TROTSKY, STALIN AND THE RED ARMY
CIVIL WAR IN THE USSR
Contents
Introduction
Beginnings of the Red Army
Brest-Litovsk and the Left Opposition
First Steps to a Professional Red Army
General Forces Ranged against the Bolsheviks Internally and
Externally
Trotsky as War Commissar
Stalin’s Mission to Southern Front at Tsaritsyn
The Food Shortage
Continued Professional Development of the Army – Partisans
or Guerillas
Disaster at Perm – and Stalin’s Mission to Perm
The Eight Party Congress – The Military Opposition
Introduction
In Trotsky Against the Bolsheviks
Trotsky's Political Biography in two parts:
Trotsky part 1;
Trotsky
Part 2], Communist League & Alliance have examined the earlier
history of Trotsky methodically. However, until now, we have not dealt with
the myths surrounding Trotsky in the Civil War. These are however of Homeric
proportions, and Marxist-Leninists should be familiar with a rebuttal. This
the first of a two-part article, where we will start by examining the
structure and the command of the Red Army up to 1919; a later article will
specifically discuss the USSR-Polish war of 1920, and the Trotsky version of
“export of revolution”.
A common perception amongst progressives is that
Trotsky “saved” the revolution, indeed “made” the revolution, during the
Civil War following the seizure of power by the Bolsheviks. Largely because
Trotsky “made” the new Red Army. This is certainly the view of those like
Trotsky himself. Trotsky presents himself as being guarded from Stalin’s
ruthless attacks, by Lenin. According to Trotsky for example:
“Stalin stayed in Tsarityn for a few months ..Lenin watched the conflict
develop with alarm. … He knew Stalin better than I did, and obviously
suspected that the stubbornness of Tsartisyn was being secretly staged
by Stalin”;
Trotsky, Lev “My Life”; New York; 1970; p. 441.
At the same time according to Trotsky, Lenin really
was just very distant from the details of the Civil War and could not have
known what was needed – were it not for the all-informed Trotsky:
“Lenin
was too much absorbed .. to make trips to the front. I stayed at the
fronts most of the time… After half an hour talk with me, our mutual
understandings and complete solidarity were restored… a few days later..
Lenin was making a speech… “When Comrade Trotsky informed me that in our
military department the offices are numbered in tens of thousands, I
gained a proper understanding of what constitutes the secret sue of our
enemy.. of how to build communism out of the bricks that the capitalists
had gathered to use against us”;
Ibid; p,. 446-7.
Naturally his followers such as Erich Wollenberg
and more recently, Tony Cliff echo Trotsky, writing for example
that:
“ Trotsky’s building of the Red Army is rightly
considered a gigantic achievement. By combining contradictory elements
he produced a mighty army out of a void…in the train Trotsky
demonstrated how the sword and the pen could act together in complete
harmony…“
Cliff, T; Trotsky 1917-1923 - The Sword of the Revolution; London; 1990;
p. 11, 95;
However, these Heroic Myths are simply not
consistent with the facts.
It is telling for instance, that when from Trotsky writes a long memo to
the Central Committee, where Trotsky is urging on his own plans for the
Southern Frontier as follows:
“13. The division of the southern front into a
south-eastern and a southern one consolidates organizationally the
fundamental strategic mistake. At present between the commander in chief
and the two southern groups there no longer stands one person
responsible for the southern front…
14. Despite the formal
release of the commander in chief from the obligations of the original
plan, the de facto situation remains such that even essential changes
(the transfer of Budenny’s corps, the movement of the army to the west
etc) are evaluated in the Central Committee and the Revolutionary
Military Tribunal as “assaults” on the basic plan and implemented with
extreme delay…. Conclusion .. It is essential to realise the actual
extent of the danger. It is essential to order the commander in chief to
take steps that will really save Tula from perdition”
Lenin would simply write on
this above memo as follows:
“Nothing but bad nerves; - was not discussed at the plenum; it is
strange to raise it now”;
Memo Trotsky to Central Committee dated 1st October 1919; In: Edited,
Pipes R; The Unknown Lenin: From the Secret Archive; New Haven; 1996; p.
73.
It is very telling that the editor of these new files from the archives
writes:
“Trotsky’s note to the Central Committee holds
interest for two reasons. First it shows how little familiarity Trotsky
had with the operational plans of the Red Army, which he nominally
headed. Written less than two months before the Red Army would
decisively defeat General Denikin (and save Tula) it reveals that
Trotsky either was unaware of the actual preparing for the Soviet
counter-offensive or misunderstood them. Second Lenin’s cavalier
dismissal of this advice indicates that he did not hold Trotsky’s
military abilities in high esteem”;
Ibid; p. 69-70
Both Lenin’s Collected Works for this period, and
the papers known as the “Trotsky Papers 1917-1922”, [“The Trotsky Papers
1917-1922”; Ed J.M.Meijer; 1971; The Hague]
show a further wealth of detail that Lenin was very
well aware of events in the Civil war. It is evident that he was frequently
directing Trotsky in numerous ways; or asking for very specific details that
are only consistent with a deep understanding of the situation.
Finally, it is evident that Lenin was frequently consulting Stalin, and
even urging him to intervene in areas where Trotsky’s command was failing.
Resorting to Stalin to pull Trotsky’s military chestnuts out of the fire,
became a habit of Lenin.
One basic later ideological position of Trotsky’s
was that without socialism in other countries, the “Socialism in One
Country” of the USSR would fail. This mistake of Trotsky’s has its roots
early on, when he espoused the “permanent Revolution” [See Marx and
Engels on Socialism In One Country:
One Country ]. Rather than just leading ultimately to a serious
error, it lead to serious errors in the immediate post 1917 era. This is
exemplified in Trotsky’s ultra-leftist error at Brest-Litovsk, and in his
conduct of the Polish Campaign.
Part One of this article follows, and will deal with the setting up of
the Red Army, the struggles over the treachery Ex-Tsarist generals and
the early stages of the Civil War, up to the Eight Party
Congress in March 1919. We will take the story from there to the Polish
campaigns of 1920, to Part Two of this article in the next issue of
Alliance Quarterly.
[See in association with this article, some relevant texts of Stalin
at: http://www.allianceML.com/STALIN-TXT/JVSCIVILWAR.html ]
Beginnings of the Red
Army
When the Military Revolutionary Committee of
the Bolshevik party overthrew the Provisional Government in Petrograd on the
8th November 1917, they set up the Council of Peoples Commissars
(Sovnarkom). Recognising its debt to the soldiers and sailors, they
struck a Committee on Army and Naval Affairs. The seizure of power
could never have taken place without the army and navy militants who:
“Prepared by the Bolsheviks, carried out fighting orders with precision
and fought side by side with Red Guards. The navy did not lag behind the
army. Since Kronstadt was a stronghold of the Bolshevik Party, and has
long since refused to recognise the authority of the Provisional
Government. The cruiser Aurora trained its guns on the Winter Palace,
and on October 25th their thunder ushered in a new era, the
year of the Great Socialist Revolution”;
Editors: A Commission of the CC of the CPSU(B); “A Short History of the
Communist Party Soviet Union (Bolsheviks)”; Moscow; 1939; p.208.
Already on the 8th October, the
Second Congress of Soviets had adopted the Decree on Peace:
“The congress called on the belligerent countries
to conclude an immediate armistice for a period of not less than three
months to permit negotiations for peace.”
“Short History CPSU(B)”; Ibid; p. 209.
On the 10 November Lenin signed an order to
demobilize the Imperial Army – until then still at war with Germany in the
First World War. The army was 12 million strong, and Mikhail Kedrov
oversaw the demobilization as deputy Army Commissar. By mid December
Sovnarkom’s Appeal for Peace had not received any answer from the remaining
warring nations. It was also clear the counter-revolutionaries were
organising military forces. The Congress of Demobilization was still
taking place, when Army Commissar Nikolai Podvoiskii , the first
Narkomvoen (i.e. Commissar for Military & Naval Affairs – until March 13th
1918 when at his own request he stepped down from this post – Footnote no.3;
Ibid; Meijer; p. 7) discussed with the Bolsheviks party Military
Organisation the formation of a new army.
Initially Kedrov argued for an army based purely on
industrial workers and peasants who had “proven loyalty” to the Bolshevik
Party. But finally a proposal was agreed to that the army would be made up
of “the labouring classes, workers and peasants with a firm proletarian
core”; Cited von Hagen, Mark: “Soldiers in the Proletarian Dictatorship.
The Red Army & The Soviet socialist state 1917-1930”; Ithaca 1990; p.9.
But by January 1918, mass desertions from the army
were rife, and soldiers committees were unilaterally dissolving units.
Soldiers seized arms and went home. Luckily, since 1917, the soviets had
been organising Red Guards and militias. It was these that had seized State
Power for the Military Revolutionary Committee of the Bolsheviks, when they
overthrew the Provisional Government. It was also these Red Guards that
defended Petrograd on November 10th 1917, from the
counter-revolution led by General Petr Krasnov and former
minister-president Alexsandr Kerensky.
