Revolutions - 10.87- Anarchy in Ukraine
Episode Date: February 21, 2022Nestor Makhno thy time has come. Sponsors DrinkTrade.com/revolutions Ritual.com/revolutions...
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Hello and welcome to revolutions.
Episode 10.87, Anarchy in Ukraine.
Last time we talked about the ongoing transformation of Russia into a centralized one-party regime,
which increasingly took the form of elected Soviets of soldiers, workers, and peasant deputies,
but which functionally became an appendage of the Communist Party.
And as we discussed, this transformation caused.
tension, resentment, and finally outright revolt in many areas controlled by the communists.
But we also discussed how this was all taking place inside the context of the larger civil war,
and many of those frustrated with the communists, ultimately concluded that the Reds, however
annoying they were, were better than the whites.
This week we are going to talk about a region where this mess of social unrest and political
tension and military necessity, combined with particular volatility, Ukraine.
Since the Treaty of Breslahtovsk, the armies of the central powers had been occupying Ukraine.
But their capitulations on the Western Front in the autumn of 1918 meant that they were now going to be forced to withdraw.
This withdrawal would leave a gaping power vacuum that left much of Ukraine in a state of anarchy.
And I don't mean that is a pejorative synonym for chaos and disorder, although there was an awful lot of that going around.
I mean a literal state of anarchy.
because Ukraine was the place where the black flag-flying anarchists enjoyed the greatest success at establishing their vision for what post-revolutionary society ought to look like.
Now, depending on who you talk to, they either provided a viable blueprint for an alternative to the creeping authoritarianism of the communists,
or they were simply tossing off half-baked ideas that were never going to survive prolonged contact with reality.
Either way, there is no way to tell the story of the Russian Revolution without discussing the Ukrainian anarchists, and specifically their greatest leader, Nestor Machnoe.
Nestor MacKnoe was born in 1889 in Hulipol, a small rural city in southeast Ukraine situated east of the Neeper River and north of the Sea of Azov.
His parents had both been born serfs and were liberated by the Emancipation Decree of 1861, but they were still excephalienable.
extremely poor at the time of his birth.
Compounding the family's misfortunes,
Muckno's father died when he was just 10 months old.
Little Nestor was the youngest of five children,
and he received only a few years' primary education.
As a student, he was noted for being bright and clever,
but also extremely headstrong and rebellious.
He didn't last long in school, though,
but mostly because the family's economic circumstances
forced him to go out and work for wages.
He took his first paying job at the age of just.
seven. Mocknoe spent what was left of his childhood working in the fields for wages before moving on
to assorted other odd jobs. Wherever he went, the story was always the same. Bright and capable,
but rebellious and undisciplined. Mocknoe came equipped with an instinctive hostility to authority
that was compounded by a life spent working for various landlords and estate managers. He never
did go back to school, and so unlike most of the other revolutionaries we've talked about, Mockno was
not radicalized at university before advancing on to the coffee houses. In fact, he developed something
of a loathing for those kind of intelligentsy irraticals who had no real connection to the things they
were talking about. And in fact, McNough actually was what many coffee house Russian revolutionaries
idolized, but could never be themselves, a true revolutionary peasant.
MacKnoe first got into politics as a teenager in the wake of the Revolution of 1905,
attracted to the fundamentally anti-authority message of anarchism, he joined a small anarchist group in his hometown of Hulipal in 1906.
Their group numbered in the mere dozens, but were committed to continuing the revolutionary struggle even in these reactionary days of the Stalipan era.
The group engaged in both revolutionary expropriations, which is to say robberies, as well as revolutionary strikes against the enemies of the people, which is to say bombings and arsons of local estates.
He was arrested once and held for 10 months before being released without charges even being filed.
And then the Akrona infiltrated the group, and after several shootouts with the police,
McNough was arrested again.
Several of his comrades were hanged, and he himself was sentenced to death.
But this sentence was commuted down to life in prison on account of his alleged youthful immaturity.
Transferred to a prison in Moscow, young McNo wound up amidst other veteran political prisoners.
And as we've seen before, Russian prisons turned out to be a great place to get further radicalized.
