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Title: The Third Revolution? Author: Nick Heath Date: Winter 2004 Language: en Topics: Russian Revolution, anti-Bolshevism, peasants, resistance Source: https://libcom.org/library/third-revolution-nick-heath Notes: Edited by libcom First published in Organise! #63
During the Civil War in Russia, Leninâs government was faced with a
number of predominantly peasant uprisings which threatened to topple the
regime. Can the accusation be justified that these were led by kulaks
(rich peasants), backed by White reaction, with the support of the
poorer peasants, unconscious of their real class interests? Or was it,
as some opponents of Bolshevism to its left claimed, the start of the
âThird Revolutionâ?
âAll those who really take the social revolution to heart must deplore
that fatal separation that exists between the proletariat of the towns
and the countryside. All their efforts must be directed to destroying
it, because we must all be conscious of this â that as much as the
workers of the land, the peasants, have not given a hand to the workers
of the town, for a common revolutionary action, all the revolutionary
efforts of the towns will be condemned to inevitable fiascos. The whole
revolutionary question is there; it must be resolved, or else perishâ
â Bakunin, from The Complete Works âOn German PanGermanismâ.
According to the German Marxist Karl Kautsky, the small peasant was
doomed. It was tactically useful to mobilise the peasant masses. In his
the Agrarian Question, he stated that the short-term objectives of the
peasants and the lower middle class, not to mention the bourgeoisie,
were in opposition to the interest of all humanity as embodied in the
idea of socialist society. âWhen the proletariat [meaning the industrial
working class] comes to try and exploit the achievements of the
revolution, its allies-the peasantry- will certainly turn against
it...the political make-up of the peasantry disbars it from any active
or independent role and prevents it from achieving its own class
representation...By nature it is bourgeois and shows its reactionary
essence clearly in certain fields... That is why the proposition before
the congress speaks of the dictatorship of the proletariat alone
supported by the peasantry... Peasantry must assist proletariat, not the
proletariat the peasantry in the achievement of the latterâs wishesâ.
Leo Jogiches, âThe dictatorship of the proletariat supported by the
peasantryâat the Sixth Party Congress of the Polish Social Democrats
1908. (and the following discussion at the Congress where it was stated
that the âpeasantry cannot play the autonomous role alongside the
proletariat which the Bolsheviks have ascribed to itâ. Rosa Luxemburg
shared Jogichesâ mistrust of the peasantry, and could see them only as a
reactionary force.
Lenin himself, extremely flexible on a tactical level, and extremely
rigid on an ideological level, was conscious of what he was doing when
his Party advanced the slogan of the dictatorship of the proletariat and
peasantry. After Bolshevik triumph âthen it would be ridiculous to speak
of the unity of will of the proletariat and of the peasantry, of
democratic rule...Then we shall have to think of the socialist, of the
proletarian dictatorshipâ(Two Tactics of Social Democracy in the
Democratic Revolution, 1905).
For his part Trotsky had a harsher attitude to the peasantry, and was
unconvinced of even a temporary alliance with them: âThe proletariat
will come into conflict not only with the bourgeois groups which
supported the proletariat during the first stage of the revolutionary
struggle, but also with the broad masses of the peasants (1905,written
in 1922).
The Bolsheviks defined âkulaksâ as rich peasants, able to sell produce
on the market as well as produce for their own use, able to employ hired
labour and to sell their surplus products. They were seen as
representing the real petit bourgeois elements in the countryside, ready
to develop agriculture through capitalist advances. In the second stage
of the revolution, after the initial bourgeois stage, the kulaks (and a
âsubstantial part of the middle peasantryâ-Lenin) would go over to the
bourgeoisie, whilst the proletariat would rally the poor peasantry to
it. But as Ferro points out: âThe search for the kulak was partly false,
a matter of chasing shadows, for the kulaks had often disappeared, or
sunk to muzhik level, since the Revolution of Octoberâ[1]. What is
certain is that on a practical level the Bolsheviks alienated vast
masses of the peasantry in the âWar Communismâ years from 1918 to 1921,
in particular with grain requisitioning and the Chekist repression. The
Bolsheviks sought to bring class war to the peasantry. In doing so they
exaggerated the importance and wealth of the kulaks. Selunskaia reports
that in fact only 2 per cent could be classified as âclearly kulaksâ[2].
One official statistic gives the following figures: in 1917, 71% of the
peasants cultivated less than 4 hectares, 25% had between 4 and 10
hectares, only 3.7% had more than 10 hectares, these categories changing
respectively in 1920 to 85, 15, and 0.5%. Another criterion, the
possession of a horse, according to the same statistics, can be used to
show relative wealth.29% had none, 49% had one, 17% had two, and 4.8%
had more than 3 (in 1917). By 1920, the figures had changed respectively
to 27.6, 63.6, 7.9, and 0.9%[3]. In fact, the number of kulaks- and here
we are referring to Bolshevik norms as to what constituted âwealthyâ-
was diminishing, and the equalisation process was continuing. As for the
requisitioning, the leading Bolshevik Kubanin admitted that half the
food collected rotted, and many cattle died on railway carriages en
route, due to lack of water and food[4].
