Revolutions - 10.83- Terror Is Necessary

Episode Date: January 24, 2022

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Starting point is 00:00:04 And welcome to revolutions. Episode 10.83, terror is necessary. In the summer of 1918, communist leaders looked out from the vantage point of the Kremlin and saw themselves surrounded by an array of enemies both foreign and domestic. And because Lenin and his comrades made no distinction between the fortunes of the Communist Party and the fortunes of the Russian Revolution, that meant that the revolution was surrounded by an array of enemies both born and domestic. This list of enemies now included their erstwhile coalition partners, the left SRs,
Starting point is 00:00:46 whose quixotic uprising on July the 6th drove home the point to Lenin and his government that only the Communist Party could be trusted to defend the revolution. For them, the logic was axiomatic. For the revolution to survive, the communist regime had to survive. Lenin was not surprised by the array of threats facing the young communist regime, nor believe that they could be avoided. The dialectic of events meant that revolution necessarily begat counter-revolution, although begat isn't even the right word,
Starting point is 00:01:17 because revolution does not precede counter-revolution, temporally, or logically. Counter-revolution is embedded in the very fact of revolution. They are simultaneous events. One cannot stage a revolution such that one will not face a counter-revolution. No sensible revolutionary seeks to. to avoid conflict with counter-revolutionaries, they seek to win that conflict. And the communist leadership was historically literate, and they had studied all the revolutionary precursors, most especially the original French Revolution, and more immediately the tragedy of the Paris Commune.
Starting point is 00:01:54 Lenin believed that the latter had failed in part for their lack of iron will, that the communards in their idealism dithered with administrative minutia, instead of quickly arming and striking Versailles before Versailles struck them. The communards had hesitated to shed blood, and so instead their blood was shed. For Lenin, revolutions are kill or be killed propositions, and he did not plan on getting killed. So in the summer of 1918, everything was happening pretty much as expected. On the one hand, there were the forces of revolution, with the assumption still in place that Russia was simply the leading edge of a broader international Socialist Revolution. And on the other hand, there were the forces of counter-revolution,
Starting point is 00:02:36 of bourgeois capitalist imperialism, similarly joined by their own kind of international solidarity, international banks, stock exchanges, and exploitive colonial enterprises, managed by the diplomatic core and defended by military apparatuses. These forces were, of course, currently enmeshed in a murder-suicide pact called World War I, which is what made international socialist revolution plausible to the point of being an almost guaranteed necessity. But they were still very powerful, still dangerous. And so even while the bourgeois imperialists were engaged in this capitalist civil war called World War I, they would stop at nothing to crush the socialist revolution in its infancy.
Starting point is 00:03:19 Which brings us to the component of the Russian Revolution and the Russian Civil War that we have not yet talked about, but which appeared to the communists to be ironclad proof that their analysis of the situation was correct. In the summer of 1918, the Allied powers began a whole series of armed interventions into Russian territory. Now, ironically, the first armed Allied intervention after the October Revolution came at the behest of the young Soviet regime. Remember back in February when Trotsky said neither war nor peace and then walked out of Brestletovsk, and the central power said, okay, so war, and invaded, well, recall that in this brief window, the Bolsheviks reached out to the Allies, in case the Germans decided to just never stop advancing.
Starting point is 00:04:05 We talked about this in episode 10.78. This is when Lenin said, please add my vote in favor of taking potatoes and weapons from the bandits of Anglo-French imperialism. Well, in the midst of this little window, local Soviet leaders in the far northern port of Mormansk faced a possible threat from encroaching white fins. The British wanted to prevent Mormons
Starting point is 00:04:29 from falling into the hands of forces allied with the Germans, and they disembarked 170 Marines on March the 4th. The fact that Trotsky had invited the British in was later thrown in his face during the intra-party squabbles of the 1920s. But this very brief window coincidentally closed the same day the British Marines landed in Mormonsk when the Russians signed the Treaty of Brestle-Tosk. And though the Treaty obviously upended the political dynamic, it did not change the Allied interest in putting troops into places like Mormansk. Their overriding objective was all about winning World War I. They read the terms of the Treaty of Bresley-Tofk and knew how much of the store Lenin was ready to give away.