Engels had advocated a militia-like army,
while the Paris Commune of 1870 had actually put this into practice. These
examples inspired militia leaders like Valentin Trifonov who
advocated that the Red Guards become formally, a peoples’ militia, as the
backbone of the army. On January 15th, Sovnarkom struck the
All-Russian Collegium to Organise a Worker-Peasant Red Army, which
declared in the “Declaration of the Rights of the Laboring and Exploited”,
the arming of all labourers and the formation of a socialist red army of
workers and peasants. Guided by the movement from below, the army was
envisaged as being a volunteer army from below:
“Like
everything in our revolution, the formation of a socialist army cannot
await instructions from above. It must be formed from below, by the
people themselves; therefore all organisations – factory and volost’
committees, local party organisations, trade unions, local soviets, and
all Red Guard staff – immediately must set themselves to the task of
organising the Socialist Army”;
Cited von Hagen; Ibid p.21-22.
The general model was of the Paris Commune and its fully
volunteer army. The soldiers committees, rejecting any question of an
officer leadership, discarded all traces of an officer layer. All military
courts had been abolished by Sovnarkom in November, and replaced by comrade
courts (tovarish-cheskie sudy). Also on December 1, 197, the Petrograd
Military District abolished all ranks and insignia, and privileges for
officers, and started the election of officers. It is on the face of it,
surprising then that some 8,000 generals and officers of the Imperial army
would wish to volunteer to serve the Soviet state. These officers were
received with great suspicion, and the term “military specialists” pointed
out their expertise, without drawing attention to their prior allegiances.
In order to create a new ‘communist’ officer corps, Sovnarkom initiated
courses for Red Commanders in December. By end of 1918, there were
13,000 red commanders through the state.
The first test of the new state defence forces came
in Estonia, in 1918 at Narva – when the German army battled with the
Red Guards. In the absence of central professional leadership, and the
refusal of the Red Guards to accept any orders unless given by elected
commanders, the rout was inevitable. Immediately after this, the Treaty of
Brest-Litovsk was finally signed, and the Red Army was under pressure to
adopt professional standards.
Brest-Litovsk and the Left Opposition
The objective situation of the fledgling socialist state was precarious. It
was necessary to ensure that the unilaterally declared Peace proclaimed by
the USSR, was accepted by the foreign warring armies:
“But the position of the
Soviet Government could not be deemed fully secure as long as Russia was
in a state of war with Germany and Austria. In order finally to
consolidate the Soviet power, the war had to be ended. … The Soviet
Government called upon "all the belligerent peoples and their
governments to start immediate negotiations for a just, democratic
peace." But the "allies" -- Great Britain and France -- refused to
accept the proposal of the Soviet Government. .. The Soviet Government,
in compliance with the will of the Soviets, decided to start
negotiations with Germany and Austria. The negotiations began on
December 3 in Brest-Litovsk. On December 5 an armistice was signed. … It
became clear in the course of the negotiations that the German
imperialists were out to seize huge portions of the territory of the
former tsarist empire, and to turn Poland, the Ukraine and the Baltic
countries into dependencies of Germany. To continue the war under such
conditions would have meant staking the very existence of the new-born
Soviet Republic. The working class and the peasantry were confronted
with the necessity of accepting onerous terms of peace, of retreating
before the most dangerous marauder of the time -- German imperialism --
in order to secure a respite in which to strengthen the Soviet power and
to create a new army, the Red Army, which would be able to defend the
country from enemy attack.“
"Short History of the CPSU(B)": Ibid; p.215;
Lenin’s proposal to sign
an armistice with Germany and Austria, provoked a storm of antagonism of
Ultra-Leftists in alliance with Russian ultra-nationalists. The opposition
united under the name of the “Left Communists”, and was led by
Trotsky:
“All the
counter-revolutionaries, from the Mensheviks and
Socialist-Revolutionaries to the most arrant Whiteguards, conducted a
frenzied campaign against the conclusion of peace. Their policy was
clear: they wanted to wreck the peace negotiations, provoke a German
offensive and thus imperil the still weak Soviet power and endanger the
gains of the workers and peasants. Their allies in this sinister scheme
were Trotsky and his accomplice Bukharin, the latter, together with
Radek and Pyatakov, heading a group which was hostile to the Party but
camouflaged itself under the name of "Left Communists." Trotsky and the
group of "Left Communists" began a fierce struggle within the Party
against Lenin, demanding the continuation of the war. These people were
clearly playing into the hands of the German imperialists and the
counter-revolutionaries within the country, for they were working to
expose the young Soviet Republic, which had not yet any army, to the
blows of German imperialism.“
“Short History of the CPSUB“; Ibid; p.216.
Trotsky, in disobeying the
Central Committee’s instructions, provoked a crisis by refusing to sign the
treaty, while the German imperialists used this provocation as an excuse to
storm deeper into USSR territory:
“On February 10, 1918, the
peace negotiations in Brest-Litovsk were broken off. Although Lenin and
Stalin, in the name of the Central Committee of the Party, had insisted
that peace be signed, Trotsky, who was chairman of the Soviet delegation
at Brest-Litovsk, treacherously violated the direct instructions of the
Bolshevik Party. He announced that the Soviet Republic refused to
conclude peace on the terms proposed by Germany. At the same time he
informed the Germans that the Soviet Republic would not fight and would
continue to demobilize the army….The German government broke the
armistice and assumed the offensive. The remnants of our old army
crumbled and scattered before the onslaught of the German troops. The
Germans advanced swiftly, seizing enormous territory and threatening
Petrograd. German imperialism invaded the Soviet land with the object of
overthrowing the Soviet power and converting our country into its
colony. The ruins of the old tsarist army could not withstand the armed
hosts of German imperialism, and steadily retreated under their
blows.”
“Short History of the CPSUB“; Ibid; p. 216.
Fortunately the rally of
the Red Army at Narva, was able to “check” the advance. This then became
known as the “birthday of the Red Army”:
“The Soviet Government
issued the call -- "The Socialist fatherland is in danger!" And in
response the working class energetically began to form regiments of the
Red Army. The young detachments of the new army -- the army of the
revolutionary people -- heroically resisted the German marauders who
were armed to the teeth. At Narva and Pskov the German invaders met with
a resolute repulse. Their advance on Petrograd was checked. February 23
-- the day the forces of German imperialism were repulsed -- is regarded
as the birthday of the Red
Army.”
Short History of the CPSUB“; Ibid p. 217.
As a consequence of the
actions of the USSR delegate to the talks, Trotsky, the USSR was in an even
more serious situation than before:
“On February 18, 1918, the
Central Committee of the Party had approved Lenin's proposal to send a
telegram to the German government offering to conclude an immediate
peace. But in order to secure more advantageous terms, the Germans
continued to advance, and only on February 22 did the German government
express its willingness to sign peace. The terms were now far more
onerous than those originally proposed. Lenin, Stalin and Sverdlov had
to wage a stubborn fight on the Central Committee against Trotsky,
Bukharin and the other Trotskyites before they secured a decision in
favour of the conclusion of peace. Bukharin and Trotsky, Lenin declared,
"actually helped the German imperialists and hindered the
growth and development of the revolution in Germany." (Lenin,
Collected Works, Russ. ed., Vol. XXII, p. 307.) On February 23,
the Central Committee decided to accept the terms of the German Command
and to sign the peace treaty. The treachery of Trotsky and Bukharin cost
the Soviet Republic dearly. Latvia, Estonia, not to mention Poland,
passed into German hands; the Ukraine was severed from the Soviet
Republic and converted into a vassal of the German state. The Soviet
Republic undertook to pay an indemnity to the Germans.”
“Short History of the CPSUB“; p. 217.
Because of the controversy with the Left
Opposition, Lenin insisted that the decision to sign a Peace Accord be
brought back for the approval or otherwise of the Seventh Party Congress:
“In order
that the Party might pronounce its final decision on the question of
peace the Seventh Party Congress was summoned. the congress opened on
March 6, 1918. This was the first congress held after our Party had
taken power. It was attended by 46 delegates with vote and 58 delegates
with voice but no vote, representing 145,000 Party members…. reporting
at this congress on the Brest-Litovsk Peace, Lenin said that ". . . the
severe crisis which our Party is now experiencing, owing to the
formation of a Left opposition within it, is one of the gravest crises
the Russian revolution has experienced." (Lenin, Selected Works,
Vol. VII, pp. 293-94.). The resolution submitted by Lenin on the subject
of the Brest-Litovsk Peace was adopted by 30 votes against 12, with 4
abstentions….
.
On the day
following the adoption of this resolution, Lenin wrote an article
entitled "A Distressful Peace," in which he said: "Intolerably severe
are the terms of peace. Nevertheless, history will claim its own. . . .
Let us set to work to organize, organize and organize. Despite all
trials, the future is ours."
(Lenin,
Collected Works, Russ. ed., Vol. XXII, p. 288.)”
“Short
History of the CPSUB“; Ibid; p.218.