In reaction to war communism, a number of insurrections broke out. In
the East Ukraine, the Makhnovist movement, inspired and militarily led
by the anarchist peasant Nestor Makhno, was one of the more
ideologically developed movements. It must be remembered that the
Makhnovists had controlled this part of the Ukraine before the arrival
of the Red Army and had successively defeated Austro-German and White
troops. The Makhnovists invited a number of anarchists fleeing from the
North and Bolshevik persecution or returning from foreign exile, to work
through the Nabat (Alarm) Confederation of Anarchists in propaganda,
cultural and educational work among the peasantry. The Makhnovists saw
the White threat as a greater danger than the Bolsheviks, and concluded
a series of alliances with the latter in a united front against the
White leaders, Denikin and Wrangel. In fact, there seems to be much
evidence that Wrangel would have smashed through the Ukraine and taken
Moscow and destroyed the Bolshevik government, if not for the efforts of
the Makhnovists. At the end of a joint campaign against the Whites in
the Crimea, Makhnovist commanders were invited to Red Army headquarters
and summarily shot. Makhno himself fought on for several months, before
being forced to retire over the border [5].
The Cheka and the prodrazverstksa (food requisition squads) never showed
themselves in the Makhnovist centre of Hulyai-Polye before 1919, but
peasants living in the Ekaterinoslav and Alexandrovsk areas had plenty
of experience of them. In other areas of insurrection the initial
opposition was more directly a result of the âWar Communismâ policies of
Bolshevism.
In West Siberia, (and indeed throughout the whole of Siberia â see [URL=
http://libcom.org/history/1900-1923-anarchism-in-siberia] our article A
Siberian Makhnovschina[/URL]) the regime was faced with probably their
worst threat, and it is possible that it was this, more than the
Kronstadt insurrection of the same year, that forced it to change
course. Krasnaya Armiya (Red Army, published by the Military Academy,
and aimed at a small circle of Communist readers) had to admit in its
edition of December 1921 that the carrying out of the grain collections
in spring 1920 roused the Siberian peasantry against the Communists and
that âthe movement in the Ishimsk region was proceeding under the same
slogans which at one time were put forth by the Kronstadt sailorsâ. Red
Army had to admit that ineptitude, economic mismanagement and âcriminalâ
seizure of property had been amongst the causes of peasant
dissatisfaction. The journal recognised the effect on the morale when
they saw at first hand the food requisitioned from them rotting in
carloads. âProvocatory actsâ by government representatives in the
tax-gathering agencies had frequently brought about risings of entire
villages. The journal also reported on âa very uniqueâ movement in the
Don and Kuban regions, headed by Maslakov, an ex-Commander of the Red
Army, with the aim of declaring war on âthe saboteurs of the Soviet
power, on the âcommissar-mindedâ Communistsâ[6]. In fact, this was a
whole brigade of the Red Army.
Indeed Maslakovâs uprising in February 1921 in eastern Ukraine quickly
linked with the Makhnovists through the detachment of the Makhnovist
commander Brova. Red Army Commanders revolted, as with the battalion at
Mikhailovka led by Vakulin, and then Popov, in the Northern Don Cossack
territory (from December 1920) Vakulin appears to have had a force of
3,200 â six times the amount he had started out with â when he moved
east into the Ural region. He succeeded in taking prisoner a Red Army
force of 800. But on 17^(th) February 1921 he lost a battle in which he
died, and the Don Cossack F.Popov, a Socialist Revolutionary, took over.
The Popov group moved back into Samara and then Saratov provinces,
picking up strength as it went along. It was estimated by the Red Army
that it numbered 6,000 by now. It managed to capture an entire Red Army
battalion. It appears to have been eventually crushed, if we believe
Bolshevik sources. In Samara a Left-Social Revolutionary officer,
Sapozhkov, in the Red Army revolted at the head of âanarchistic and SR
elementsâ (according to the Soviet historian Trifonov). He was himself
the son of a peasant in this province. This uprising began on 14^(th) or
15^(th) July 1920 with a force of 2,700. Sapozhkov fell in battle on
6^(th) September after 2 months of fighting. His place was taken by
Serov, who was still able to gather 3,000 combatants and who fought on
until summer of 1923, the longest time than any rebel band had fought
on, apart from Makhno.