Starting point is 00:05:14 So while they couldn't, for example, stop the takeover of the Ukrainian breadbasket, Allied forces could block access to strategic ports not yet in German hands. They also saw value in holding these ports to possibly run soldiers and supplies to forces inside Russia who were willing to reopen the Eastern Front. Now, despite the communist assumption, the initial Allied incursions were not about the forces of counter-revolution gathering to snuff out revolutionary socialism. It was entirely about the strategic imperatives of the war.
Starting point is 00:05:46 From everything I have read, I have no doubt whatsoever that had Lenin buckled to left communist and left SR pressure to abandon Bresselaed and resume the war against Germany, the pipeline of munitions, resources, and money from Britain, France, and the United States, would have opened right back up. In May 1918, the revolt of the Czechoslovak Legion accelerated the ambitions of the Allied interventionists. The whole motivation for the Legion
Starting point is 00:06:13 was to keep fighting the central powers, which meant that they were in complete strategic alignment with the Allies. But no matter what the Communists believe, it is not the case that the Czechs rose up at the behest of the Allies. It was simply that their interests neatly coincided and they were obviously now on the same side.
Starting point is 00:06:32 Though it is worth mentioning that the Allies disagreed about what to do with the Czechoslovak Legion. The British wanted them to stay in the region to help form the nucleus of a reformed Eastern Front that would at least tie down the central powers in the spring of 1918. The French, meanwhile, were hoping to affect their speedy evacuation and race them around the world so they could shore up the Western Front. But more than anything, the Czechoslovak Legion served as an incredibly useful piece of propaganda. All the allied governments could sell their people on the idea of committing troops to save the brave and beleaguered Czechoslovaks. That's certainly what American President Woodrow Wilson
Starting point is 00:07:10 is going to run with. So in late June, for example, 600 more British Marines landed in Mormansk. This time, not at the request of the Soviets, but in opposition to them. Moscow responded by sending up red guards to push them out, leading to the first skirmishes between the Allies and the communists. the Allies won these skirmishes and were then able to set up a small defensive line about 300 miles south of Mormansk, which they now controlled. Coinciding with this foreign intervention, other insurrections started breaking out that seemed very closely linked to allied interests. For example, in the city of Yaroslavil, just about 200 miles northeast of Moscow, on the rail line linking Moscow to the northern ports where Allied navies are now landing troops. On July 6th, 1918, which just so happened to coincide with the left SR uprising in Moscow, a group of anti-communist right SRs staged a successful armed uprising of their own.
Starting point is 00:08:10 It was led by Boris Savinkov. Savinkov had been a part of the SR combat organization during the days of the Revolution of 1905, but ever since then had drifted towards the center, and in 1917 served as Deputy Minister of War in Kerenzky's government. after October he became an implacable anti-communist. When his forces took Yaroslavl, they were not benevolent in victory. They summarily executed any red agents they got their hands on. Because let's never forget, both sides in the Russian Civil War engaged in ruthlessly punitive brutality, was the nature of the Russian Civil War.
Starting point is 00:08:50 Savinkov's uprising was meant to coincide with the Allied invasion of the Port of Archangel. but miscommunications had led Savinkov to strike too early, and so within a matter of weeks, Red Army forces retook Yaroslavl, though Savinkov himself managed to flee into exile abroad. Within days of Savinkov's revolt, another rebellion broke out that seemed connected to allied interests. This one more troubling because it involved treasonous betrayal.