Obviously, the treaty was
a retreat. But was it needed, and what was the result of signing the
Brest-Litovsk Treaty?
“The Peace of Brest-Litovsk
gave the Party a respite in which to consolidate the Soviet power and to
organize the economic life of the country. The peace made it possible to
take advantage of the conflicts within the imperialist camp (the war of
Austria and Germany with the Entente, which was still in progress) to
disintegrate the forces of the enemy, to organize a Soviet economic
system and to create a Red Army. The peace made it possible for the
proletariat to retain the support of the peasantry and to accumulate
strength for the defeat of the Whiteguard generals in the Civil
War.”
“Short History of the CPSUB“; Ibid; p. 219.
First Steps to a Professional Red Army
In the
wake of this enforced “respite”, Sovnarkom began to reorganize the army.
“The Narva defeat marked the first retreat from the
principles of the commune in matters of defense.”
Von Hagen M; ”Soldiers in the Proletarian Dictatorship”; Ibid; p. 64.
As part of the re-organisation, Lev Trotsky was appointed as
commander in chief of the army, in place of the collegium. He was therefore
the second Bolshevik Commissar for war, following Podvoiskii as
discussed above.
Given the dearth of trained communist commanders,
Trotsky moved to ensure that Sovnarkom would approve the recruitment of
former Tsarist officers. Undoubtedly this was correct. What was incorrect
was the lack of supervision and the favouring of these element over the
political cadre. Inevitably, this was going to cause conflict with the
soldiers committees. Trotsky had to appeal to the All Russian Central
Executive Committee (VtsIK), who stated that all commanders in the
Red Army would be only appointed by higher-ranking commanders. But even this
compromise was still resisted, and elected commanders were still in position
up to 1919. In a compromise known as “dual command” (dvoenachalie),
each commander had to have a political equivalent – the commissar, and each
order had to be signed by both. It was now that the All-Russian Bureau of
Military Commissars (Vsebiurvoenkom) identified the soldiers
committees as an obstacle in ensuring authority in the army, and moves were
taken to disband them.
General
Forces Ranged against the Bolsheviks Internally and Externally
The
encirclement of the USSR by the capitalist states, facilitated the foreign
incursions into the USSR, which directly and indirectly aided the
counter-revolutionary white forces.
“By the summer of 1919, without declaration of war,
the armed forces of fourteen states had invaded the territory of Soviet
Russia. The countries involved were:
Great Britain Serbia France
China
Japan Finland
Germany Greece
Italy Poland USA
Rumania
Czechoslovakia Turkey.
Fighting side by side with the anti-Soviet invaders were the
counter-revolutionary White armies led by former Czarist generals
striving to restore the feudal aristocracy which the Russian people had
overthrown”;
Sayers M & Kahn AE; The Great Conspiracy”; Boston; 1946; p.79.
The overthrown landowning classes were in conspiracy with the West for
the defeat of the Bolsheviks:
“Overthrown by the October Socialist Revolution,
the Russian landlords and capitalist began to conspire with the
capitalists of other countries for the organisation of military
intervention against the Land of the Soviet…. The Soviet Government
proclaimed the Socialist fatherland in danger and called upon the people
to rise in its defence. The Bolshevik Party rallied the workers and
peasants for a patriotic war against the foreign invaders and the
bourgeois and landlord Whiteguards”.
Alexandrov GF et al: “Joseph Stalin – A Short Biography”; Moscow 1952;
p.59.
Following the end of the First World War, various regiments inside
Russian territory were left stranded. The Czech regiment was on its way to
their home in trains. But the provocation of Trotsky enlisting them into the
Red Army, and their prior contacts with the Western imperial agents sparked
some of the first shots of the Civil War. The conspiracy was shown clearly
by the timing of the assaults:
“The
revolt of the Czechoslovaks, .. was timed to coincide with the revolts
engineered by White Guards and Socialist-Revolutionaries in 23 cities on
the Volga, a revolt of the Left SR in Moscow, and a landing of the
British troops in Murmansk”;
Alexandrov Ibid; p. 59-60.
“Thus, already in the first half of 1918, two definite forces took shape
that were prepared to embark upon the overthrow of the Soviet power,
namely, the foreign imperialists of the Entente and the
counter-revolutionaries at home. . . The conditions of the struggle
against the Soviet power dictated a union of the two anti-Soviet forces,
foreign and domestic. And this union was effected in the first half of
1918. . . . The imperialists of Great Britain, France, Japan and America
started their military intervention without any declaration of war,
although the intervention was a war, a war against Russia, and the worst
kind of war at that. These "civilized" marauders secretly and stealthily
made their way to Russian shores and landed their troops on Russia's
territory. . . The British and French landed troops in the north,
occupied Archangel and Murmansk, supported a local Whiteguard revolt,
overthrew the Soviets and set up a White "Government of North Russia."
The Japanese landed troops in Vladivostok, seized the Maritime Province,
dispersed the Soviets and supported the Whiteguard rebels, who
subsequently restored the bourgeois system. In the North Caucasus,
Generals Kornilov, Alexeyev and Denikin, with the support of the British
and French, formed a Whiteguard "Volunteer Army," raised a revolt of the
upper classes of the Cossacks and started hostilities against the
Soviets. On the Don, Generals Krasnov and Mamontov, with the secret
support of the German imperialists (the Germans hesitated to support
them openly owing to the peace treaty between Germany and Russia),
raised a revolt of Don Cossacks, occupied the Don region and started
hostilities against the Soviets. In the Middle Volga region and in
Siberia, the British and French instigated a revolt of the Czechoslovak
Corps. This corps, which consisted of prisoners of war, had received
permission from the Soviet Government to return home through Siberia and
the Far East. But on the way it was used by the
Socialist-Revolutionaries and by the British and French for a revolt
against the Soviet Government. The revolt of the corps served as a
signal for a revolt of the kulaks in the Volga region and in Siberia,
and of the workers of the Votkinsk and Izhevsk Works, who were under the
influence of the Socialist-Revolutionaries. A
Whiteguard-Socialist-Revolutionary government was set up in the Volga
region, in Samara, and a Whiteguard government of Siberia, in
Omsk.“
“Short History of the CPSU(B)”; p. 226.
Three Fronts faced the Bolsheviks, and at
the same time there were three major periods of the Civil War:
“The war was fought across three main fronts - the eastern, the southern
and the northwestern. It can also be roughly split into three periods.
The first period lasted from the Revolution until the Armistice. The
conflict began with dissenting Russian groups, the main force was the
newly formed Volunteer Army in the Don region which was joined later by
the Czecho-Slovak Legion in Siberia. In the east there were also two
anti-Bolshevik administrations, Komuch in Samara and the nationalist
Siberian government centred in Omsk. Most of the fighting in this first
period was sporadic, involving only small groups amid a fluid and
rapidly shifting strategic scene. The main antagonists were the
Czecho-Slovaks, known simply as the Czech Legion, and the pro-Bolshevik
Latvians.
The second period of the war was the key stage, it lasted only from
March to November 1919. At first the White armies advancing from the
south (Anton Denikin), the northwest (Nikolai Nikolaevich
Yudenich) and the east (Aleksandr Vasilevich Kolchak) were
successful, forcing the new Red Army back and advancing on Moscow.
However under . the Red Army … pushed back Kolchak's forces from June
and the armies of Denikin and Yudenich from October. The fighting power
of Kolchak and Denikin was broken almost simultaneously in
mid-November.
The final period of the conflict was the extended defeat of the White
forces in the Crimea. Petr Nikolaevich Wrangel had gathered the
remnants of the armies of Denikin and they had fortified their positions
in the Crimea. With the Red Army fighting in Poland in the Polish-Soviet
war from 1919 (or even earlier) the Whites held their positions until
that struggle was over. When the full force of the Red Army was turned
on them they were soon overwhelmed, and the remaining troops were
evacuated to Constantinople in November 1920.”
http://www.nationmaster.com/encyclopedia/Russian-Civil-War
All of
these military threats, forced further steps towards a professional army,
and on April 22 1918, VtsIK decreed an obligatory military training for all
workers and peasants.
“The
party proclaimed the country an armed camp and placed its economic
cultural and political life on a war footing. The Soviet Government
announced that “the socialist fatherland is in danger”, and called upon
the people to rise in its defence. Lenin issued the slogan , “All for
the front!” – and hundreds of thousands of workers and peasants
volunteered for service in the Red Army and left for the front.”
“Short History USSR”; Ibid; p. 228.
Von Hagen confirms these figures, citing some
500,000 new recruits and over 700,000 citizens trained by The Universal
Military Training Demonstration (Vsevobuch) (ibid p. 36).
Vsevobuch was led by L.E.Mar’iasin. It
retained the model of a volunteer militia rather than a regular army. But as
the Civil War erupted in the East – foreign troops had landed in Vladivostok
and in the North – the anti-Bolshevik risings stirred VtsIK into
conscription. This was a difficult task however, in a war weary peasantry,
and even proletariat. As food crises developed in the countryside, mutinies
were more frequent.