In particular, MacNo met a guy called Piotr Arsinov, who school him in anarchism, slipping him smuggled copies of Bakunin and Kropotkin.
These books gave form and voice to McNo's own instinctive loathing of authority, and he became a committed anarchist,
placing the blame for most social ills and injustices on the nature of political authority itself,
and believing the common people would be just fine running their own effect.
without the need for any parasitic and exploitive state apparatus.
McNoe was still sitting in prison at the age of 27 when the February Revolution hit.
He and all the other political prisoners were amnestied and set free.
He returned home to Hulipel and immediately started working to organize the local population,
putting into practice the things he had learned in prison.
Machno turned out to be a naturally charismatic leader,
and in the post-February Revolution era,
became a forceful advocate for direct appropriation of land by the peasants.
These were the days when the provisional government in Petrograd was dragging their feet on the land question,
and we talked about how the peasants out there just started taking matters into their own hands.
Well, Nestor MacKnoe was one of those taking power into his own hands.
He led strikes and work stoppages, organized volunteer armed bans to go disarm local law enforcement,
and simply seize estate lands and redistribute them to the peasants, asking neither
permission nor forgiveness.
It was during this period in 1917 that MacNo gained a reputation as a sort of revolutionary
Robinhood, rallying the locals under the slogan Land and Liberty, not unlike his Mexican
counterpart, Emiliano Zapata, who had been doing the same thing for years in the Mexican state
of Morelos, doing of their own initiative, with their own people, what the educated big city
intellectuals only talked about doing.
This initial period of revolutionary anarchism was upended by the Treaty of Brestli Tovsk and the invasion of Ukraine by the central powers.
This invasion was ostensibly welcomed by the leaders of the Rada and their self-declared Ukrainian People's Republic,
and also ratified and recognized by the Russian Bolsheviks.
Mokkno and his comrades were aghast at the betrayal of the people of Ukraine, but there wasn't anything they could do about it.
He had a small partisan band who were sturdy, loyal, and tough,
but they weren't going to be able to fend off hundreds of thousands of invading Germans,
Austrians, and Hungarians.
So instead, they settled into a life resisting the occupation wind and where they could,
and protecting local peasants from abuses by the occupation authorities.
In the early summer of 1918,
Mokkno embarked on a tour of Russia to try to gin up support for the Ukrainian resistance,
eventually winding his way to Moscow in July,
According to Mucknow's memoir, while in Moscow, he had two important meetings.
First, with an aging Kropotkin, who offered him sage advice and cautious encouragement,
but the other was an audience with Lennon in the Kremlin.
According to Mockno, Lenin quizzed him on the situation in Ukraine,
bemoaned the contagion of anarchism, but finally admitted that they were at least probably fighting on the same side.
McNo provides a detailed description of this conversation, and his depiction of Lenin certainly tracks with Lenin's personality.
But it is worth mentioning that, so far as I can tell,
Macnowe's memoir is the only evidence we have that he ever met personally with Lenin.
There's apparently no other contemporaneous record, schedule, calendar entry, or note
from anyone working inside the Kremlin at the time that confirms that this meeting ever took place.
Which doesn't mean that it didn't, just that it's not entirely clear that it did.
From Moscow, Mocknoe returned to Hulipel and found things had gotten worse in his absence.
The occupation forces were rooting out all his comrades.
His mother's home had been burned to the ground.
His brother had been shot.
He also discovered that a bounty had been placed on his own head, and he had to go into hiding.
But it would be a very active hiding, not a passive hiding.
MacKnoe started organizing and arming local forces to commence a more deliberate guerrilla campaign.
against the occupation. And it was during this period in the second half of 1918 that his reputation
as an innovative military strategist and tactician grew. He wound up running an exemplary guerrilla
campaign built on speed, mobility, surprise, local knowledge, and loyal camaraderie. His growing forces
were supported by the peasants with food, supplies, and information. They could gather, strike,
and disperse before the enemy forces, mostly Austrian soldiers could respond. He famously
pioneered the use of mounting machine guns on horse-drawn carts to strike targets with deadly speed.