Starting point is 00:09:21 After the Czechoslovak legions rose up, the Volga River had become a major front in the burgeoning civil war. The critical forces of the Red Army mobilizing to hold the line on the Volga were put under the command of Mikhail Moraviev. Now, ever since he had volunteered to defend Petrograd in the days after the October Revolution, Moraviev had been among the Red's most dependable officers. He had never been a Bolshevik and was never considered 100% politically reliable by Lenin
Starting point is 00:09:52 or the other members of the Bolshevik Central Committee. But time and again, Moraviev proved. his military reliability. That came to an end in July 1918. Moraviev had never supported the treaty of Brestli-Tovsk, and after the left SR revolt was crushed, he got it in his head to
Starting point is 00:10:10 revive the call to cancel the treaty and to have Russians stop fighting Russians and instead have everyone go off and fight Germans together. So on July the 10th, 1918, Moravef publicly defected from the Red Army and led a thousand loyal troops down the Volgaris. from Kazan to Simbiersk, issuing orders for the rest of his troops to stop fighting the Czech legions and instead head west to reform the Eastern Front. Once Moraveev got to Simbiersk, he occupied
Starting point is 00:10:40 several key points in the city, but his revolt was as brief as the left SRs in Moscow. The very next day, July 11th, he was ambushed in Simborsk by a mix of Red Guards, Latvian riflemen and Cheka units, and he was killed in the subsequent exchange of fire. To replace the dead traitor Moraviev, Lenin appointed someone he believed he could trust, the commander of the Latvian rifleman who had just suppressed the left SR revolt in Moscow. His name, and I apologize if I butcher this, was Yukum's Vatius. Vatius set up his headquarters in the city of Kazan, but faced daunting setbacks before he even got his feet wet. The Camuch, that self-declared government and exile of the constituent assembly that had set up shop in Samara on June the 8th,
Starting point is 00:11:31 had started raising what they called the People's Army, and in conjunction with the Czech legionaries had made rapid advances all along the Volga River. At the end of July, they captured Simbiersk, costing the Reds, the provincial capital, a key railway junction, and its munitions depot, to say nothing of letting Lenin's hometown fall into the hands of the enemy. then on August 5th they descended on Kazan and took the city after two days of street fighting. Vatius watched several of the officers on his staff defect to the enemy, and then he himself was forced to slip out of the city with a couple of dozen riflemen under the cover of a heavy fog. For the communist leadership in Moscow,
Starting point is 00:12:11 all the threats coming at them in the summer of 1918 were merely aspects of a single phenomenon, the phenomenon of counter-revolution. On July 29th, Lenin told the example. Executive Committee of the Soviet, what we are involved in is a systematic, methodical, and evidently long-planned military and financial counter-revolutionary campaign against the Soviet Republic, which all the representatives of Anglo-French imperialism have been preparing for months. With the benefit of hindsight, we know that this isn't really the case. There wasn't some carefully planned counter-revolution that was being executed from some central
Starting point is 00:12:50 location in the halls of Western imperialism. But I also don't think Lenin was crazy to draw this conclusion. The facts on the ground seemed to perfectly conform to his prior beliefs. And there was a broad alliance of anti-communist forces forming out there. It's just that they were never all tendrils of a single counter-revolutionary Leviathan. They were individual snakes in the grass, doing their own things for their own reasons. But in August, the Allies gave Lenin little reason to doubt that they were not, in fact, embarking on a single coordinated counter-revolutionary
Starting point is 00:13:24 operation. By now, the British presence around Moormansk had grown to 6,000. Then on August 1st, Allied ships finally arrived at the northern port of Archangel bearing 1,500 British and French Marines. After brief skirmishes between rival political factions and the city drove the red leaders out, Allied Marines disembarked to secure the port. The British and French, however, did not have many more troops to spare, and so they pressed other allied nations to provide reinforcements. The Americans, Canadians, and Italians would all respond. But there wouldn't be too much to do beyond simply hold the coastal enclaves. It would have been extremely difficult to invade Russia from these northern ports across
Starting point is 00:14:07 a thousand miles of not particularly hospitable country, so when the additional allied reinforcements showed up at these coastal cities, there they would sit. of more far-reaching impact were events in the far east. By July 1918, the Czechoslovak Legion had risen up and taken over Vladivostok, the terminus of the Trans-Siberian Railroad. Nearly every Allied power proceeded to land some kind of expeditionary force in the city, and they had agreed amongst themselves to place about 25,000 troops total to make sure they controlled Vladivostok. The British landed a battalion on August 3rd, shortly thereafter 500 French Marines came from their colonial holdings in Asia. Between August 15 and August 21, the first 3,000 Americans disembarked, the beginning of a force that would eventually grow to over 8,000.