As this crisis developed, VtsIK realised that the
political commissar was the vital element, to solving of the army morale
crisis. The first All-Russian Congress of Commissars in June,
emphasised this saying it:
“declared the commissar to be the direct
representative of Soviet power and as such, an inviolable person. Any
insult or other act of violence against a commissar while he was
executing his official responsibility was equivalent to “the most
serious crime against the Soviet regime”. The commissars demanded
control over all comrades’ courts and the “cultural enlightenment life”
of the army”;
Von Hagen Ibid p. 32.
Led by Nikolaii Podvoiskii, the
Vesbiurvoenkom and Vsevobuch were instrumental in exerting this
new authority of the commisars. The Fifth Congress of Soviets took
place in July 1918 – amidst the Moscow uprising led by the Left Social
Revolutionaries. Fortunately this revolt was soon suppressed. Consistent
with the themes of labour discipline put for the by Lenin in his article,
“The Immediate Tasks of the Soviet Government”, the Congress moved to
reaffirm the new principles of the Red Army:
“Obligatory service, centralized demonstration and an end to local
autonomy and arbitrary makeshift structures, the recruitment of military
specialists; the death penalty for traitors, and the creation of a
cohort of Red Commanders eventually to replace the (tsarist) military
specialists, and the prominent status of commissars”;
von Hagen Ibid p. 34.
It was during this period
that what became known as “war Communism came into effect. This was the
introduction of the grain monopoly and several other industries. The term
emphasises the linkage between the political actions of the Bolsheviks and
the war conditions embraced by the White counter-revolutionaries:
“The Soviet Government
introduced War Communism. It took under its control the
middle-sized and small industries, in addition to large-scale industry,
so as to accumulate goods for the supply of the army and the
agricultural population. It introduced a state monopoly of the grain
trade, prohibited private trading in grain and established the
surplus-appropriation system, under which all surplus produce in the
hands of the peasants was to be registered and acquired by the state at
fixed prices, so as to accumulate stores of grain for the provisioning
of the army and the workers. Lastly, it introduced universal labour
service for all classes. By making physical labour compulsory for the
bourgeoisie and thus releasing workers for other duties of greater
importance to the front, the Party was giving practical effect to the
principle".
“Short History of the CPSU(B); Ibid; p.229.
These directly military
steps at the congress were largely favoured by Trotsky. However the seeds of
later conflicts lay in his tendency to favour the former Tsarist officers,
rather than the commissar. Trotsky’s leadership of the army was still facing
much opposition.
Trotsky as War Commissar
The
major opposition to Trotsky’s leadership revolved around his espousal of the
ex-Tsarist military specialists, and his attacks on the commissars for their
questioning of these specialists’ authority. His credibility was not helped
by the treachery of ex-Tsarist General Mikhail Murav’ev:
“In
July the commander of the Western Front Murav’ev, raised a mutiny
against Soviet power under the banner of solidarity with the recent Left
SR uprising in Moscow. Murav’ev had already been arrested once for
abusing his authority; Trotsky had arranged not only his release but his
promotion to command of the Eastern Front. Murav’ev was killed resisting
his second arrest… Iokaim Vatsetis the hero of the Latvian
infantry division that had just put down the Left SR uprising in Moscow
[of July 6-7 1918 –ed], rushed off to Simbirsk to replace Murav’ev and
reorganize the Eastern Front. Vatsetis arrived at HQ to find
bureaucratic chaos… Vatsetis accused the Supreme Military Council –
namely, Trotsky and Chief of Staff Mikhail Bonch-Bruevich
– of reducing Soviet Russia to a state of “utter defenselessness”.
Von Hagen Ibid; p. 37.
Trotsky’s response to his decline in credibility
did not endear him to the commissars. Trotsky accused the commissars of
eroding a military discipline. He attracted more criticism when he ordered
the shooting of Commissar Panteleev in 1918:
“Trotsky’s authority declined markedly in the wake
of the Murav’ev incident. He sought to deflect criticism from himself
and the military specialists by blaming the commissars for the army’s
poor performance; but he won the lasting enmity of the commissars after
he ordered the court-martial and shooting of one of their number.
Commissar Panteleev, for desertion. Though he had warned all commissars
a few weeks earlier that they would be the first persons shot if their
units retreated without authorisation, still the first execution sent
shock waves through the ranks. Trotsky quickly developed a reputation as
a commander who placed military expediency over political reliability
and who listened too much to the military specialists who surrounded him
in increasing numbers.” Von Hagen; Ibid; p. 37.
In fact, although Trotsky prided himself on setting
discipline, it was only after Vatsetis arrived in the Eastern Front that
several field tribunals were set up, that tried cases of sabotage and
treason (von Hagen Ibid; p. 37). Even then, the Cheka special
investigations forces [All-Russian Extraordinary Commission for Combat of
Counter-Revolution and Sabotage], and the introduction of the death penalty
were needed to defeat the White forces:
“The treachery of some military specialists and the
frequently poor morale and fighting ability of the conscripts prevented
the Red Army from halting the White advance during the summer months.
The introduction of the death penalty and the field tribunals and the
special detachments of the Cheka began to turn the tide.”
Von Hagen Ibid; p. 38.
Even as late as August 15th, Trotsky was
finding it necessary to reassure Lenin that:
“I consider it necessary to confirm once again that
our troops are good ones and fighting with a will… as regards our
organisation we have effected a great improvement… (but) the command
apparatus is weak. Hence mishaps, and on occasion, panic retreats for no
reason etc”;
Message Trotsky to Lenin; In Meijer Ibid; p. 81.
In spite of this reassurance, Lenin was sending
messages the next day insisting that Skljanski (Trotsky’s second in
command) attack “malpractice and criminal acts” in the army (Meijer Ibid; p.
83); and on the 18th August that Lenin was:
“astonished and alarmed at the slowing down of the
operation against Kazan’. What is particularly bad is the report of our
having the fullest possible opportunity of destroying the enemy with
your artillery”;
Message Lenin to Trotsky; in Meijer Ibid; p. 91.
Repetitively, the charge was brought against
Trotsky by numerous commissars and Red Commanders, that he favoured in a
blind manner the old Tsarist ex-generals. After an article in Pravda on this
by a amber of the Central Executive Committee A.Kamenskij, Trotsky
was even more defensive. Kamenskij was a Trotskyite, and thus no ‘hay’ can
be made of any putative ‘Stalinist’ attempt to undermine him here. (See
Letter to the Central Committee of the Russian Communist Party by Trotsky of
December 25th 1918; in Miejer Ibid; p. 205-209; & footnote no.1).
It was in a desperate climate, with losses on many
fronts, that the Central Committee began the call up of large numbers of
Communist Party members, and only now in September:
“For the first time the Red troops halted the White
advance. The Central Committee credited the September victories to the
energetic organising efforts undertaken by the Party members sent to the
front as commissars, commanders and rank and file Red Army men”:
Ibid p. 3.
Even by September, the situation remained tense.
the Soviet Government decreed martial law for the whole country. And
although the Eastern fronts were succeeding, almost immediately the South
erupted under the White armies of General Anton Denikin.
Now, 1,134,356 men were called up in the largest
recruitment of the entire Civil War, between October and December 1918.
Stalin’s Mission to Southern Front at Tsaritsyn
Before
Stalin was sent South, he had already drawn attention to the inaction in the
East, and especially the attempt of the Germans to capture Certovo Station,
controlling supply lines to Rostov. On the Sovnarkom’s initiative, Stalin
was put in charge of the capture of Certkovo (Meijer J.M. Editor &
Annotator, “The Trotsky Papers 1917-1922”; Hague 1964; p. 43). Given the
evidence of serious deficiencies of the Eastern command under Trotsky, the
Southern Front was created by the Revolutionary Military Council
of the Republic with its’ own revolutionary military council:
“which
included one military specialist, the former general Pavel Sytin,
and three commissars J.V.Stalin, Kliment Voroshilov and Sergei
Minin. Almost at once conflicts erupted between the military
specialists and the commissars”;
von Hagen Ibid p. 39.
“At the end of May Sovnarkom had put Stalin in overall charge of supply
in the South of Russia and had given him extraordinary powers”;
Meijer J.M; Ibid; footnote No 1 p. 49.
The context of this contentious mission (both then
and now) is important to grasp. Tsaritsyn (later named Stalingrad) was a
gateway to two granaries for the USSR state, the Ukraine and Siberia:
“The workers in Moscow and
Petrograd were receiving a bare two ounces of bread a day. The republic
was cut off from the granaries of the Ukraine and Siberia. The Southwest
, the Volga region, and the North Caucasus , was the only area from
which grain could still be obtained, and the road to them lay by way of
the Volga, through Tsaritsyn. Only by procuring grain could the
revolution be saved. … Stalin left for the South invested by the CC with
extraordinary power to direct the mobilisation of food supplies in the
South.. On June 6, 1918, Stalin arrived in Tsaritsyn…. The capture of
Tsaritisyn would have cut off the republic from its last sources of
grain supply and from the oil of Baku, and would have enabled the Whites
to link the counter-revolutionaries in the Don region with Kolchak and
the Czechoslovak counter-revolution for a general advance on Moscow”;
Alexandrov Ibid; pp. 60-61.
