
because the data completely destroys his argument. (âIn Defence of
October,â 61â64),
[159] Lenin and Trotsky, Kronstadt, 87, 90, 81.
[160] Getzler, Kronstadt 1917â1921, 208, 197â98.
[161] Getzler, Kronstadt 1917â1921, 179â86. Populist influence in
1917â18 is confirmed by Trotsky (Lenin and Trotsky, Kronstadt, 86)
[162] Avrich, Kronstadt 1921, 171â72. For a good introduction to the
politics of the Left SRs, see Ronald I. Kowalskiâs ââFellow travellersâ
or revolutionary dreamers? The left social revolutionaries after 1917,â
Revolutionary Russia vol. 11, no. 2 (December 1998).
[163] Rabinowitch, The Bolsheviks in Power, 302.
[164] Goldman, âTrotsky Protests Too Much,â 237, 235.
[165] Robert Service, The Bolshevik Party in Revolution: A Study of
Organisational Change (London: Macmillan, 1979), 44. The âbulk [of new
party members in 1917] were green recruits from among the most impatient
and dissatisfied elements in the factories and garrison who knew little,
if anything, about Marxismâ (Alexander Rabinowitch, Prelude to
Revolution: The Petrograd Bolsheviks and the July 1917 Uprising
[Bloomington and Indianapolis: Indiana University Press, 1991], 231).
[166] Trotsky, Stalin, 305.
[167] Lenin and Trotsky, Kronstadt, 98.
[168] It should be noted that troops were still being used in workplaces
to intimidate workers and for roadblocks to stop âspeculationâ in food,
but in practice simply stopped peasants from bringing foodstuffs to the
cityâthis did not stop the Bolsheviks justifying seizing food from the
peasants because they would not provide it to cities. The Kronstadt
sailors demanded the end of both practices (items 8 and 10).
[169] Avrich, Kronstadt 1921, 13, 219, 146, 105, 117â19.
[170] Lenin and Trotsky, Kronstadt, 52. Berkman quotes from the
Communist radio on how the revolt was organised to undermine trade talks
with the imperialist powers. (âThe Kronstadt Rebellion,â 146â47)
[171] Serge, Memoirs, 150â51. Trotsky makes a similar argument on soviet
democracy but he generalises it to all revolutions. (Lenin and Trotsky,
Kronstadt, 90)
[172] Victor Serge, Revolution in Danger: Writings from Russia,
1919â1921 (London: Redwords, 1997), 6. Writing to French anarchists, he
generalised to all revolutions the necessity of âthe dictatorship of a
party,â for militants âcannot rely on the consciousness, the goodwill or
the determination of those they have to deal with; for the masses who
will follow them or surround them will be warped by the old regime,
relatively uncultivated, often unaware, torn by feelings and instincts
inherited from the pastâ (103, 92).
[173] It must be stressed that the NEP did not, as Serge asserted, mean
that â[a]ll the economic demands of Kronstadt were being satisfied.â
(Memoirs, 152) The Kronstadt demands opposed wage-labour in agriculture,
unlike the NEP, which allowed it.
[174] Lenin, The Lenin Anthology, 573.
[175] Sakwa, Soviet Communists in Power, 203. Interestingly, a workersâ
commission set up after a strike wave in March 1921 was disbanded under
martial law in Saratov after it calledâlike Kronstadtâfor new elections
to the soviets and unions along with freedom of speech, press and
assembly. (Raleigh, Experiencing Russiaâs Civil War, 388â89)
[176] Karl Radek, âThe Kronstadt Uprising,â accessed October 23, 2018,
. Originally published in French, âCronstadt,â Bulletin communiste, 2
Annee, no. 19 (12 Mai 1921), 321â5; translated by Ed Maltby.
[177] Lenin, âThe State and Revolution,â 383.
[178] Trotsky, Terrorism and Communism, xliii; Chris Harman, Bureaucracy
and Revolution in Eastern Europe (London: Pluto Press, 1974), 11â12.
[179] There were Marxists who had come to libertarian conclusions from
the experience of the war, namely, the council communists. While
initially dominating the newly formed German Communist Party, they were
quickly displaced by orthodox Leninists, not least because of Leninâs
opposition, as expressed in Left-Wing Communism: An Infantile
Disorderâfor a reply, see Herman Gorter, Open Letter to Comrade Lenin
(London: Wildcat, 1989). However, theseâalong with the fast growing
anarcho-syndicalist union, the FAUâwere a minority within the labour
movement. See Serge Bricianer, Pannekoek and the Workersâ Councils
(Saint Louis: Telos Press, 1978) and D.A. Smart, ed., Pannekoek and
Gorterâs Marxism (London: Pluto Press, 1978).