Starting point is 00:15:01 The Americans stated objective was simply to aid the evacuation of the Czechoslovak legions, and they tried to hue to that narrow parameter. but by far the largest contingent was the Japanese. The Japanese were both eager to extend their own influence in the region, but also justifiably concerned that the British and Americans were planning to box the Japanese out once they had gotten the Russians out of the picture. Now at first, the Allies requested the Japanese send 7,000 men for this joint Vladivostok mission. The Japanese government then approved 12,000. Eventually, they poured over 70,000 troops into the area.
Starting point is 00:15:42 Without question, the Japanese were the largest influx of foreign troops into Russia during the Civil War. With this apparent Leviathan of counter-revolution enveloping the Soviet Republic, Lenin concluded the time had come to follow the lead of their Jacobin forebearers, who had faced a similar multi-front crisis in 1792 and 1793. It didn't really matter if the terror was right or wrong, moral or immoral. It was necessary, and that was all that mattered. As we've noted, Lenin prided himself on being able to do the hard thing if it was necessary. He wasn't going to let sentimentality or morality prevent him from doing that which needed to be done,
Starting point is 00:16:24 because if sentimentality or morality caused him to flinch, that would mean they would lose. The revolution would be overthrown. and that would not mean that there would not be a terror. It would simply mean that the terror would be inflicted by the whites rather than the reds. Lenin believed a terror was necessary not just to kill opponents, but also to snap the population to attention, to ensure that areas under red control stayed under red control, to make sure people didn't waver from their revolutionary commitments, to make sure that conscripts into the Red Army maintained discipline,
Starting point is 00:16:59 even if they didn't want to be a part of the Red Army. but also, yes, to root out and exterminate enemies of the revolution. Now, even before the Red Terror officially commenced, Lenin had already drafted what is now an infamous order on August the 11th. It was sent to loyal cadres in the city of Hunza, where there had been some local resistance to grain requisitioning. Comrades, Lenin's communique read. The Kuulac uprising in your five districts must be crushed without pity.
Starting point is 00:17:29 You must make an example of these people. Then he gave them orders and four bullet points. One, hang, I mean hang publicly so that people can see it, at least 100 cullocks, rich bastards, and known bloodsuckers. Two, publish their names. Three, seize all their grain. Four, single out the hostages per my instructions in yesterday's telegram. Do all this so that for miles around people see it all, understand it,
Starting point is 00:17:57 tremble and tell themselves that we are killing the bloodthirsty cullocks and that we will continue to do so. Yours, Lennon. P.S. Find tougher people. This communique also gets to another component of the terror, which is trying to draw a sharp distinction between us, the good guys, and those, the bad guys, the rich bastards, the bloodsuckers. This distinction would make the terror not merely something the population would endure with trembling fear, but also maybe even actively support. Meanwhile, out on the war front, things started to turn in the Reds favor, and Trotsky was right in the thick of it. The commissar of war was now cruising around in a mobile train command center, and on August 28th was at the
Starting point is 00:18:47 Romanov Bridge, a huge bridge that spanned the Volga 20 miles west of the city of Kazan. He was there surveying the scene when 2,000 forces of the People's Army marched out of Kazan and tried to take it over. But they had marched all day by the time they reached the bridge and were so tired that when they got there, the Red Army forces under Trotsky fought them off. But it was not a clean victory. One regiment broke and fled in the middle of the battle.
