Revolutions - 10.70- The Kornilov Affair
Episode Date: October 4, 2021Not a political plot. A sitcom plot. ...
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Hello and welcome to revolutions.
Episode 10.70, the Cornelof affair.
The July days were a very close call for the provisional government and for the Soviet.
The armed demonstration in Petrograd had been aiming at ending the unsustainable dynamic of dual power
by overthrowing the government and vesting all power in the Soviet.
What better way to solve the problem of dual power than eliminating one of the
two powers. But when the moment of truth came on the evening of July 4th, 1917, however,
the leaders of the Soviet refused to bow to these demands. And though both the Soviet and the
provisional government weathered this particular storm, the prestige of both was badly damaged.
The provisional government was still intact, but remained just as unpopular and ineffectual as
ever. The Soviet, until this moment the universal darling of the streets, now generated growing contempt
for its refusal to become the avatar the streets demanded.
Forces on both the left and the right
rightly saw a golden opportunity to take advantage
of the staggering stumbles of a center that could not hold.
But though we ultimately know where this is all headed,
in July of 1917, the staggering and stumbling center tried to hold.
But to hold it would need new leadership.
The prime minister, Prince Lavov,
who had done everything in his power since February
to unify a coalition of liberals and socialists, admitted he could not do the job.
Exhausted and demoralized, he admitted defeat and resigned his prime minister on July the 7th.
And when he resigned, he retired from public life entirely, retiring to a monastery where he hoped
he would be left alone until he died in peace.
There was only one man who had the influence, prestige, and energy necessary to succeed him,
and that was Alexander Korenski.
Without setting down his portfolio as minister of the Army and Navy,
Kerenzky became Prime Minister of Russia.
It was quite the ascent to power for the son of state bureaucrats
who had made a name for himself as a radical lawyer and journalist
and who had previously spent time in prison for his unsavory political connections.
That Alexander Kerenzky was now considered the only man who could lead Russia
was, if nothing else, proof that a political revolution had in fact occurred.
In the months since February, Kerenzky appears to have undergone something of a transformation.
Little by little, event by event, he replaced his radical idealism with a kind of egotistical resolve,
from a belief that a free and democratic Russia was sure to flourish after the fall of Bloody Nicholas,
to the belief that he alone could save the Russians from themselves.
In the wake of the April crisis, he was already lamenting he had not died on the barricades back in February,
and further lamenting the fact that the Russian people could probably not be led without whips and chains.
But rather than becoming so disillusioned that he quit politics and retired to a monastery like Lavov,
Kerenzky convinced himself that he was the one who was going to save Russia and save the revolution.
He had begun his career believing that he was something of a Russian Mirabeau.
Now he believed he was destined to be a Russian Napoleon Bonaparte,
rescuing it from military defeat and political chaos.
After becoming Prime Minister in the first week of July 1917,
Karenski let all the power he now wielded go straight to his head.
Almost immediately, he moved into the Winter Palace, ancient residents of the Tsars.
He set up his offices behind a giant desk of Tsar Alexander III and slept in the bed of the Romanoz.
He surrounded himself in imperial trappings,
and even ordered the flag raised and lowered from the Winter Palace as he came and went,
copying the old system of alerting Petrograd when the Tsars were physically in residence.
Fully believing now that he alone could unify and save the revolution,
and sensing that the Soviets' hesitation to seize power in the July days was proof that the moral authority they held over Russian politics,
that they were actually the real power in Russian politics,
was a spell that was on the verge of being broken.
Korensky ordered them to vacate the Toree Palace and find a new home.
The pretext for this move was that the government was,
planning on reconvening the Duma, and the Soviet had only been allowed to meet the Torep palace
because the Duma was not in session. The order itself was a clear signal Kerensky was going to try
to alpha-dog the Soviet into a place of submissiveness. That they complied with the order and moved
their assemblies, meetings and offices to the Smolny Institute, a former finishing school for the
nobility, further indicated that after the July days, it was possible to turn the tables on the Soviet.
They had been pushing the government around since February, and having failed to seize
power when it was offered to them, Kerenzky and his government realized they could start
pushing the Soviet around for a change.
There was one small hang-up to Kerenzky's vision of himself as a Russian Napoleon
Bonaparte.
He was a lawyer and a journalist, not a soldier.
In his role as Minister of War, he had taken to wearing military uniforms, but that was
mere theatricality.