And while military affairs took up most of his attention, Mugno also became quite the anarchist
proselytizer. He delivered passionate political speeches in every town and village he passed through,
always and everywhere promising the people what they wanted, land and liberty. His courage in battle
and steadfast commitment to the safety of the local population earned him the affectionate honorific
Botko, or little father. And as much as Mocknoe hated all forms of authority, he was earning
quite a bit of it for himself. This brings us to November 1918 when everything gets turned upside
down once again. The defeated central powers had to renounce their claim to Ukraine and prepare to
withdraw their forces. This left the propped-up reactionary regime of Hetman Skoropotsky without anything
propping him up. Multiple political factions gathered forces to overthrow that.
Hetmanet, and within a matter of weeks, Skoraponsky abandoned Kiev and fled into permanent exile.
His flight was precipitated by the advance of those left-leaning Ukrainian nationalists that had formed
the initial leadership of the Rada. They took over Kiev on December 19th and established a new
directory government to govern what they were declaring to be the restored Ukrainian People's Republic.
But they were far from the only faction in play. Conservative forces who had supported the Hetman's
and the occupation, waited in the wings for an opportunity to launch a counter-revolution.
Meanwhile, on the border with Russia, there loomed two forces.
The Russian communists were organizing an army to support a Ukrainian Soviet socialist republic
that would enter Ukraine as soon as they were sure the armies of the central powers were
fully withdrawn, but there were also white armies under General Denekean also poised for an invasion.
They planned to take over Ukraine and use it as a further springboard to capture Moscow.
Meanwhile, anarchist groups like McNoh's had no truck with any of these people, and they planned to carve out their own stateless society free of all outside authority or interference.
At a regional Congress of insurgent leaders in late 1918, they organized themselves into a much larger force called the Revolutionary Insurgent Army of Ukraine, fighting under the black banner of anarchism.
McNo became its overall leader.
And even though the insurgent army had its own interests,
The brewing conflict over the future of Ukraine was a great time for enemies of enemies to become friends.
McNough identified four immediate enemies for the insurgent army.
The forces who had propped up the Hetmanet, the withdrawing armies of the central powers,
the Don Cossacks, and the white Russians who were aligned with the Nekins Volunteer Army.
These last two were acutely important, and on January the 12th, 19190,
the White Army launched an attack on the area controlled by McNo, and on January 21st, they directly
attacked Hulipel. Facing this threat, Mucknow resolved on an alliance with a rival faction he did not
include on his list of immediate threats, but who would in time be his political rivals,
the Russian communists. Now at that same moment, the Red Army was preparing its own invasion of
Ukraine, and they were looking for local military allies. So the Reds and the Blacks agreed to an
alliance of pure military convenience.
Machno agreed to integrate his insurgent army into the organizational structure of the Red Army
and nominally submit to orders from Red Army headquarters, but the Ukrainian insurgents would
maintain their own internal structure and, in reality, acted far closer to an independent auxiliary
force than a centrally controlled subsidiary of the Red Army.
The Ukrainian front of the Red Army was now under the command of Vladimir Antonov, the guy who had
overseeing the capture of the Winter Palace during the October Revolution. His forces crossed
into Ukraine and successfully captured Kiev on February 5th, installing the Ukrainian Soviet Socialist
Republic to replace the ousted Ukrainian People's Republic. Good luck keeping all of this straight.
As part of the offensive, Machno's forces participated in battles against the whites down in the
Donbos region, north of the Sea of Azov. As a result of the Black Army successes, the territory controlled by
MacKno grew even more, and they soon control a large autonomous zone free from all outside authority,
just the way they liked it. So what I want to do now is turn to what was going on inside this zone
during the first half of 1919. We're talking about a loose blob of territory comprising maybe 75,000
square kilometers east of the Nepe River and north of the Sea of Azav. It had a geographic and political
center in Moknoe's hometown of Hulipel. At its maximum extent, it probably covered a population
somewhere north of 7 million people. Mostly these were agrarian peasants, but we also have
several small industrial cities with the working classes that go along with them. The population
was also mostly Ukrainian, but there were also Russians in the cities, as well as a significant
population of Jews. And in dealing with the Jewish population, Moknoe was a very much.
famously a virulent anti-ante-Semite. Most of the people he had been fighting with since he was a
teenager were Jewish, and he detested their persecution and abuse at the hands of anti-Semites.
