Trotskyism
Counter-Revolution in Disguise

Introductory
A GREAT leader died. On December 1, 1934, Sergei Kirov, a member
of the Political Bureau of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union, was waylaid
in Leningrad and shot dead. On December 21 the Soviet Government announced that
the assassin, Nikolaiev, was a member of the so-called “Leningrad Center” of
counter-revolutionists, a terrorist group bent on assassinating the highest
officials of the Soviet.
Said the official communique:
“The investigation has established that the motive for the
killing of Kirov was a plan of this underground anti-Soviet group to disorganize
the leadership of the Soviet Government by means of terrorist acts directed
against its chief leaders and thereby effect a change in policy along the lines
of the so-called Zinoviev-Trotsky platform. . . . There was an additional motive
for the killing of Kirov because Kirov had smashed the Leningrad group of former
Zinoviev oppositionists both ideologically and politically.”
A few days later, Zinoviev, Kamenev and 17 members of another
counter-revolutionary group, the so-called “Moscow Center”, were arrested and
brought to trial. At the hearings, Zinoviev, apparently realizing the
hopelessness of his situation, declared:
“This outrageous murder threw such an ominous light upon the
whole previous anti-Party struggle, that I recognize the Party is absolutely
right in speaking of the political responsibility of the former anti-Party
Zinoviev group for the murder committed.”
Members of the Moscow Center, in their confessions, explained the nature of
the degeneration that led to the murder. Said Yevdokimov:
“We were separated from the actual life of the country and we
stewed in our own juice. Our counter-revolutionary connections were strengthened
in us. Blinded by the wrath towards the leadership of the Party, we did not see
what was occurring in the towns and villages. We did not see the colossal
successes of Socialist construction. The tremendous historical processes of our
country, influencing the international working-class movement, went by us. We
appraised the difficulties arising in the process of growth in the countries as
enemies, maliciously rejoicing at failures, and accusing the Party leadership of
these failures.
“We did not see what every rank-and-file member saw. We did not
notice the growth in the consciousness of strength, of the unity of the Party.
We addressed Stalin with malicious counterrevolutionary insinuations. We accused
the Party leadership that it did not accept measures to activize the
international working-class movement. We slanderously asserted that the Central
Committee handicapped the development of this movement.”
Another member of the group, Bashkirov, declared: “Nikolaiev’s shot resulted
from the fact that he received his education in counter-revolution in the
Trotsky-Zinoviev organization.”
Once more the name of Trotsky cropped up in connection with an attack on the
Bolshevik Revolution. Once more Zinoviev (and his old associate, Kamenev)
appeared as collaborating with Trotsky. This time it was no mere word barrage. A
great hero was destroyed. New Russia was robbed of a talented, courageous and
universally beloved working-class builder of the Socialist system. The blow was
aimed at the very heart of the Revolution.
“The dregs of the Trotsky-Zinoviev opposition.” . . . This is how the Soviet
masses termed the band of plotters. And once more a gigantic surge of hatred
rose among the millions of friends of the Soviet Union the world over for this
man, Trotsky.
Who is he? What is Trotskyism? What are its social roots? What is the
international role of the Trotsky group?
The following is to be a brief answer to these questions:
1. Trotsky’s
Career
2. The
Social Basis of Trotskyism
3. Trotskyism
Defined
4. Socialism
in One Country
5. The
Revolution and the Peasantry
6. The
Soviet Union
7. The
Communist Party
8. The
Anglo-Russian Committee
9. The
Chinese Revolution
10. The
Third Period
11. The
German Situation and the Question of Social-Fascism
12. The
Trotskyites in the U.S.A.
13. Trotsky
the Historian
14. The
Danger of Trotskyism