Starting point is 00:19:14 And the next day, showing his own clear affirmation for uncompromising discipline and will, Trotsky had the commander of the offending regiment shot, along with one out of every ten men. After its brief hiatus following the first, February Revolution, the death penalty was back with a vengeance. The victory at the bridge meant General Vatius had a clear path to retake the city of Kazan, and Lennon suggested to Trotsky that if Vatius stalled, delayed or hesitated in any way that he should be shot. This too, harkening back to the
Starting point is 00:19:47 good old days of the French Revolutionary armies. But while all this was going on, far more momentous events unfolded in Moscow. Lennon was very much more in favor of killing than being killed, so he rarely left the safety of the Kremlin. But on August 30th, he gave a speech at a munitions factory on the southern outskirts of Moscow. After the speech, he was walking out of the building towards a waiting car. A woman called out Lenin's name, and when he turned, she pulled out a gun and fired three shots at him. One of the shots missed and went through his coat. Another one lodged in his shoulder, but the other one was the bad one. It passed through his neck and partially punctured a lung. Lennon dropped in a bloody heap on the ground as confusion exploded all around him. Still conscious,
Starting point is 00:20:41 Lenin refused to go to a hospital because he didn't trust anyone there, and he demanded he be taken to the Kremlin and that doctors be brought to him. A given the same, given the same, scope of the injuries and the inadequate medical facilities at the Kremlin, there seemed to be very little chance that Lenin would survive this. I mean, if you move these bullets just a centimeter, he's dead before he even hits the ground. And history starts doing its summary assessment of the life and career of Vladimir Iliich Lenin who was assassinated at the age of 48 here on August 30, 1918. But the bullets landed where they did. And he did not die that day. Through that magical combination of luck and will, he survived. Now, as for the would-be assassin, it turned out to be a woman
Starting point is 00:21:28 named Fannie Kaplan. At least that's the official story. Fanny Kaplan was a long-standing member of the SRs. She had joined the party as a teenager in 1905 and been arrested in 1906 as a part of a bomb plot. After 11 trying years in Siberian exile, she was set free in the political amnesties following the February Revolution. Kaplan had no love for Lenin and the Bolsheviks, and she had completely soured on their vision for revolution after October. With the outset of deep political repression in the summer of 1918, she and several SR comrades, who she refused to subsequently name, decided to start assassinating people.
Starting point is 00:22:07 She was assigned Lenin. There were a bunch of arrests in the wave of the shooting, and under questioning, Kaplan made the following recorded confession. My name is Fanny Kaplan. Today I shot Lenin. I did it on my own. I will not say from whom I obtained my revolver. I will give no details.
Starting point is 00:22:25 I had resolved to kill Lenin long ago. I consider him a traitor to the revolution. I was exiled to Siberia for participating in an assassination attempt against a czarist official in Kiev. I spent 11 years at hard labor. After the revolution, I was freed. I favored the constituent assembly and am still for it. This confession was good enough for a speedy conviction. Fanny Kaplan was taken out and shot in the back of the head on September 3rd.
Starting point is 00:22:54 Now the thing about this is so far as I can tell, there were no actual witnesses saying, ah yes, I saw that woman there, Fannie Kaplan, fire the three shots at Lennon. Nor was she rustled to the ground gun in hand right at the moment that it all happened. So there are lingering alternate theories that maybe she wasn't actually the shooter, and that she either willingly gave herself up as the shooter to protect her comrades, or that the very clear and straightforward confession she offered was extracted after some good old-fashioned enhanced interrogation techniques. The further details about Kaplan and the assassination attempt came from one of her comrades
Starting point is 00:23:32 who turned informant a few years later and was the star witness for the public trials of the SRs in 1920. And yes, that witness confirms and elaborates on all these details, But he isn't exactly the most reliable source either. Now, I'm not trying to inject conspiracy theories into this. I'm just reporting that what actually happened is surprisingly muddled. If you're ever on Jeopardy and they say, this SR shot Lenin on August 30, 1918, the answer is Fannie Kaplan.
Starting point is 00:23:59 That's the historical answer. So Lenin managed to live, but he is now confined to a recovery bed. And in that bed, he absolutely resolved that the time had come for terror. Now, Checo was already out there arresting people and interrogating people and executing people, but it's all about to get ramped up to vast national policy. Just a few days after the assassination attempt on September 3rd, Pravda published an appeal to the working class, which said that the people must crush the hydra of counter-revolution with massive terror.
Starting point is 00:24:35 And it said the defenses could be slight, but invite swift and permanent retribution. Quote, who dares to spread the slightest rumor against the Soviet regime will be arrested immediately and sent to a concentration camp. Then on September 5th, the People's Commissars issued the following decree. The Council of People's Commissars, having heard the report of the Chairman of the All-Russian Extraordinary Commission for Combating Counter-Revolution, Speculation and Crime, which is, by the way, just the official name of Cheka, about the activities of this commission finds that in the present situation the safeguarding of the rear by means of terror is necessary.