But if he was envisioning a Bonapartist model for post-revolutionary Russia, that was obviously
going to require the military.
as a major pillar of support.
Kerenzky needed a military figure
who was popular with the troops,
popular with the public generally,
but also willing to do what might be necessary
to impose order on a now perpetually
chaotic home front.
Kerenzky believed he found his man
in General Lavre Kornilov.
Cornelov was a 47-year-old
career army officer.
He had been born on the periphery of the empire
among the Siberian Cossacks.
His father was a peasant.
who had served as a soldier, his mother was a housekeeper.
Cornelov himself served all over the empire, including stints in Central Asia and the Far East.
In the Russo-Japanese War, he had risen through the ranks on a combination of courage and talent.
When World War I broke out, he commanded a division on the Southwestern Front and was promoted
to Major General in 1915. But shortly thereafter, he was captured by the Austrians after
refusing an order from General Brusilov to retreat, already popular in the press and among
his troops for a kind of salt-of-the-earth heroism,
Cornelof won further fame by escaping Austrian confinement in 1916
and successfully making it back to Russia.
The leaders of the February Revolution had considered Cornelov politically reliable enough.
He was given control of the Petrograd Military District in March 1917,
but then he became something of an uncomfortable liability in the midst of the April crisis.
Cornelov demanded full authority to use the military to indiscriminately restore
order. When the provisional government refused, he requested to be transferred back to the front,
a request that was quickly granted. Returning to his old stomping grounds on the southwestern front,
Cornelov led an initially successful wing of the June offensive, which was then stalled and forced to
retreat, much to his angry disgust. In Cornelov's estimation, the failure of the offensive
was obviously caused by the infamous Order No. 1. Order No. 1 had disastrous,
replace military discipline with disobedient committees of soldiers who could not be ordered to do
anything they didn't want to do, nor punished for their refusal to obey.
Kerenzky, who had very recently believed the democratization of the army would propel it to
ultimate victory, now agreed with the assessment of the senior staff that order number one
needed to be tossed out if Russia was going to withstand the German offensive, now rolling them
backwards. This was going to be dicey politically, and somebody like Cornelaw seemed to be the perfect
vehicle for it. He was popular with the rank and file, as well as enjoying a positive reputation in the
press as a national war hero. Nobody took him to be an aristocratic reactionary of the old school,
and so his clear determination to restore order and discipline in the ranks would be taken for what it was,
a determination to restore order and discipline in the ranks, and nothing more. So in mid-July,
Kerenzky fired General Prasilov, who had been recently elevated to the post of
Commander-in-Chief, effectively dumping on him the failure of the June offensive,
and then he turned around and offered the Commander-in-Chief spot to Kornilov.
But Kornilov did not accept straight away.
He had conditions, which he transmitted to Kerenzky on July 19.
He wanted a completely free hand to run the military as he saw fit.
The most controversial specific demand was the restoration of the right to execute soldiers for mutiny and desertion,
including the garrisons in the rear, who were presently protected from such punishment by
Order No. 1 and the Soldier's Declaration of Rights. His most controversial general demand
was a statement that he would consider himself responsible only to the nation and his conscience.
Now, these were somewhat provocative demands. After all, there are other authorities he needed
to consider himself responsible to, but after some careful clarifications brokered by Deputy Minister
of War, a guy named B.
Boris Savinkov, a former member of the SR Combat Organization turned militant nationalist,
the two sides came to an agreement.
On July 24th, General Cornelov became commander-in-chief of the Russian army.
Cornelov's elevation was cheered by everyone to Alexander Korenski's right.
The general's demand for the right to impose discipline and authority were leaked to the press
and he was hailed as the savior of Russia.
There were those, after all, who had supported the February Revolution
because of the gross incompetence of Nicholas and Alexandra.
In the five months since their abdication, and by the way, it's only been five months,
things only went from bad to worse.