“The German imperialists did their utmost to isolate, weaken and destroy
Soviet Russia. They snatched from it the Ukraine -- true, it was in
accordance with a "treaty" with the Whiteguard Ukrainian Rada (Council)
-- brought in their troops at the request of the Rada and began
mercilessly to rob and oppress the Ukrainian people, forbidding them to
maintain any connections whatever with Soviet Russia. They severed
Transcaucasia from Soviet Russia, sent German and Turkish troops there
at the request of the Georgian and Azerbaidjan nationalists and began to
play the masters in Tiflis and in Baku. They supplied, not openly, it is
true, abundant arms and provisions to General Krasnov, who had raised a
revolt against the Soviet Government on the Don. Soviet Russia was thus
cut off from her principal sources of food, raw material and fuel.
…..”
Short History CPSU(B) p.227-8
However the aim of the
White General Krasnov to cut off Moscow from the rear was not fulfilled:
“Although the country was
in a difficult position, and the young Red Army was not yet
consolidated, the measures of defence adopted soon yielded their first
fruits. General Krasnov was forced back from Tsaritsyn, whose capture he
had regarded as certain, and driven beyond the River Don. General
Denikin's operations were localized within a small area in the North
Caucasus, while General Kornilov was killed in action against the Red
Army. The Czechoslovaks and the Whiteguard-Socialist-Revolutionary bands
were ousted from Kazan, Simbirsk and Samara and driven to the Urals. A
revolt in Yaroslavl headed by the Whiteguard Savinkov and organized by
Lockhart, chief of the British Mission in Moscow, was suppressed,
and Lockhart himself arrested. The Socialist-Revolutionaries, who had
assassinated Comrades Uritsky and Volodarsky and had made a villainous
attempt on the life of Lenin, were subjected to a Red terror in
retaliation for their White terror against the Bolsheviks, and were
completely routed in every important city in Central
Russia.”
“Short History CPSU(B)”; Ibid; p.227-8; 228-229.
In a separate web appendix, we publish the full correspondence of Stalin
with Lenin on the situation in Tsaritsyn [See
http://www.allianceML.com/STALIN-TXT/JVSCIVILWAR.html ]; but here we will
only cite the extent to which Stalin’s involvement in Tsaristyn was driven
by the matter of disruption and plain disorder, hampering supplies back to
the rear:
“Arrived in Tsaristyn on the 6th. Despite the confusion in
every sphere of economic life, order can be established.
In Tsaritsyn, Astrakhan and Saratov the grain monopolies and fixed
process were abolished by the Soviets, and there is chaos and
profiteering. Have secured the introduction of rationing and fixed
prices in Tsaritsyn. The same must be done in Astrakhan and Saratov,
otherwise all grain will flow away though this profiteering channels.
Let the Central Executive Committee and the Council of People’s
Commisars also demand that these Soviets put an end to profiteering.
Rail transport is dislocated owing to the efforts of the multiplicity
of collegiums and revolutionary committees. I have been obliged to
appoint special commisars; they are already establishing order despite
the protests of the collegiums. The commissars are discovering heaps of
locomotive in places there they did not suspect their existence.
Investigation has shown that eight or more trains a day can be sent by
the Tsartisy-Povorino-Balshov-Kozlov-Ryazan-Moscow line. Am now
accumulating train in Tsaritsyn. Within a week we shall proclaim a
“Grain Week” and shall dispatch to Moscow right away about one million
poods..”; ]
Stalin JV: Telegram to V.I.Lenin; Dated June 7th, 1918; In
“Works”; Volume 4; p. 118-119; Moscow 1953.
Stalin complained of Trotsky’s management directly
to Lenin:
“Comrade Lenin, Just a few words.
1)
If Trotsky is going to
hand out credentials right & left without thinking – to Trifnov (Don
Region); to Avtonomv (Kuban region); to Koppe (Stavropol), to members of
the French Mission (who deserve to be arrested), etc – it may be safely
said that within a month everything here in the North Caucasus will go
to pieces, and we shall lose this region altogether. Trotsky is behaving
in the same way Antonov did at one time. Knock it into his head that he
must make no appointments without the knowledge of the local people,
otherwise the result will be to discredit the Soviet power.
2)
If you don’t let us have
the aeroplanes & airmen, armoured cars & 6 inch guns, the Tsaritsyn
Front will be lost for a long time;
3)
There is plenty of grain in the South, but to get
we need a smoothly working machine which does not meet with obstacles
from troop trains army commanders & so on. More, the military must
assist the food agents. The food question is naturally bound up with the
military question. For the good of the work, I need military powers. I
have already written about this, but have had no reply. Very well, in
that case I shall myself without any formalities, dismiss army
commanders and commissars who are ruing the work. The interest of this
work dictate this, and of course, not having a paper from Trotsky is not
going to deter me”.
July 10th: Stalin JV: Letter to V.I.Lenin; in Works Volume 4;
Ibid p. 123.
By dint of correcting the imbalance towards
"military experts”, Stalin turned the situation:
“One favourable factor on the Tsaritsyn-Gashun
Front is the complete elimination of the muddle due to the detachment
principle, and the timely removal of the so-called experts (staunch
supporters either of the Cossacks or of the British & French) have made
it possible to win the sympathy of the military units and establish iron
discipline in them”;
Letter to Lenin dated August 4th 1918; Works Stalin; Ibid; p.
126.
By September 6th the offensive for
Tsaritsyn was successful (Stalin 'Works'; Volume 7 Telegram to Council of
Peoples Commissars; Volume 4; p. 131.
That it was after the arrival of Stalin, that matters were turned around
is acknowledged in Trotsky’s own papers, albeit indirectly. On June 7,
Stalin informed Lenin and Christian Rakovskji, an “unrepentant
Trotskyite” [Meijer Ibid footnote 6; p.49] from Caricyn (Tsaristyn), that
Batajsk had been captured had been captured. Rakovskji wrote to Trotsky
informing him of this, and that Sytin had already confirmed that the
situation just one day after Stalin’s arrival, was untenable:
“The sole line of communication of the these troops
with Great-Russia, and that a circuitous one, across the Caspian Sea to
Astrachan’ cannot even be regarded as satisfactory”;
Message to Trotsky 7th June 1918; Meijer Ibid; p. 47.
Stalin had found it necessary to stay in Tsaritsyn
for some time, until by September 1918 the Front was secure. By this time,
Stalin had been interviewed by Iszvestia on September 21 1918, and said:
“First of all Comrade Stalin said, two gratifying
facts should be noted: One is the promotion to administrative posts in
the rear area of working men with an ability not only for agitating in
favour of a Soviet power, but also for the building the state on a new,
communist basis; the second is the appearance of a new corps of
commanders consisting of officers promoted from the ranks who have had
practical experience in the imperialist war, and who enjoy the full
confidence of the Red Army men….”
Stalin JV: “The Southern Front. Izvestia Interview”; September 21 1918;
Volume 4; Ibid; p. 133-5.
There is little doubt that Trotsky’s management of
that Front had been clearly exposed.
Trotsky now insisted upon Stalin’s recall by threatening Vorsohilov’s
court martial on October 4, 1918 (Trotsky “My Life”; p.443; Note Trotsky to
Lenin 4.10.1918; in Meijer Ibid; p. 135-137). In fact as Meijer (Footnote
no. 2; Ibid p. 136) makes clear, Trotsky’s action was precipitated by a
telegram from Voroshilov and Stalin to Lenin on 3rd October
complaining of Trotsky’s work.
Trotsky’s’ charges were that after Stalin’s
arrival, Trotsky’s commands from the centre (Trotsky “My Life”; Ibid p.
442). On Trotsky’s promptings, the Orgburo and the RSVR supported Sytin and
removed Stalin. However by the time of his recall, Stalin had both secured
Tsaritsyn and formed the nucleus of the Tenth army under Voroshilov.
Alexandrov points out that he achieved this by:
“Ruthlessly breaking down the resistance of the counter-revolutionary
military experts appointed and supported by Trotsky, and taking swift
and vigorous measures to reorganize the scattered detachments”;
Ibid; p. 61.
Sytin was left in charge, until in October was
removed from the command of the Southern Front (Meijer Ibid; p. 48). In the
month of October, Stalin’s speeches on the Southern Front were given
prominence in both Iszvestia and Pravda. These are reprinted on the Alliance
web-pages [ ].
However there were further repercussions. Upon
Stalin’s return to Moscow, he met with Lenin and Sverdlow, and
reported further victories in the Tsaristyn area. Stalin pointed out to them
that he had persuaded Vosroshilov and Minin to stay on, subject strictly to
the central command. Further, in a letter from either Lenin or Sverdlov – it
is stated:
“(Stalin) would like very much to work on the Southern Front; he
expresses great apprehension that people whose knowledge of this Front
is poor may commit errors, of which he cite numerous examples. … He is
not putting any stipulation about the removal of Sytin and Mechonosin…
In informing you Lev Davydyc, … I ask you to think them over and let me
have a reply, as to whether you agree to talk matters over with Stalin
personally, and secondly, whether you consider it possible under
specific circumstances to put aside former differences and range to work
together with as Stalin so much desires”;
Attributed by different sources to either Lenin or Sverdlow:
Communication to Trotsky 23.10.1918; In Meijer Ibid; p. 159-161.