Starting point is 00:25:17 That it is necessary to send a greater number of responsible party comrades to the all-Russian extraordinary commission for combating counter-revolution speculation and crime in order to strengthen its work and introduce into it a more systematic character. That it is necessary to safeguard the Soviet Republic from class enemies by isolating them in concentration camps, that all persons associated with white guard organizations, plots, and rebellions are liable to be shot, that it is necessary to publish the names of all those shot and the reasons for shooting them. This decree of September 5, 1918, is the legal embarkation point for what becomes the red terror and the foundations for a generally repressive police state. So the red terror is going to
Starting point is 00:26:06 last for years and go through periods of winding up and winding down. And obviously the first several weeks and months after the decree were a period of major windup. There is a lot of conflicting information out there about casualties and victims. Some people tend to downplay how many people were killed. Other people obviously exaggerate it beyond all reason. The communists were often fastidious record keepers about who was being killed, where and why, but oftentimes local decisions were simply made on the fly. Groups of people were taken to the outskirts of town and shot. The who, what, when, and why of their deaths never recorded. Among the first victims were those who had already been rounded up and held in custody, whether as hostages or as potential threats to the regime.
Starting point is 00:26:52 They were executed. Lots of SRs were executed. There were also large police sweeps to pick up all kinds of suspects. People were just rounded up and crammed into prisons. There were little revolutionary tribunals operating at the local level, haphazardly and ruthlessly. Now, very often, yes, they were identifying real threats to the communist regime, arresting them and executing them, or they were picking up people from rival political parties. But as often is not, the basis for an arrest is extremely flimsy, a single denunciation from an anonymous informant. Maybe somebody is arrested for the crime of being a foreigner. And as history has seen in several different times and locations, sometimes people are arrested for having the same name as somebody who the government is
Starting point is 00:27:37 looking for. That happens a lot during the initial phase of the red terror. And then, of course, as we've also seen many times throughout history, going all the way back to, let's say, the sullen prescriptions in people like Crassus and Catalan, where denunciations and arrests are driven entirely by greed and avarice, or maybe a ruthless desire to get ahead, settling personal grudges, settling old scores, none of which had anything to do with politics. Now, this is all just the very beginning of it, and as we move forward, there will be dungeons and tortures and executions, and the whole thing will become an absurd, paranoid blanket spreading out over everything. Initially justified by the context of the Civil
Starting point is 00:28:15 War, it would become a permanent feature of post-revolutionary Soviet life. As the Cheka fanned out and fulfilled its mandate to grow its operation and systematically impose a reign of terror, the Red Army advanced on the Volga. They recaptured Simbiersk on September the 2nd, and then on September the 12th took Kazan, which meant by the by that General Vatius did not become an early victim of the Red Terror, which he surely would have had he failed, and instead is on his way to being promoted to Commander-in-Chief of the whole Red Army. In the face of this onslaught, the Camuch collapsed as a potential threat to the communist regime. The People's Army they created topped out at just 30,000 soldiers.
Starting point is 00:28:58 soldiers, and they couldn't get any more as the Red Army poured reinforcements into the region. In the first week of October 1918, with the Red Army closing in on Samara, the Kamuch disbanded, and everyone fled east, seeking the protection of white armies that were forming in Siberia. Meanwhile, the Czechoslovaks grew demoralized and frustrated. They had never wanted to get involved in a Russian civil war in the first place, but had tolerated it because the Reds were putting up practically no resistance. Now that it was turning into a real war, they wanted out. And as they reoriented themselves, back to their original goal of trying to get out of Russia, the Allies continued to bring forces
Starting point is 00:29:39 into Russia under the cover of getting the Czechoslovak legions out of Russia. On September the 4th, 4,500 Americans arrived at Archangel. They were officially dubbed the American Expeditionary Force, and unofficially they were called the Polar Bear Expedition. And then more troops flooded into Vladivostok. most especially the Japanese. But if you take a quick glance over the calendar, you know that in next week's episode, everything is about to get rocked by another major event
Starting point is 00:30:10 that is going to re-destabilize the whole Eurasian continent. The 11th hour of the 11th day, of the 11th month, is just around the corner. And I have taken pains to impress upon you that everything that we have understood so far about the Russian Revolution has to be understood in the context of World War. So how are things going to change when World War I isn't a thing anymore?

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