In the Tambov region another serious insurrection began in August 1920
under the guidance of Alexander Stepanovitch Antonov. Here again the
revolt was sparked off by grain requisition. Antonov himself was an
ex-Social Revolutionary, and then Left SR, who spoke of defending both
workers and peasants against Bolsheviks. Other leading lights in this
movement included, Socialist Revolutionaries, Left Socialist
Revolutionaries and anarchists. The Antonovists were able to assemble
21,000 combatants at one time. The anarchist Yaryzhka commanded a
detachment of the Antonovist movement under the black flag of anarchism.
Whilst serving in the Army during World War I he had struck an officer
in 1916, been imprisoned and had converted to anarchism as a result of
his experiences. He began operations in autumn 1918, fighting on till he
was killed in action by the Bolsheviks in autumn 1920.
It can be seen that all these risings or oppositional movements to
Leninism amongst the peasantry occurred around about the same time, over
the period 1920â1921. Indeed, taken with the rising of the sailors at
Kronstadt in 1921, they formed in toto a grave threat to Bolshevik rule.
The aims of the Kronstadt insurgents seem to have had an echo in the
peasant movements. This is hardly surprising considering many Kronstadt
sailors had peasant origins. The west Siberia uprising adopted the
Kronstadt demands[6A], as noted by Krasnaya Armiya. After the Tambov
insurrection, the Soviet authorities found the Kronstadt resolutions at
an important Antonovist hiding place. Antonov himself was so saddened by
the news of the crushing of the Kronstadt uprising that he went on a
vodka binge, so it is alleged. It appears that some Kronstadt sailors
escaped the crushing of the insurrection and linking up with the
Antonovschina. On 11^(th) July Bolshevik cavalry fought an engagement
with a small but elite band of Antonovists, Socialist-Revolutionary
political workers and sailors. They fought with âstriking steadfastnessâ
until the end according to the Chekist Smirnov, when the few survivors
shot first their horses and then themselves. One Bolshevik noted in 1921
that âthe anarchist-Makhnovists in the Ukraine reprinted the appeal of
the Kronstadters, and in general did not hide their sympathy for
them.â[7]
It is clear that the Kronstadters were opposed to Tsarist restoration,
and had been instrumental in bringing down the Kerensky regime. The
Makhnovists were equally implacable towards the Whites. No alliance was
even considered with them against the Bolsheviks, and indeed the
Makhnovists formed anti-White alliances with the Bolsheviks, the last of
which was to prove their downfall, as seen above. The movement was
deeply influenced by anarchism, and hardly likely to countenance
collaboration with one of its mortal foes. As for Maslakov, he had been
a trusted Red Commander, and seems to have been fighting for a communism
without commissars. Krasnaya Armiya admitted that the insurgents in the
Don and Kuban regions âdisapprove of and fight against White Guardist
agitationâ. As for Antonov, he âundertook no embarrassing action against
the Bolsheviks such as cutting communications behind the front lines,
but contented himself with combating punitive detachments sent out
against the peasantsâ[8]. Antonov had been imprisoned under Tsarism for
his activities as a Socialist Revolutionary during and after the 1905
Revolution with a 12 year sentence in Siberia, and his peasant movement
was unlikely to have favoured a return to the old days.
Another accusation against the peasant movements was that they were
kulak-led, dragging the rest of the peasantry in their wake. An analysis
of leading lights within the Makhnovist movement at least disproves it
in their case. Trotsky implied that the âliquidation of Makhno does not
mean the end of the Makhnovschina, which has its roots in the ignorant
peasant massesâ. But all the leading Makhnovists that we have
biographical information on came from the poor peasantry, including
Makhno himself, and in a few cases the middle peasantry. As Malet says:
âthe Bolsheviks have totally misconstrued the nature of the Makhno
movement. It was not a movement of kulaks, but of a broad mass of the
peasants, especially the poor and middle peasantsâ[9]. We have little
empirical evidence for the composition of the peasant uprisings in the
Don and Kuban areas. Radkey has provided some information on the Tambov
insurrection through research under difficult conditions, and has found
that Antonov was the son of a small-town artisan â hardly a kulak! There
is evidence that some leading Antonovists were of kulak origin, (based
on Bolshevik archives) yet one Cheka historian had to admit that a
âconsiderable part of the middle peasantryâ supported the
insurrection[10]. There is evidence that Antonov had the support of the
poor peasantry and some workers in the province[11].
One must have reservations over the allegations of the âkulak characterâ
of these uprisings. Even if it is admitted that some kulaks took parting
the risings, it must be granted, from the little evidence available,
that other sections of the peasantry took an active part. What can be
made of the allegations that far from being counter-revolutionary, the
peasant uprisings were the start of a âThird Revolutionâ (leading on
from the February and October Revolutions)? This term appears to have
been developed by anarchists within the Makhnovist movement, appearing
in a declaration of a Makhnovist organ, the Revolutionary Military
Soviet, in October 1919. It reappeared during the Kronstadt
insurrection. Anatoli Lamanov developed it in the pages of the Kronstadt
Izvestia, the journal of the insurgents, of which he was an editor.