Trotsky had no choice but to accede to Lenin’s
obvious pressure to meet Stalin. However, Stalin did not return to the
Southern Front. Instead his next military mission was his appointment to the
Defense Council on November 30th, and then a special mission to
investigate military failures in Perm’.
In the meantime, Voroshilov wrote urgently to Lenin
complaining of the inability to obtain small arms and shells (See Telegram
to Trotsky from Lenin 24 October 1918) to which Trotsky cavalierly replied
that the “Crisis” was due to the “incredible, completely rabid expenditure
of ammunition” at Tsartisyn (See Telegram Trotsky to Lenin 25 October 1918;
Meijer Ibid; p. 163).
Typically of Trotsky, after he ridicules legitimate
grievances, he then “discovers” the problem for himself, as instanced in a
lengthy analysis of the problem [Memorandum to Lenin; copied to Krasin and
Serpuchov; November 29, 1918; In Meijer Ibid; p. 187-191; p. 193]. The
systemic problem of which Vosroshilov was complaining, was due to the small
scale of the factories responsible, and the hostility of their former
owners.
It is clear that the military commisars, and the
Red Commanders had become ever more frustrated with the military leadership.
This comes across loudly from the note of A.Egorov (Chairman of the
Higher Credentials Commision of the Peoples Commissariat for Military
Affairs), as early as 20th August 1918 to Lenin and Trotsky,
where he chastises the command in rather simple and blunt terms, as though
in a nursery school, as follows:
“Practical military art and so the theory of it, bases itself wholly on
the experience of the past… the necessity and the feasibility of a
single command for directing warfare, in a word that the military leader
must be given full power has been demonstrated by long experience.. Only
a single uniform purpose can direct operations… the military axioms
indicated above .. fail to find application in the military operations
of the armies of the Republic.. A survey of all the operations in
progress on the various fronts indicates that they contain no definite,
uniform conception or purpose”;
Egorov A to Lenin, cced Trotsky: Meijer Ibid; p. 90-97.
The Food Shortage
Morale
fell drastically. Even many party members, as well as regular soldiers, now
deserted, and Trotsky ordered summary executions of these soldiers and the
arrest of all rural soviet chairmen in whose jurisdiction deserters were
found (von Hagen; Ibid p. 46).
The problem of desertions was eased as the army men were given
concessions: tax relief to the families of Red Army men and provision of
free apartments to their families.
But as the Sixth Congress of Soviets in
November 1918, turned more determinedly back to the peasant masses, these
problems reversed. For many of the problems, had their roots in food
shortages and privation in both the countryside and correspondingly the
army. Illustrating the extent of this crisis are Lenin’s “Theses On The
Current Situation”, of 26 May 1918. Again the seriousness of Stalin’s
intervention at Tsaritsyn in June, is highlighted by an appreciation of the
situation.
The Theses start by announcing the transformation
of the Commissariat of War into the Commisariat for War and Food. The
theses go on to outline a clear policy of a general martial law, and a
stiffened army discipline, and call-ups to the army, and good relations with
the peasantry:
“1) The Commissariat for
War to be converted into a Commissariat for War and Food - i.e., 9/10 of
the work of the Commissariat for War to be concentrated on re-organising
the army for the war for grain and on waging this war - for three
months: June-August.
2) Martial law to be declared throughout the country during this period.
3) The army to be mobilised, selecting its sound elements, and
19-year-olds to be called up, at any rate in certain regions, for
systematic military operations to fight for, win, collect and transport
grain and fuel.
4) Shooting for indiscipline to be introduced.
5) The success of detachments to be measured by success in obtaining
grain and by practical results in collecting grain surpluses.
6) The tasks of the military campaign should be formulated as follows:
a) the collection of stocks of grain for feeding the population;
b) ditto-for three months' food reserve for war;
c) safeguarding stocks of coal, collecting them and increasing output.
7) The detachments of the active army (active against kulaks, etc.) to
consist of from one-third to one-half (in each detachment) of workers
and poor peasants of the famine-stricken gubernias.
8) Each detachment to be issued two kinds of instruction:
a) ideological-political, on the importance of victory over famine and
the kulaks, on the dictatorship of the proletariat as the working
people's power;
b) military-organisational, on the internal organisation of the
detachments, on discipline, on control and written documents of control
for each operation, etc.
9) A collective liability of the whole detachment to be introduced, for
example the threat of shooting every tenth man-for each case of plunder.
10) All means of transport belonging to rich persons in the
towns to be mobilised for work In transporting grain; well-to-do classes
to be mobilised to act as clerks and stewards.
11) If signs of demoralisation of the detachments become threateningly
frequent, the "sick" detachments to be sent back after a month, i.e.,
exchanged, to the place from which they came, for report and
"treatment".
12) The following to be adopted both in the Council of People's
Commissars and In the Central Executive Committee:
(a) declaration that the country is in a state of grave danger
as regards food;
(b) martial law;
(c) mobilisation of the army, together with its re-organisation as
mentioned above, for the campaign for grain;
(d) in each uyezd and volost with grain surpluses, immediate compilation
of a list of rich owners of land (kulaks), grain traders, etc.,
making them personally responsible for the collection of all grain
surpluses;
(e) the appointment to each military detachment-at the rate of at least
one out of approximately ten men- of persons with a party recommendation
of the R.C.P., the Left Socialist-Revolutionaries or the trade unions.
13) In implementing the grain monopoly the most vigorous measures for
assistance to the rural poor to be made obligatory without shrinking
from any financial sacrifices, and measures for free distribution among
them of part of the grain surpluses collected from the kulaks, side by
side with ruthless suppression of kulaks who withhold grain surpluses.”
Lenin’s Collected Works,
4th English Edition, Progress Publishers, Moscow, 1972 Volume 27, pages
406-407.
Continued Professional Development of the Army – Partisans
or Guerillas
After
Lenin’s Theses of May, clearer signs of ensuring the solidarity of the
peasants appeared. Rural soviets were being urged now to mend relations with
the poor and middle peasants. Army units composed only of poor peasants were
now formed. Steadily the ‘militarization’ – or professionalisation of the
army proceeded.
The conflicts between commissars and military
specialists were numerous in 1918, as in 1918 75% of the Red Army commanders
were from the old army. Another layer of authority was the Cheka, which
again blurred clear lines of authority. Further divisions at rank-and-file
level also now erupted as the party recruits, who insisted on reporting to
their own communist party cells in the local party and armies. The
commissars were being cramped on two sides now – from the Military
specialists at one end, and form the other end separate Party organisations.
At the same time elements of the party members were ‘lording’ it over the
other recruits.
The old Red Guard militias had slowly evolved into
another voluntarist model, of the rural partisans or guerrillas.
These also maintained elections of commanders and anti-authoritarian
principles, and represented in a sense the peasant based self-defence units
as central authority had broken down in many parts.
At first, while these partisans were fighting
against the German and Austrian occupying forces, or against the Whites of
hetman Petlurya in Ukraine, several commanders and some commissars
(including Voroshilov, Stalin, and Budyenni) had initially supported
them. But as these partisans resisted attempts to integrate into the Red
army, and proved unreliable in joint actions, and moreover appointed SR and
anarchist political advisers, matters changed. A strong anarchist, rural
petit-bourgeois element with some forces led by Nestor Makhno, proved
further illustrations of the need for discipline.
“The
partisans were very similar to the Red Guards. In this sense the rural
partisan forces were inspired by the larger revolutionary repudiation of
super ordinate authority which had brought the Bolsheviks to power in
1917; indeed, at first several Red commanders and some commissars
including such influential ones as Voroshilov, Stalin & Budennyi defined
the partisans as truly revolutionary fighting forces. As long as the
partisans were waging their struggle against the German & Austrian
occupation forces in 1918 or against the hetman’s regime in the Ukraine,
especially when the red Army was still organising its first units, the
Soviet Government welcomed their aid, even if it already looked on their
practices with some misgivings. By late 1918 and early 1919, the
attitude of the center had changed decisively…. The partisans were
resisting all attempts to integrate them into the Red Army’s forces.”
von Hagen, Mark: “Soldiers in the
Proletarian Dictatorship. The Red Army & The Soviet socialist state
1917-1930”; Ithaca 1990; p.52-3.
Disaster at Perm – and Stalin’s Mission to Perm
Trotsky does not contest that Stalin and the head of the Cheka –
Felix Djersinksi - were ordered to the Front to investigate shortcomings
of the army. Ass Lenin put it:
“The news from Perm’ area is extremely alarming.