But while Cornelov absolutely believed Russia probably needed a full-blown military dictatorship
to see it through the present crisis, we should be clear again that he was not an outright
political reactionary. He in fact said, and I'm quoting here,
I am not a counter-revolutionary. I despise the old regime, which badly mistreated,
my family. There is no return to the past, and there cannot be any. But we need an authority that
can truly save Russia, which will make it possible honorably to end the war, and lead her to the
constituent assembly. So far as I can tell, this is what Cornelof was always trying to do. He was thinking
the thing that generals sometimes think, which is that a period of temporary military rule might be
required to allow space for a democratic government to form. Whether he had any deeper thoughts on
the implication of unilaterally imposing military role on Russia? We do not know, but General Alex
Sieve once commented about Cornelof that he had a lion's heart and a sheep's brain. For the time
being, however, General Cornelof publicly acknowledged the proper authority of the provisional government
now reorganized under Prime Minister Kerensky, and this was the third government since the
February Revolution, which again, it's only been five months. But privately, he neither liked nor
trusted the ministers. When he met with them for the first time on August 3rd,
Kerenzky warned him not to be too frank or open about anything, because some of the ministers
were happy to make strategic leaks to the press. In particular, this side-eye was directed at
Minister of Agriculture, Victor Chernoff. Kornilov left this meeting and returned to military
headquarters, convinced the provisional government, as presently constituted, was hardly worthy of leading
Russia. He had his doubts about Kerenzky, too, but concluded,
even in private, that Kerensky was at least a sincere patriot doing his best to save Russia.
Kerensky, meanwhile, was becoming very concerned with the response from the right to the elevation
of Cornelof. He was detecting an awful lot of outright open salivating for Cornelov to ride in on a
white horse and save Russia from the menace of the Bolsheviks, who were obviously German
agents trying to destroy the country. In a further meeting between Kerenzky and Kornilov on August 10th,
The general told his prime minister that what he really wanted and what he probably needed
was something like the power General Ludendorff now enjoyed in Germany.
Supreme authority over all private and civilian affairs connected to the war.
This would include railroad, communications, and industry.
Kerenzky was incredibly non-committal about this,
and started to worry that maybe he had promoted a man with his own dictatorial ambitions.
In an attempt to prevent a right-wing coup and re-forged something of the
revolutionary consensus that had existed in February,
Kerenzky convened what is dubbed the Moscow State Conference on August 12th.
It brought together a whole array of people who had driven support for the February
Revolution in the first place, industrialists, businessmen, military officers, and
conservative liberals who had made up the old progressive bloc, but also invited were
moderate socialists, intellectuals, lawyers, and journalists, leaders of the trade unions,
and lower-ranking officers. They had all stood together in
in February, and Kerenzky hoped to bring them back together here in August. But the state
conference only proved that the unity of February was over. Meeting in the Bolshoi theater,
the delegates divided themselves physically between left and right in the hall, which is to say that
the left sat on the left and the right sat on the right. Over the next several days' worth of
speeches, if the left liked what they heard and applauded, the right sat in stony silence,
and if the right liked what they heard and applauded, the left sat in stony silence.
General Cornelof arrived in Moscow for the conference and was given a hero's welcome at the station,
flanked by red-robed Turkmen bodyguards, looking an awful lot like a personal Praetorian guard,
flanking him wherever he went.
Cornelov's speech was simple and honestly pretty milk-toast, but the right applauded him rapturously,
feeding Kerenzky's perception that Cornelov was possibly
the spearpoint of counter-revolution.
Karenski's closing address in contrast was a disaster.
He had clearly lost his touch and gave a rambling and at times nearly incoherent speech.
One delegate, sympathetic to Kerenzky, was forced to admit,
one could hear not only the agony of his power, but also of his personality.
If the Moscow State Conference was meant to reunify the center, it failed spectacularly.
But this was not actually the death of Kerenzky's fortunes, nor the fortunes of the provisional government.
It was not even the cause of a major breach between the prime minister and his commander-in-chief.
And in fact, as we are about to see, they were basically still on the same page.
Now, one thing that cannot get lost in all of this is the context of the war.
The June offensive had failed, and Russia's armies were falling back in disarray.
The central powers had paused to catch their breath for most of July,
but in August the Germans stood poised to launch an offensive into Latvia,
putting Petrograd itself in danger of being captured.
With this grave emergency looming out on the front,
and the politics in the rear still a confused, fractured, and dangerous mess,
both Korenzky and Kornilov moved towards the conclusion
that martial law was going to have to be declared.
The subtle distinction between them, though,
was that Kerenzky believed that martial law would prevent a coup from the right
and Cornelof believed it would prevent a coup from the left.
The Germans finally launched their expected offensive into Latvia on August 19th.