Lamanov was a leader of the Union of Socialist-Revolutionary Maximalists
in Kronstadt, and saw Kronstadt as the beginning of a âThird Revolutionâ
which would overthrow the âdictatorship of the Communist Party with its
Cheka and state capitalismâ and transfer all power âto freely elected
Sovietsâ and transform the unions into âfree associations of workers,
peasants and labouring intelligentsiaâ[12]. The Maximalists, a split
from the Socialist-Revolutionaries, demanded immediate agrarian and
urban social revolution, a Toilers Republic of federated soviets,
anti-parliamentarism and distrust of parties. There is little evidence
on the links between them and the Makhnovists, though it would be
unlikely that this slogan emerged in two places totally independently.
âHere in Kronstadt, has been laid the first stone of the Third
Revolution, striking the last fetters from the labouring masses and
opening a broad new road for socialist creativityâ, proclaimed the
Kronstadters[13].
The term âThird Revolutionâ however, seems vague, with no clear idea of
how to bring this Revolution about. It had its adherents in Makhnovist
circles, and possibly in West Siberia and with Maslakov, but never
operated in a unified approach to a development of its implementation.
What distinguished the Makhnovist movement from Tambov was the formerâs
specific ideology. The Antonov movement had no ideology, âknew what they
were against... but only the haziest of notions as to how to order
Russia in the hour of victoryâ[14]. The Antonovists were a local
movement with local perspectives. The Makhnovists were wide-ranging, and
links were formed with Maslakov. Makhno himself campaigned as far as the
Volga, going around the Don area linking up similar bands. A Makhnovist
detachment under Parkhomenko was sent off to the Voronezh area in early
March 1921 and it might have been attempting to link up with Antonovist
detachments under Kolesnikov.
But the vast expanse of the Soviet Union curtailed link-ups between the
movements. There seems to have been widespread mutual ignorance of
either the existence or the aims of the differing peasant movements.
Where there was an awareness, there seems to have been little effort to
combine the movements for a unified onslaught against the Bolshevik
government. The Kronstadt insurrection was later deemed as several
months premature by some of its leading lights[15]. Localism and lack of
a more global strategy similarly hamstrung Antonov and the movements in
the Don, Kuban and west Siberian regions, as did the very spontaneity of
the risings. The Makhnovists may have had a better grasp of the
situation, but they failed to unite the opposition, going into alliance
once more with the Bolsheviks, despite previous unhappy experiences.
Nevertheless, the sum of these risings presented a very grave threat to
the regime, forcing it to at least move from War Communism to the New
Economic Policy.
Avrich, P. Princeton (1970) Kronstadt 1921
Atkinson,D. Stanford (1983) The end of the Russian Land Commune
1905â1930
Lewin, M. Allen & Unwin (1968) Russian Peasants and Soviet power
Mitrany, D. Weidenfeld & Nicholson (1951) Marx and the Peasant.
Malet, M. MacMillan (1982). Nestor Makhno in the Russian Civil War
Palij, M. Washington (1976) The Anarchism of Nestor Makhno.
Radkey, O. Hoover (1976) The Unknown Civil War in Soviet Russia.
Maximoff, G. P. Cienfuegos (1976) The Guillotine at Work.
Skirda, A. Paris (1982) Nestor Makhno, Le Cosaque de lâAnarchie.
Ferro, M. RKP (1985) The Bolshevik Revolution, A Social History of the
Russian Revolution.
Getzler, I. Cambridge University Press (1983) Kronstadt 1917â1921, the
Fate of a Soviet Democracy.
Kulak â a better off peasant
Muzhik â the poorer peasants
Whites â the reaction to the Russian Revolution, gathered around the
Tsarists
Socialist-Revolutionaries â revolutionary party that saw a key role for
the peasants and thought that Russian society could avoid capitalism and
go straight to a socialist society
Left Socialist-Revolutionaries â a more radical split from the SRs.
[1] p.138 Ferro
[2] Izmeniia 1917â20, in Atkinson.
[3] L Kritsman, The Heroic Period of the Great Russian Revolution, 1926
in Skirda.
[4] Kubanin âThe anti-Soviet peasant movement during the years of civil
war (war communism) 1926, in Skirda.
[5] Palij, Malet, Skirda all cite evidence of Makhnovist achievement in
saving the Bolshevik capital
[6] p.148, Maximoff
[7] Lebeds, quoted by Malet.
[8] p.82 Radkey
[9] p122 Malet
[10] Sofinov, in Radkey. p106.
[11] p107-110 Radkey
[12] See Getzler
[13] p243 Avrich
[14] p.69 Radkey
[15] see Avrich