Perm’ is in danger…… Perm is in a dangerous position. I consider it
essential that reinforcements be dispatched….”
Lenin To Trotsky; in Meijer Ibid; 13th December 1918; 14th
December 1918; Pages 195; 197).
By the December 31 1918, Lenin was writing as
follows:
“A number of Party reports have come in form the
Perm’ area about the catastrophic state of the army and about
drunkenness. I am forwarding them to you. You are asked to go there. I
had thought of sending Stalin; I am afraid that Smilga will be lenient
with Lasevic who, it is said, is also drinking and is not fit state to
restore order. Telegraph your opinion”;
Telegram to Trotsky & Kozlov; In Meijer Ibid; p. 229.
Trotsky had no option but to accede to Stalin’s
mission, while trying to defend Lasevic with another promotion:
“I entirely share your apprehension as to the
excessive softness of the comrade who has left. I agree to the journey
of Stalin with full authority from the Party and the Military
Revolutionary Council of the Republic, for the purpose of restoring
order, purging the commissar personnel and severely punishing offenders.
I recommend that Lasevic be appointed Member of the Military
Revolutionary Council on the Northern Front..”
Telegram Trotsky to Lenin:
January 1, 1919; in Meijer Ibid; p. 229-31.
“The investigation has begun. We shall keep you regularly informed of
its progress. Meanwhile.. one urgent need of the Third Army.. The fact
is that of the Third Army (more than 30,000 men), there remain only
about 11,000 weary and battered soldiers who can scarcely contain the
enemy’s onslaught. The troops sent by the Commander-in-chief are
unreliable, in part even hostile, and require thorough sifting. To save
the remnants of the Third Army and to prevent a swift enemy advance on
Vyatka (according to all reports from the command of the front and the
Third Army this is very real danger) it is absolutely essential urgently
to transfer at least three thoroughly reliable regiments from Russia and
place them at the disposal of the army commander. We urgently request
you to exert pressure on the appropriate military authorities to this
end.”;
Stalin JV & Dzerzhinsky F: Letter to V.I.Lenin From the Eastern Front”;
January 5th 1919. Works; Volume 4; 190-193.
From this time on, increasingly there are concerns
being raised by Lenin, at Trotsky's management:
“I am very disturbed as to whether you have not got
absorbed in the Ukraine to the detriment of the over-all strategic task
on which Vecetis insists and which consists in launching a rapid,
determined, and general offensive against Krasnov. I am afraid that we
are behindhand with this and that the latest success of Krasnsov’s
forces are Caricyn (Tsaritsyn) will result again in our putting off our
offensive and letting the moment slip by”:
Telegram Lenin to Trotsky; 3 January 191; in Meijer Ibid; p. 237.
Although Trotsky defended his Ukraine actions, and
blamed “Stalin’s protection of the Tsaritsyn trend the most dangerous sort
of ulcer, worse than any act of perfidy or treachery on the part of the
military specialists” [January 11th 1919 Telegram to Lenin: In
Meijer Ibid; p. 251), Lenin cannot have been overly impressed with this.
For because by January 31 1919, Felix
Dzerzhinsky (Head of the Cheka) & Stalin had provided a very detailed
exposure of the fall of Perm’ [Stalin’s Works Volume 4; Report to Lenin;
Ibid; pp194-199; & Report to Comrade Lenin by the Commission of the party CC
and the Council of Defence on the reasons for the fall of Perm in December
1918: p 202-232. [See web-site of Alliance reprint at ].
In brief the main findings were that:
“Disaster was inevitable… apparent by end of
November, when the enemy.. surrounded the Third Army… and launched a
fierce attack on Khusva. .. The morale and efficiency of the army were
deplorable owing to the weariness of the units, .. the there were no
reserves whatever. The rear was totally insecure ( a series of
demolitions of the railway track in the rear of the army). The food
supply of the army was haphazard and uncertain (at the most difficult
moment, when a furious assault was launched against the 29th
division, its units were in action for five days literally without bread
or other food).
Although it occupied a flank position , the Third army was not secured
against envelopment form the North.. As to the extreme right flank, the
neighbouring army, the Second, being immobilized by a vague directive
form the Commander-in-chief (Trotsky-ed) .. and compelled to remain
immobile for 10 days, was not in a position to render timely support to
the Third Army by advancing at the most crucial moment before the
surrender of Khushva (close of November)……… in 20 days, the army in its
disorderly retreat retreated more than 300 versts… losing in this period
18,000 men, scores of guns and hundreds of machine guns…….Strictly
speaking it was not a retreat still less could it be called an organised
withdrawal of units to new positions; it was an absolutely disorderly
flight of an utterly routed and completely demoralized army… The noisy
laments of the Revolutionary Military Councils and Third Army HQ that
the disaster was a “surprise only prove that these institutions were out
of touch with the army, had no inkling of the fatal significance of the
events at Khusha and Lysva and were incapable of directing the army’s
actions”;
The Commission: Stalin & Dzerzhinsky;
Report to Comrade Lenin by the Commission of the Party CC and the
Council of defence On the Reasons for the Fall of Perm’ in December
1918; in “works”; Volume 4; Ibid; p. 202-232.
Following this clear instance of Stalin’s military
analytical superiority, Lenin again proposes to resort to Stalin’s help over
this period in a number of different fronts. There had been a long series of
problems related to food shortages to the army, and sabotage of the rail
links ensuring food distribution, at each crisis point Lenin got rapidly
involved:
“ 29.1.1920; To Military Council of the 5th
Army – Smirnov:
Pjakes reports that there is manifest sabotage on
the part of the railway workers. The Omsk railway works , which employ
3,000 workers, have produced no locomotives and four railway wagons in
the space of a month: there are suspicions of sabotage by the Izevsk
workers; I am surprised that you are putting up with this and do not
punish sabotage with shooting; also the delay over the transfer here of
locomotives is manifest sabotage; please take the most resolute
measures.
Lenin “.
Meijer Ibid: Volume 2: number 444 of documents; pp 21-22.
And shortly thereafter Lenin upbraids Trotsky as
follows:
“ 1.2.1920;
Lenin to Trotsky
The situation with regard to railway transport is quite catastrophic;
Grain supplies no longer get through. Genuine emergency measures are
required to save the situation. For a period of 2 months, measures of
the following kind must be put into force….
1. The individual bread ration is to be reduced for those not engaged on
transport work; & increased for those engaged on it;
2. Three quarters of the senior Party workers fro all departments except
the Commissariats of Supply and of Military Affairs, are to be drafted
to railway transport…”
Chairman of the Council of Defence V. Ulyanov Lenin.”
Meijer, Ibid; Volume 2; Document 445; p. 23.
In response to emergency crisises, Lenin again
turned to … Stalin:
“3-4 February 1920;
The CC considers it essential in order to save the situation that you
should go at once to the right flank of the Caucasus Front via
Debal’cevo where Sorin is at the moment. At the same time, you must take
urgent measures to transfer substantial reinforcements and Party workers
from the Southwestern Front. In order to put matters on a proper footing
you will be made a member of the Military Revolutionary Council of the
Caucasus Front while continuing at the same time to belong to the
Military Revolutionary Council of the South-Western Front.
Lenin, Trotsky;”
Document 446. Meijer Ibid; Volume 2; pp26-27.
In reply to this, Stalin [then in Kursk] tried to
argue that:
“my profound conviction is that my journey would not bring about any
change in the situation; that it is not journeys by individuals that are
needed but the transfer of cavalry reserves, the Southwest being without
them”;
Document 447; In Meijer Ibid; p, 27.
Lenin agreed provided:
“ that the next weeks, you concentrate all your attention and energy on
serving the Caucasus Front, subordinating to it the interests of the
South Western Front”;
Document 448; Ibid; p.29.
Although this has been variously presented by Trotsky as insubordination
or even ‘laziness’, it is likely that Stalin was at least unwilling to
simply pull Trotsky’s chestnuts out of the fire, and then end up being again
side-lined. However the situation in the army was soon to change.
There were later Stalin missions to Petrograd, and
to the Crimea, which are dealt with in Part Two of this article.
The Eight Party
Congress – The Military Opposition
Many, including Trotsky and Old Bolsheviks like Mikhail Frunze (
a commander on the Eastern Front) had complained of the unruliness of the
partisan elements. But this was only one aspect of things going wrong, and
Trotsky was under scrutiny. Matters came to a head at the Eight Party
Congress of 18 March 1919. It was at this meeting that the lessons of recent
defeats would be drawn.
As the Short History of
the CPSU(B) puts it, the 8th Congress was a “turning point” in
the party, on the question of the peasantry:
“The Eighth Congress
marked a turning point in the policy of the Party towards the middle
peasants. Lenin's report and the decisions of the congress laid down a
new line of the Party on this question. The congress demanded that the
Party organizations and all Communists should draw a strict distinction
and division between the middle peasant and the kulak, and should strive
to win the former over to the side of the working class by paying close
attention to his needs. The backwardness of the middle peasants had to
be overcome by persuasion and not by compulsion and
coercion…..