[180] See my An Anarchist FAQ, vol. 2, section H.6.1, 814. I also
discuss in my introduction to Direct Struggle against Capital: A Peter
Kropotkin Anthology how anarchists had long recognised that a revolution
would face economic crisis and factored this into the libertarian theory
of revolution. (57â8) Significantly, leading Bolshevik Nikolai Bukharin
reached this position in 1920 and while this âmay appear to have been an
obvious point, but it apparently came as something of a revelation to
many Bolsheviks. It directly opposed the prevailing Social Democratic
assumption that the transition to socialism would be relatively
painless.â (Stephen F. Cohen, Bukharin and the Bolshevik Revolution: A
Political Biography, 1888â1938 [London: Oxford University Press, 1980],
89)
[181] Rudolf L. Tokés, Béla Kun and the Hungarian Soviet Republic: The
Origins and Role of the Communist Party of Hungary in the Revolutions of
1918â1919 (London: Pall Mall Press, 1967), 151â52.
[182] As Trotsky said to his English readers in 1935, his argument from
1920 âwill turn out to be not without its use.â (Terrorism and
Communism, xlvii). Rosmer was also of the opinion that both Trotskyâs
Terrorism and Communism and Leninâs Left-Wing Communism had âlost none
of their valueâ and could âstill be profitably read today.â (Leninâs
Moscow, 69)
[183] Brinton, For Workersâ Power, 337â44; Sirianni, Workersâ Control
and Socialist Democracy, 142â50.
[184] Lenin, Collected Works, vol. 27, 341, 354.
[185] Ronald I. Kowalski, The Bolshevik Party in Conflict: The Left
Communist Opposition of 1918 (Basingstoke: Macmillan, 1990), 186.
[186] Quoted Kowalski, The Bolshevik Party in Conflict. 135.
[187] Quoted by Sakwa, Soviet Communists in Power, 182.
[188] Kowalski, The Bolshevik Party in Conflict, 136â37. Sakwa draws the
same obvious conclusion. (Soviet Communists in Power, 182â83)
[189] Kowalski, Soviet Communists in Power, 188.
[190] Cohen, Bukharin and the Bolshevik Revolution, 145, 142.
[191] Alexandra Kollontai, Selected Writings of Alexandra Kollontai
(London: Allison & Busby, 1977), 174, 182, 200, 199, 176.
[192] Kollontai, Selected Writings, 172, 197.
[193] Schapiro, The Origin of the Communist Autocracy, 294. Also see
Avrich, Kronstadt 1921, 182â83.
[194] Quoted by Getzler, âThe Communist Leadersâ Role in the Kronstadt
Tragedy of 1921,â 256. Also see Avrich, Kronstadt 1921, 183.
[195] Kollontai, Selected Writings, 192.
[196] Paul Avrich, âBolshevik Opposition to Lenin: G. T. Miasnikov and
the Workersâ Group,â Russian Review 43, no. 1 (January, 1984); Ante
Ciliga, The Russian Enigma (London: Ink Links Ltd, 1979), 277â78;
Pirani, The Russian Revolution in Retreat, 126â28, 195â98, 203â4,
214â15, 237â38.
[197] Harman, Bureaucracy and Revolution in Eastern Europe, 19.
[198] âPlatform of the Opposition,â The Challenge of the Left Opposition
(1926â27) (New York: Pathfinder, 2003), 395.
[199] Leon Trotsky, The First Five Years of the Communist International,
vol. 2 (London: New Park Publications, 1974), 255; Leon Trotsky Speaks
(New York: Pathfinder, 1972), 158; Leon Trotsky, The Challenge of the
Left Opposition (1923â25) (New York: Pathfinder Press, 1975), 78â79;
Leon Trotsky, The Challenge of the Left Opposition (1926â27), 75â76,
439, 441; Leon Trotsky on China (New York: Monad Press, 2002), 251.
[200] Serge, Memoirs of a Revolutionary, 157â58.
[201] âPlatform of the Opposition,â 347â48, 350.
[202] Ciliga, The Russian Enigma, 280. Ciliga has two interesting
chapters (âAnd Now?â and âLenin, Alsoâ) on the various factions within
the Trotskyists in the camps and his own political evolution toward
recognising the obvious: that the bureaucracy was the ruling class of a
state capitalist regime, which had its roots in Leninâs ideas and
actions.