So while anti-Jewish pogroms tended to follow the advance of practically all the armies running
around in Ukraine, McNoe wasn't having it. In fact, he demanded the opposite. In his mind,
everybody was a part of a universal brotherhood, rank bigotry like anti-Semitism, and
could not be tolerated. It had to be eliminated root and branch. So we find McNo's black army
consistently anti-ante-Semitic, though this was not something everyone in the ranks embraced.
He apparently had one troop commander summarily shot for exploitively raiding a Jewish settlement.
Another soldier was executed for waving a flag that said beat the Jews and save Russia.
Now, McNo's ultimate object was for all the people living in his own to live under their own authority.
forming hyper-local councils that would see to their own affairs.
When the Black Army rolled through town, they posted a notice which read,
The Army does not serve any political party, any power, any dictatorship.
On the contrary, it seeks to free the region of all political power, of all dictatorship.
It strives to protect the freedom of action, the free life of workers against all exploitation and domination.
The Machno Army does not therefore represent any authority.
It will not subject anyone to any obligation whatsoever.
Its role is confined to defending the freedom of the workers.
The freedom of the peasants and the workers belongs to themselves
and should not suffer any restriction.
So, MacKnoe was there to liberate and move on, not to stay and set up shop.
With this particular focus on hyper-local administration,
Machno also started establishing formal anarchist communes,
not just liberating existing villages, but setting up brand-new settlement
on land seized from large estates and populated with the formerly landless poor.
They were meant to live together in communes of a couple hundred people,
working the land together and sharing the produce together,
and McNot himself periodically resided in these communes,
working the fields just as he had done when he was a kid,
except this time not for any master.
Now these communes tend to function more like prototypes than anything else,
and there were only a handful of them set up.
mostly the people in Machnoe's zone
continued to live in their existing village structures
and continue on with their traditional way of life
simply cut loose of external authority.
Now ultimately what Machno wanted
was for all these communities to knit themselves together
in a larger confederation that would spread out across Ukraine.
And to affect this confederation,
they wanted to use the existing structure of the Soviets.
But they called for a very specific kind of Soviet,
a free Soviet.
Over 1917 and 1918, they had seen how organized political parties, now most especially the communists,
had been getting themselves elected to the executive committees of local Soviets,
and then ignoring the wishes of the peasants and the workers who had elected them,
and instead serving the interests of the party.
The role of the Soviets had thus been flipped on its head.
They were now enforcing top-down decrees with no input from the local population,
rather than what they had originally been, which is a forum for the expression of local nations.
needs from the bottom up. So by a free Soviet, what they meant was a Soviet that explicitly
barred members of political parties from joining. This was supposed to keep the Soviet grounded
in the interests of the local population they served, rather than having the local population
serve the interests of some political party and their far-off central committee.
This was an idea that was gaining widespread traction, and as we talked about last week,
the peasant uprising in the Volga were often rising up under the banner, Soviets without
communists. So Machno's anarchism was rooted in hyperlocal autonomy, but that did not mean the
Ukrainian anarchists did not seek wider coalitions and confederations. In the first half of 1919,
they held several regional congresses, the first one in January of about 100 delegates, and the second
more consequential and controversial Congress held in February. It was controversial because by now
the communists had established a Ukrainian Soviet Socialist Republic based in Kiev,
and the growth and solidification of this anarchist autonomous zone in their midst was a threat.
This second Congress held in February also established its own revolutionary military Soviet
that challenged the communist claim to power.
They further issued a declaration that read,
The workers and peasants of Ukraine had liberated the territory from its enemies.
Now that the enemy is beaten,
some government appears in our midst describing itself as Bolshevik
and aiming to impose its party's dictatorship upon us.
Is that to be countenanced?
We are non-party insurgents.
We have revolted against all our oppressors.