After a temporarily stiff but ultimately failed resistance,
the Russian armies retreated and the Latvian capital of Riga fell to the Germans,
putting the Germans on a perilously direct line to Petrograd.
The only good news was that the Russian army withdrew in good order
and was able to re-establish a defensive line preventing any further advantage.
for now.
The Fall of Riga was the immediate context for the dramatic political events that are about to unfold,
events which give us the title for today's episode, The Cornelof Affair.
But in an era of drama, peril, danger, violence, and desperation,
the Corneloff affair resembles nothing so much as an episode of a bad sitcom.
Seriously.
You know those plot lines that hinge entirely on characters saying,
lines of dialogue to each other that lead them to take away different understandings of something,
even though the misunderstanding between them only exists because the script demands it, and two
even remotely normal people would realize immediately there was a misunderstanding and just resolve
whatever the issue was. Well, that's the Cornelof affair. It is not a political plot. It is a
sitcom plot. At the center of this sitcom plot is a guest star named Vladimir Lavov, no relation at all
to Prince Lavov. This Lavov was a mom.
Moscow industrialist, octobrist delegate to the pre-revolutionary Dumas, and someone who was
heavily involved in the progressive bloc. Levov was among those who believed discipline and order
were now what Russia needed, and he decided to insert himself into the picture, with the
alleged goal of keeping Prime Minister Kerensky and Commander-in-Chief Cornelov on the same
side. But through his bungling, misrepresentations and miscommunications, he almost single-handedly
drove them apart.
On August 22nd, LeVov went to meet Karenski.
He told the Prime Minister vaguely that he represented certain right-leaning groups
ready to take drastic action to save the country.
Kerensky was skeptical, but told Lavov basically,
okay, go sound them out and report back to me.
Kerensky later said he just did this because he wanted more information from Lavov,
but Lavov left believing he was now like Kerenzky's emissary in a plot to stage a top-down military
coup. Lavov then got on a train and headed to military headquarters to meet General Cornelof.
Meanwhile out at headquarters, Corensky's actual emissary, deputy minister of war Savinkov,
was having his own meeting with the commander-in-chief where the two agreed that
Cornelov should take steps to neutralize ultra-conservative plotters in his officer corps,
but also to send the third cavalry corps to Petrograd to act as protectors of the provisional
government. Cornelov said he wanted direct military control of Petrograd, but Savinkov told him that
was impossible politically. Cornelov acquiesced and agreed to send the Third Cavalry Corps,
and they would be put at Kerensky's disposal in the increasingly likely event that the government
had to declare martial law. There were rumors swirling the capital that the Bolsheviks were
planning to stage another major demonstration on October 27th, which was the six-month anniversary
of the Petrograd garrison's mutiny.
even if it wasn't armed or violent, this demonstration might prove the perfect pretext for declaring
martial law. The only hang-up was that the Bolsheviks were absolutely not planning any demonstrations
on October 27. They were barely keeping their heads above water at this point. But oh boy,
are they about to come roaring back to life? Just as Savinkov was departing back to Petrograd on
August 24th, LeVov showed up that same day at Army headquarters and requested a meeting with Cornelov.
Levovov claimed to be Kerenzky's agent, and Kornilov assumed that this was a follow-up to the discussions he had just had with Sivinkov, and he never bothered to check with Korenzky whether Lov was legit, which he very much was not.
LeVov then floated three potential scenarios on how to administer martial law.
The first option was Korenzky declares himself dictator, with Kornilov supporting him militarily.
The second was forming a directory-style government, essentially a small executive.
executive committee with seats for both Kerenzky and Kornilov,
or then finally the third option was Kornilov being appointed dictator,
with Kerenzki supporting him politically.
Lavov asked the general which he preferred,
and Kornilov said, well, if I had my choice, it'd be option three.
The cleanest and easiest solution was for a general to run a military dictatorship.
But he also said this is just his preference, and he'd support whichever.
But whatever they decided to do,
Cornelof said Kerenzky and Sivinkov should come out to army headquarters
where they could all work out a new government safe from the mobs of Petrograd.
But as he was boarding the train back to the capital,
Lavov apparently had a brief talk with one of Kornilov's aides who said in an offhand way
that it didn't really matter which plan was put into place to start,
because Kerenzky would only be needed for 10 days and then he could be dispensed with.
Now my read on this, though, is that the officer in question was far more of an intriguer than his boss,
and he was speaking only for himself here.