The policy adopted by the congress towards the middle peasants, who
formed the bulk of the peasantry, played a decisive part in ensuring
success in the Civil War against foreign intervention and its Whiteguard
henchmen. In the autumn of 1919, when the peasants had to choose between
the Soviet power and Denikin, they supported the Soviets, and the
proletarian dictatorship was able to vanquish its most dangerous
enemy.“
Short History of the CPSU(B); Ibid; p. 234-5.
The Eighth Party Congress took place in a climate when it was clear that
there had been some serious defeats under Trotsky’s Command. The failed
defence of the city of Perm was a case in point:
“At
the end of December the city of Perm fell to Kolchak’s
armies and threatened the Boshevik stronghold of Vlatka. .. the response
to the military defeat.. the string of failures had emboldened Trotsky’s
critics to attack him directly. “
von Hagen Ibid; p. 55.
The meeting brought to a head all the varying
tensions about discipline and of leadership, and was the end of the Paris
Commune model for organisation:
“The defeat of the Military opposition at the Eight
Party Congress was the definitive defeat of the commune model in the
Soviet Republic until the end of the Civil War.”
von Hagen Ibid; p. 65.
At the 8th Party Congress on 18 March 1919, some 403
delegates attended, of whom 40 represented the 31000 party members in the
Red Army. Trotsky was ill, but Grigorii Sokol’nikov presented the
Theses of the Commissariat – largely drafted by Trotsky. These largely
declared the need to eliminate vestiges of volunteer army organising and to
tighten discipline. However, his defence on behalf of the military
specialists was not well received.
At the Congress, the so-called Military opposition took shape.
Vladimir Smirnov presented their theses:
“The Military opposition
contended that the commissars deserved more than a narrow control
function, because they already had more combat experience than many
military specialists”;
von Hagen Ibid; p. 59.
The peasant question was
closely tied to the building of the Red Army. That serious discontented was
being voiced by the Military Opposition was clear:
“The problems connected
with the building up of the Red Army held a special place in the
deliberations of the congress, where the so-called "Military Opposition"
appeared in the field. This "Military Opposition" comprised quite a
number of former members of the now shattered group of "Left
Communists"; but it also included some Party workers who had never
participated in any opposition, but were dissatisfied with the way
Trotsky was conducting the affairs of the army. The majority of the
delegates from the army were distinctly hostile to Trotsky; they
resented his veneration for the military experts of the old tsarist
army, some of whom were betraying us outright in the Civil War, and his
arrogant and hostile attitude towards the old Bolshevik cadres in the
army. Instances of Trotsky's "practices" were cited at the congress. For
example, he had attempted to shoot a number of prominent army Communists
serving at the front, just because they had incurred his displeasure.
This was directly playing into the hands of the enemy. It was only the
intervention of the Central Committee and the protests of military men
that saved the lives of these comrades. But while fighting Trotsky's
distortions of the military policy of the Party, the "Military
Opposition" held incorrect views on a number of points concerning the
building up of the army. Lenin and Stalin vigorously came out against
the "Military Opposition," because the latter defended the survivals of
the guerrilla spirit and resisted the creation of a regular Red Army,
the utilization of the military experts of the old army and the
establishment of that iron discipline without which no army can be a
real
army".
Short History of the CPSU(B); Ibid; p. 235.
The Congress Military
policies decided, were essentially two-fold:
Firstly correcting the work
of Trotsky and calling for professional change – this was a rebuke of
Trotsky;
And Secondly, rejecting the leftist path of the Military opposition:
“While rejecting a number of proposals made by the "Military
Opposition," the congress dealt a blow at Trotsky by demanding an
improvement in the work of the central military institutions and the
enhancement of the role of the Communists in the army.”
Short History CPSU(B); Ibid; p. 235.
The Central Committee
struck a special committee of three Central Committee members (Stalin,
Grigori Zinoviev and the military commissar of the Petrograd labour
Commune Boris Pozern) and two members of the Military Opposition (Emel’ian
Iaroslovaskii and G.I. Safarov). As far as Stalin’s participation
at both the Congress, and the special meeting is concerned, on March 21,
1919 – Stalin had vigorously opposed the continued vestiges of
‘volunteerism’, that were reflected in Smirnov’s espousal of a volunteer
army:
“All the questions touched
upon here boil down to one: is Russia to have, or not to have, a
strictly disciplined regular army?
Six months ago, after the collapse of the old, tsarist army, we had a
new, a volunteer army, an army which was badly organized, which had a
collective control, and which did not always obey orders. This was at a
time when an Entente offensive was looming. The army was made up
principally, if not exclusively, of workers. Because of the lack of
discipline in this volunteer army, because it did not always obey
orders, because of the disorganization in the control of the army, we
sustained defeats and surrendered Kazan to the enemy, while Krasnov was
successfully advancing from the South. . . . The facts show that a
volunteer army cannot stand the test of criticism, that we shall not be
able to defend our Republic unless we create another army, a regular
army, one infused with the spirit of discipline, possessing a competent
political department and able and ready to rise at the first command and
march against the enemy.
I must say that those non-working-class elements -- the peasants -- who
constitute the majority in our army will not voluntarily fight for
socialism. A whole number of facts bear this out. The series of mutinies
in the rear and at the fronts, the series of excesses at the fronts show
that the non-proletarian elements comprising the majority of our army
are not disposed to fight for communism voluntarily. Hence our task is
to re-educate these elements, infusing them with a spirit of iron
discipline, to get them to follow the lead of the proletariat at the
front as well as in the rear, to compel them to fight for our common
socialist cause, and, in the course of the war, to complete the building
of a real regular army, which is alone capable of defending the country.
That is how the question stands.
. . . Either we create a real workers' and peasants' army, a strictly
disciplined regular army, and defend the Republic, or we do not, and in
that event our cause will be lost.
. . . Smirnov's project is unacceptable, because it can only undermine
discipline in the army and make it impossible to build a regular army. “
J. V. Stalin, Excerpt From A Speech On The Military Question
Delivered At The Eighth Congress Of The R.C.P.(B.). Works; Vol. 4, pp.
258-59. Moscow, 1953;
or at
http://www.marx2mao.org//Stalin/SPQ19.html
It cannot be denied by even the most vigorous
admirer of Trotsky, that Trotsky had been rebuked. For, in his papers is
found an extract of the Minutes of the Meeting of the CC of the RCP held on
25th March 1919, where Trotsky is instructed to meet on a monthly
basis with party workers:
“Comrade Zinoviev announced that the Military
Section of the Congress had succeeded in attaining unanimity, thanks to
our having made a concession of a kind, and adopted resolutions which it
was decided not to make public at the Congress, namely:
1)
On the reorganization of
the All Russian General Staff;
2)
On Field HQ;
3)
On an obligatory monthly conference between Comrade
Trotsky and Party workers.
Cmde Zinoviev considered that the Congress had , by token of its entire
line of conduct on the military question, administered a serious caution
and that, in consequence of this, it was inadmissible that all its
direction should be treated with insufficient heed, and that, for this
reason, it was essential for Comrade Lenin to talk things over with
Comrade Trotsky… . .
The Meeting Decided that:
A written approach be made to Comrade Trotsky,
this is to be in 3 sections:
1)
Comrade Zinoviev
statement;
2)
The unpublished
resolutions together with an explanation as to why they constitute the
expression of the genuine wishes of the Congress;
3)
The resolution of the Political Buro of the CC”;
Minutes of Meeting of the CC, RCP (Bolsheviks); new convocation held on
25th March 1919: Present Comrades, Lenin, Zinoviev,
Krestinskji, Bukharin, Stalin, Tomski, Kamenev, Dzerinskji, Beleborodov,
Muranov, Evdokimo, Serebrjakov, Stasova.
In Meijer Ibid; p. 319-321.
Typically of Trotsky, a rather long-winded reply
that attempts to exculpate himself form any criticism followed, with
imputations of psychological disease to Voroshilov, in March (undated) [In
Meijer Ibid; p. 325-335].
Conclusions Part One
We will argue that the Homeric Myth of the Super
Hero of the Civil War – not the first – but the Second Commissar of war –
had been already somewhat dented by these above facts. We will return to the
matter in examining the drive of the Red Army to Poland.
It may be asked here, did Comrade Trotsky finally
accept the critique offered by the CC of the RCP? It will appear not,
when we move forward.
It could also be asked, did Comrade Stalin defer to the military
experts, following this period? It appears not:
“Following the capture of Krasnaya Gorka, Seraya Losad has been taken.
Their guns are in perfect order. A rapid check of all the forts and
fortresses is under way.
Naval experts assert that the capture of Krasnaya Gorka form the sea
runs counter to naval science. I can deplore so-called science. The
swift capture of Gorka was due to the grossest interference in the
operations by me and civilians generally, even to the point of counter-manding
orders on land and sea and imposing our own.
I consider it my duty to declare that I shall continue to act in this
way in future, despite all my reverence for science”;
Stalin Telegram to V.I. Lenin: June 16trh 1919; Volume 4 Ibid; p. 271.