We will not countenance a new enslavement,
no matter the quarter whence it may come.
The Congress then declared its intention
to establish a regime of freely elected anti-authoritarian Soviets.
Now, it was not all land in liberty
inside this anarchist free zone, though,
and there were internal contradictions of their own making
that threatened the project. For one, the regional congresses approved the need for military conscription,
which tends to undermine the kind of free choices guaranteed by the anarchist creed. But they insisted that
this was all voluntary, it wasn't conscription, because the levy had been approved by the people's
representatives at the regional Congress, which is, of course, clever rhetoric, but doesn't matter
very much to the people being pressed into service against their will as the Black Army joined the
Reds and the whites and everyone else, pissing off every local population they pass through
by conscripting people into their army at bayonet point.
There were also problems with the urban population.
Machneau was temperamentally a peasant, and he kind of detested cities.
He encouraged workers to take control of their own factories, but otherwise offered
very little understanding of their specific needs.
He certainly didn't care much about the value of paper money, which urban workers needed to
buy things, like food from the villages.
Machnoe tended to insist that food should only be given up for bartered goods, goods the urban
population often didn't have readily at hand.
So, Magno's free society had many supporters among the peasants, but was viewed with increasingly
hostile skepticism by the urban population.
So while there was internal dissension and internal conflict, the main threat to McNo's
autonomous zone seemed to come from outside, from the communists, those in Kiev,
and those in Moscow. In the spring of 1919, both the reds and the blacks were making it very clear
to each other that once the war against the whites was over, there would not be room in Ukraine
for the both of them. These conflicts really started breaking out into the open when a third
regional Congress of Insurgents was called to convene on April the 10th. The communist
authorities deemed this Congress counter-revolutionary and explicitly banned the delegates from
convening. In their eyes, it represented an attempt to create a
a state within a state that was outside the bounds of the authority of the communists,
which of course it was.
That was the whole point.
And since communist authority didn't actually extend into the region yet,
the delegates to the Congress just went ahead and convened in defiance of the ban.
When they met, they incredulously defended themselves against the crazy charge that they were
a bunch of counter-revolutionaries.
They said, can it be that laws laid down by a handful of individuals describing themselves
as revolutionaries, can afford them the right to declare outside of the law and entire people
more revolutionary than themselves? Is there some law according to which a revolutionary is alleged
to have the right to enforce the harshest punishment against the revolutionary mass on whose behalf he
fights? And this because that same mass has secured for itself the benefits that the revolutionary
promised them, freedom and equality? Can that mass remain silent when the quote unquote
revolutionary, strips it of the freedom which it has just won. Does the law of revolution
require the shooting of a delegate on the grounds that he is striving to achieve in life the task
entrusted to him by the revolutionary mass which appointed him? What interests should the
revolutionary defend, those of the party, or those of the people at the cost of whose blood the
revolution has been set in motion? The Congress met and dispersed without further incident,
but gauntlets are being thrown down. Now, despite
all this, as late as April
1919, both sides were still publicly
supporting each other.
Kameneff even came down and
praised McNo's steadfast revolutionary
principles, though he also
sent a private telegram to Lenin
recommending only temporary
diplomacy with McNo's army.
MacKnoe was also told by
sympathetic functionaries inside the Soviet apparatus
he might be ambushed
and killed.
Now this was not a great time for the
reds and the blacks to be sizing each other
up for a final battle, because General De Nican's white army was about to make a major push into Ukraine.
Like his counterpart Admiral Colchak, De Nican was now being supplied by the British, and throughout the
fighting in 1919, his army would receive in total almost 200,000 rifles, 6,200 machine guns,
500 million rounds of ammunition, 1,100 artillery pieces, and nearly 2 million shells.
They also delivered 60 brand new tanks and made available 168 aircrafts from the newly minted RAF.
They also received additional supplies for the soldiers, including 460,000 coats and 645,000 pairs of boots.
Supplied to the hilt and now commanding a pretty competent and disciplined white army of about 50,000 men,
Daniken moved into Ukraine in the spring of 1919.
The forces opposing him started to break down in May.