This is not something Cornelof was secretly planning.
Lavov then returned to Petrograd and met with Corensky on August 26th,
bearing incredible and not even remotely accurate news.
He told Corenzky that Cornelof demanded full dictatorial authority,
mischaracterizing completely what Cornelov had said
that the third option was merely his preference and hardly a deal-breaker.
Kerensky was at first incredulous and didn't believe it.
This was quite an about turn for Corningloff.
But then he seemed struck by two ideas simultaneously.
First, maybe, without Kerenzky knowing it,
Cornelov had entered into a battle of wills with him
and was about to attempt to overthrow him in the provisional government
and stage the very right-wing coup Kerenzky himself feared.
And second, that even if none of that was true,
he now had a really great way to rehabilitate his standing with the left,
to expose and destroy an alleged right-wing plot,
and emerge as the unrivaled defender of the revolution against agents of reaction.
Now I think up to this point, August 26, 1917,
Korenzky saw Kornilov as an ally working towards a shared goal.
But from this point on, I do think it becomes clear
Kerenzky did everything in his power to set Kornilov up to.
to take a fall. After their meeting,
Karenski invited Lavov to come back to the Winter Palace at 8 that evening to engage in
a series of cables with Cornelof.
When Lavov didn't show up on time, Karenski went ahead and initiated communications at
8.30. But remember, this is a sitcom plot, not a political plot. So what Karenski does,
and I am not making this up, is he simply pretended LeVov was in the room with him, and further
pretended to be Lavov in the ensuing back and forth of message.
messages. Kerensky opened by saying, do you want to proceed as you indicated to Lavov?
Cornelov, believing he was talking to both Kerensky and Lavov at the same time, and believing the
three options were still on the table, replied, yes, but we do need to come to a decision quickly.
Kerensky then impersonated Lavov and said, the prime minister wants to know if you want to do
what you indicated to me privately want to do. Cornelov said yes.
Kerensky and Savinkom should come to headquarters at once.
They then exchanged a few more lines before the communication line dropped.
Cornelov walked away believing the Third Cavalry Corps would proceed to Petrograd,
Kerensky and Savinkov would depart Petrograd,
and within a few days they would collectively declare martial law from Army headquarters.
Kerensky walked away believing Cornelov was demanding Hebe made dictator
and demanding Kerensky come to Army headquarters where he would be made hostage
and then later possibly shot.
Or, what is also just as likely,
Korenski kept this entire farce of a conversation just vague enough
that he could now run off and claim that's what Cornelof planned to do.
Kerensky immediately convened all his ministers
and informed them of what had just transpired, in his own words.
He told them Cornelov was preparing to stage a military coup d'etat, and he had proof.
Kerenzky then told them the only way to see this through
was for the government to resign and vest all power in Kerensky himself.
After a great deal of heated discussion that went on overnight,
the ministers ultimately agreed.
At 4 a.m. on August 27th,
they vested Kerenzky with Supreme Executive Authority
and then collectively resigned.
Kerenzky promptly sent a cable to military headquarters
relieving Kornilov of his command effective immediately.
He ordered another general to take over
and placed Cornelov in custody.
When Cornelov received this cable at about 7 or 8 o'clock in the morning,
he understandably blew his stack.
But he moved very quickly from believing Kerenzky had out and out double-crossed him
and considered it far more likely that the rumor of another Bolshevik insurrection
scheduled for August 27th had been true,
that overnight something momentous had happened in Petrograd
and Korensky had probably been taken hostage by armed Bolsheviks
who were now forcing him to issue orders under duress.
So Cornelov ignored the cable, sent orders to the Third Cavalry Corps
for them to advance on Petrograd as fast as possible,
and then prepared, at least in his own mind,
to rescue the provisional government from the clutches of what was surely another Bolshevik insurrection.
But of course, there was no Bolshevik insurrection.
There was nothing even close to a Bolshevik insurrection.
The Cornelof affair is a farcical miscommunication full of unfounded assumptions all the way down.
And the great historical irony is that by ignoring Kerensky and ordering the Third Cavalry Corps to proceed with all haste to Petrograd,
Cornelov did more to single-handedly rehabilitate the Bolsheviks than anyone.
After the July days, something like 800 Bolsheviks had been arrested,
and it kind of looked like they were done for.
Lenin even said, they're going to shoot us.
I mean, now is the time to do it.