[203] Leon Trotsky, Writings 1936â37 (New York: Pathfinder Press, 1978),
513â14.
[204] Trotsky, The Challenge of the Left Opposition (1923â25), 460.
[205] Leon Trotsky, âThe Moralists and Sycophants against Marxism,â in
Their Morals and Ours (New York: Pathfinder, 1973), 59. As Lenin put it
at a Cheka conference in 1920: âWithout revolutionary coercion directed
against the avowed enemies of the workers and peasants, it is impossible
to break down the resistance of these exploiters. On the other hand,
revolutionary coercion is bound to be employed towards the wavering and
unstable elements among the masses themselvesâ (V.I. Lenin, Collected
Works, vol. 42 [Moscow: Progress Publishers, 1969], 170)
[206] Quoted by Alec Nove, âTrotsky, Collectivization and the Five-Year
Plan,â in Socialism, Economics and Development (London: Allen & Unwin,
1986), 100. Trotsky also added: âFormally speaking this [the creation of
factory committees] is indeed the clearest line of workersâ democracy.
But we are against it. Why? For a basic reason, to preserve the partyâs
dictatorship, and for subordinate reasons: management would be
inefficientâ (100).
[207] Lenin, âThe State and Revolution,â 327; emphasis added.
[208] Harman, Bureaucracy and Revolution in Eastern Europe, 14.
[209] V.I. Lenin, Collected Works, vol. 32 (Moscow: Progress Publishers,
1973), 20â21.
[210] Goldman, My Disillusionment in Russia, 25.
[211] Daniel Guérin, No Gods, No Masters: An Anthology of Anarchism
(Oakland/Edinburgh: AK Press, 2005), 476â77.
[212] These were the two main factions in Russian Marxism, but they were
many others (including âEconomism,â âLiquidators,â âRecallism,â
âGod-builders,â âUltimatismâ and âMachismâ) as discussed in Grigorii
Zinoviev, History of the Bolshevik Party: A Popular Outline (London: New
Park Publications, 1973). This work is notable for an appendix
containing a statement issued in March 1923 by the Central Committee of
the Communist Party (âTo the Workers of the USSRâ) that summarised the
lessons gained from the Russian Revolution, namely, that âthe party of
the Bolsheviks proved able to stand out fearlessly against the
vacillations within its own class, vacillations which, with the
slightest weakness in the vanguard, could turn into an unprecedented
defeat for the proletariat.â Vacillations are expressed by workersâ
democracy, so this was rejected: âThe dictatorship of the working class
finds its expression in the dictatorship of the partyâ (213, 214).
[213] A partial but indicative count of votes covering fifty-four of
seventy-nine constituencies published in 1918 reported that the SRs
received 58 per cent of the vote (16.5 million) and the Bolsheviks 25
per cent (9.2 million). Lenin summarised that the âpetty-bourgeois
democraticâ parties (SRs, Mensheviks, etc.) received 62 per cent, the
landlord and capitalist parties, 13 per cent (4.6 million), and the
âParty of the Proletariat,â 25 per cent (V.I. Lenin, âThe Constituent
Assembly Elections and the Dictatorship of the Proletariat,â in
Collected Works, vol. 30 [Moscow: Progress Publishers, 1965], 253â55).
[214] V.I. Lenin, âTheses on the Constituent Assembly,â in Collected
Works, vol. 26 (Moscow: Progress Publishers, 1964), 379â83.
[215] Anarchists had been arguing for elections, mandates and recall
since Proudhon at the start of the 1848 revolution (Property is Theft! A
Pierre-Joseph Proudhon Anthology, ed .Iain McKay [Oakland: AK Press,
2011], 273, 279, 379), a position Bakunin echoed in 1868 with his call
for âthe federated Alliance of all labour associationsâ to âconstitute
the Communeâ (Daniel GuĂ©rin, No Gods, No Masters: An Anthology of
Anarchism (Oakland/Edinburgh: AK Press, 2005), 181).
[216] Edward Hallett Carr, The Bolshevik Revolution: 1917â1923, vol. 1
(Harmondsworth: Penguin Press, 1966), 220â21.
[217] V.I. Lenin, âLeft-Wing Communism: An Infantile Disorder,â The
Lenin Anthology (New York: Princeton University, 1975), 568â73.