Trotsky visited the region for the first time and reported
the prevailing state of chaos, irresponsibility,
laxity, and separatism exceeds the most pessimistic expectations.
The Ukrainian front to the Red Army
had been built on a system of alliances with local warlords,
including people like Nestor MacKnoe.
But just as the whites started to advance,
one of the most important of these local warlords,
a guy called Nikifor Grigoryev split from the Reds taking all his forces with them.
It wasn't entirely clear what Gregoriev's ultimate plan was,
but he controlled a good chunk of southwest Ukraine,
and his defection was a big deal.
Trying to hold the rest of the line together,
Kamenev ordered McNo to denounce Gregoriev publicly,
but McNo refused to take a hard, pro-communist line,
and said only that he remained unshakably loyal to the worker and the person,
peasant revolution, and that, as an anarchist revolutionary, I cannot by any means support seizure
of power by Gregoriev or by anyone. This rather lackluster declaration of loyalty to the communists,
which obviously implied that he wasn't planning on letting the communists take over either,
rang alarm bells in Moscow that maybe McNo could not really be depended on. Though it is worth pointing
out that McNo ultimately did denounce Gregoriev and wrote, among other things,
brothers, don't you hear in his words a grim call to the Jewish pogrom?
Don't you feel the desire of Ataman Gregoriev to break the living fraternal connection between the
revolution of Ukraine and Revolutionary Russia?
And of course, Gregoriev's ultimate fate, which we'll get to next week, was a pretty clear
final denunciation by MacKno.
Then in the first week of June, there was a huge blow-up between the Reds and the Blacks.
A fourth regional Congress was scheduled.
for June 15, and this time the communists absolutely refused to allow it to proceed,
especially because the invitation sent out was addressed to soldiers in the Red Army,
all but encouraging them to mutiny and desert, to ditch the authoritarian reds and join the
freedom-loving blacks.
So Trotsky issued order number 1824 on June 4th absolutely forbidding the Congress,
and he said, among other things, the Hulipole Executive Committee,
in concert with McNoz Brigade staff
is attempting to schedule a Congress of Soviets and insurgents.
Said Congress is wholly an affront to Soviet power in the Ukraine
and to the organization of the Southern Front,
to which McNose Brigade is attached.
That Congress could not produce any result other than to deliver the front to the whites,
in the face of whom McNose Brigade does nothing but fall further and further back,
thanks to the incompetence and criminal tendencies and treachery of its commanders.
This is quite an open denunciation of McNo, and it was followed up by communist-aligned Red Army forces moving into his district, breaking up the anarchist communes and briefly occupying Hulipel itself.
But this occupation didn't last very long, because just a few days later, De Nican's forces showed up and drove off everyone.
MacKnoe resigned from his position in the Red Army while reaffirming his commitment to the revolution, at least to the revolution as he understood it.
as a revolution of workers and peasants, actual workers and peasants, not just those who claim to
represent them. With the whites advancing through Ukraine, McNo declared his intention to go on waging a
guerrilla war, just like he had waged against the occupation forces in 1918. Trotsky ordered
McNo arrested for deserting his post, but sympathetic officers in the Red Army tipped him off,
and he avoided capture by the Cheka. Meanwhile, the whites enjoyed unbroken success in
Ukraine against the disintegrating line of red and blacks. The Red Army retreated more than 200 miles
beyond even Karkov, the main political and industrial center of eastern Ukraine in one of the most
important cities in the whole region. On June 4th, Trotsky had confidently said, I think that Karkov
stands in no greater danger than Moscow or any other city of the Soviet Republic. It fell to the
whites by the end of the month, which opened up the question, if it was in no greater danger than Moscow,
then how much danger was Moscow in?
Next week, we will answer that question,
as we get to the second stage of Denekean's 1919 summer offensive.
The threat of an ultimate white victory
will force the Reds and the Blacks back together
into an uneasy fighting alliance
as the Red Army reformed a front line
and McNose guerrilla forces
found the over-extended white supply lines easy pickings.
They would once again team up to save the revolution
they both believed the other was hell-bent on wrecking.