But with many socialists, including Kerensky, increasingly worried about a right-wing coup
over the summer of 1917, instead of grinding the Bolsheviks to dust, they let their foot up.
And though the leaders were still in custody, many party members had been released,
and the backlash everyone had feared after the July days turned out to not be the catastrophic
crackdown they feared.
In fact, just a few weeks later, here we are with word ripping through Petrograd that
right-wing coup was upon them, Cornelov has sent troops to overthrow the provisional government,
the Soviet, and the revolution. Suddenly, the Bolsheviks went from potential threat to potential
saviors, because they were, if nothing else, the most heavily armed and militant defenders of the
revolution in Petrograd. Scambling a defense, the Soviet called all the socialist parties in
Petrograd together and they hastily formed what was called the Committee for the Struggle
against the counter-revolution. Bolshevik representatives were not only invited to participate in this
committee but asked to take the lead. In addition to mobilizing their own armed cadres, the Bolsheviks demanded
40,000 workers be armed at once, significantly augmenting the ranks of what were called the Red Guards,
militia units of workers under arms. The first Red Guard units had been formed back in March and April,
but they now jumped in size, and more importantly for future events,
were being organized by the Bolsheviks, who almost overnight went from being considered
armed activists causing trouble for everyone, to being the most uncompromising and clear-eyed defenders
of the revolution. In the end, though, the Bolsheviks did not have to lead Petrograd in street
fighting against Cornelof's forces. Railroad workers successfully tore up all the tracks leading
into the Capitol, and the 3rd Cavalry Division's transports were temporarily halted in their
tracks on August 29th. While they sat
idol, representatives from Petrograd went out to meet and mingle and agitate among the troops.
Party leaders, garrison soldiers, workers' deputies all went out to implore them to please stop.
There were no disturbances in Petrograd. The people were merely rising in defense of the
provisional government, who you are posing a threat to. And this completed the farce of the
Cornelof affair. Only a few of the cavalrymen had any idea why they were even being ordered
to Petrograd in the first place. And those who did have some idea believed they were the ones
being sent to defend the provisional government. So they're like standing around looking at each other,
with one side saying, I've come to protect the provisional government and the other side saying,
no, I've come to protect the provisional government. The two sides engaged in discussions through the
night, and by the morning of August 30th, the whole thing was over. Now fully brief that the only
emergency threat to the provisional government was the third cavalry court itself. The men now refused to
move until they received more official clarification. And this loss of momentum alone effectively
ended the threat. The commander of the Third Cavalry Corps was escorted to meet with Karenski.
Now, we have no account of their meeting, but it was probably a supreme dressing down from the
prime minister, which the commander no doubt received with angry contempt, knowing as he did,
and this is true, that Kerenzky had been the one who ordered the Corps to Petrograd in the first place.
Kerensky was now heavily amping up the accusation that Cornelof had done everything of his own sinister initiative.
But the historical record more than confirms the transfer of the Third Cavalry Corps to Petrograd was done at Kerensky's initiative and probably with the intention of declaring martial law.
It was only after he did this that Kerensky changed his mind and decided to pin all the blame for any attempt to declare martial law on Cornelof and Cornelof alone.
After all, Alexander Kerenzky is no military dictator.
He is the defender of democracy against the right-wing counter-revolutionaries.
Despairing for himself and for Russia after having received this absurd dressing down,
the commander of the cavalry corps left his meeting with Kerenzky, went to a private apartment of
Petrograd, and shot himself in the heart.
With the Kornilov affair now abruptly ended, anyone who might have supported him,
loudly disowned him.
He was peacefully relieved of command on September 1st and placed under house arrest, and he would remain in custody until November.
When the Bolshevik revolt, Cornelov had long predicted and tried to avert, finally happened.
Cornelov and other loyal officers in custody with him escaped their jail cells and went off to form the Corps of the Volunteer Army,
one of the main pillars of the White Army in the coming Civil War.
having successfully thwarted a right-wing coup that was probably never a right-wing coup,
and having rehabilitated and rearm the Bolsheviks,
Alexander Kerensky now stood as the effective dictator of Russia.
And next week, we will head into September 1917 and see him make his final fumbling attempts
to be the great leader Russia needed him to be.
The great leader, he believed it was his destiny to become.
But of course, we know what Alexander Korensky's destiny really was.
The man known to history as the leader overthrown in the October Revolution.
