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CHAPTER FIVE
Bolshevik Leaders’
Miscalculations
MENTION has already been made of the theory of the Russian
Communist
Party that the achievement of Socialism did not need to wait on the
growth of the
workers’ understanding.
On an extreme interpretation such a theory would have been compatible
with a belief on the part of the Russian Communist Party that its
seizure of power in
November 1917 could be followed by the early inauguration of Socialism
in Russia
alone, and in Western Europe and America many of their uninformed
admirers, as well as frightened defenders of capitalism, believed this
to be true.
If the leaders of the Russian Communist Party had any such idea
they
were soon undeceived. But another belief they held was hardly less
fantastic.
They were soon to find that the peasants had no intention of
co-operating in the
government’s plans
which were opposed to their desire to secure unfettered ownership of
land by dividing up the big estates. Faced with peasant hostility, the
government had to
institute forcible requisition of food in order to feed the town
population.
In sympathy with the peasants’ resistance to the requisition,
sailors
at Kronstadt naval base passed a resolution in February 1921 seeking
relaxations. When
these were refused they mutinied. Lenin’s government – which the
Kronstadt sailors
had actively helped in the struggle for power in 1917 – brought in
troops and
smashed the mutiny with artillery fire.
Among industrial workers, apathy and resistance to government
policies
were also to add to the difficulties of reconstruction. Lacking support
for
Socialism inside Russia the Russian government still believed that it
could count on the
decisive support of
the workers in Britain, France and Germany. It viewed its own situation
as that of holding power for a short interim period until the workers
of the West
took revolutionary action and came to Russia’s aid. Lenin in his
pamphlet
‘The Chief Task
of our Times’ dismissed the idea that Russia could itself stand up to
the power of “international imperialism”. He stressed that Russia’s
struggle, if it
was to succeed, had to be conducted “in conjunction with the
revolutionary proletariat
of Germany,
France and England. Till then, sad and contrary to revolutionary
traditions as it may be, our only possible policy is to wait, to tack
and to retreat”.
RUSSIA DEPENDENT ON HELP FROM OUTSIDE
Lenin’s fellow Communist Party leader Trotsky, in an address delivered
on 14 April 1918, spoke of their aim to establish “a common brotherly
economic
system ... so that all should work for the common good, that the whole
people should live
as one
honest, loving family”, but he added that it could only be done with
help from outside.
“All this can and shall realise completely only when the European
working class support us.
“Comrades, we should be wretched, blind men of little faith, if we ever
for one single day, were to lose our conviction that the working class
of other
countries will come to our aid, and following our example will rise,
and bring our task to a
successful
conclusion.” (‘A Paradise in this World’, page 18.)
When the Russians issued their call for a general armistice they
addressed it to the ‘class-conscious workers’ of the western countries;
but most of those
workers were not class-conscious and the reasons Trotsky gave for his
‘faith’ that
they would revolt rise in revolt rested on all sorts of things except
the one that
mattered, their understanding of Socialism. What he countered on was
the war-weariness
of the soldiers and civilians and discontent about high prices and
unemployment. It was an
appeal to the politically-immature workers of the West to come to the
aid of the politically-immature workers and peasants of Russia – to
establish
Socialism, a world-wide system which only a few in any country wanted.
The work of spreading an understanding of socialism widely among
the
workers of Europe had not been done. The great majority were at best
indifferent
to socialist principles, at worst hostile, as was to be shown nine
months later at
the General
Election in Great Britain in which Tory-Liberal-National Labour
‘Victory’ coalition was returned by an overwhelming majority against
the official Labour
Party and other opposition candidates who, though not socialist, were
expected to take
a more or less sympathetic attitude to the new Russian government.
The new government under Lloyd George then embarked on armed
intervention in Russia and supported the reactionaries who were to wage
civil war to
overthrow Lenin’s government. Appeals made to British workers to refuse
to make
or ship arms to Russia for use against the government forces received
little
response. The workers in France, Germany and elsewhere were equally
unready for
Socialism and the Russian government had to fall back largely on its
own
resources.
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