Revolutions - 10.95- Russian Empire Soviet Empire
Episode Date: April 25, 2022Tbh, it's bit like one of those "circle five differences in these two pictures that otherwise seem identical" games....
Transcript
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Hello and welcome to revolutions.
Episode 10.95, Russian Empire, Soviet Empire.
March of 1921 is quite the pivot point to the Russian Revolution.
Maybe not quite at the same level as October 1793 is to the French Revolution,
but as with October 1793, you can dang near tell the whole story of the Russian Revolution
just by focusing on the events of this one single month.
Now, it doesn't quite get you everything the way October 1793 does, but there is a lot packed in here.
On the domestic front, we've got the Kronstadt Rebellion that we talked about two weeks ago,
a story about competing visions of the meaning of the revolution, which pitted against each other not implacable enemies,
but former close friends and allies from the heady days of 1917.
Then last week, we talked about the 10th Congress of the Communist Party,
which politically cleared the way for the uppermost ruling click of the parliament.
party to build a walled-off internal dictatorship to match the walled-off external dictatorship
they were building throughout Russia.
Economically, we have the unveiling of the new economic policy, which was a huge shift
that can only be understood by explaining the wise and hows of war communism, the crisis of
massive peasant revolt sweeping the Russian countryside, and the failure of the international
proletarian revolution to materialize after World War I.
And all of that is just on the domestic side of the country.
of the ledger. Today we will turn to the international scene and find that just as March 1921 is an
epicenter for really important internal affairs, it was also an epicenter for really important
external affairs. On almost every front, Soviet Russia's place in the world solidifies here with a
series of treaties and diplomatic agreements, with historical rivals like Poland and Turkey,
ideological rivals like the arch-capitalist British, as well as new nominally independent entities that
wind up serving is little more than puppet states controlled by Moscow.
The 10th Party Congress also set the tone for a debate inside the Communist Party about how to deal
with non-Russian nationalities in their sphere of orbit. This debate pitted those who believed in a
great centralized communist zone as the only way to survive in a world still run by capitalist
imperialism, and those who believe that ignoring national identity and the powerful aspirations
for national self-respect and self-determination was probably a recipe.
for disaster. So what I want to do today is go around the horn of the old Russian Empire,
to lay out explicitly where everyone stands in relation to everyone else, as the reality
of the post-revolution, post-World War I, post-Civil War international scene are fully revealed
and solidified here in the spring of 1921. Geographically, we'll start up in the northwest
was some of the territories of the old Russian empire that the Russian communists would not be bringing
into their fold. The Republic of Finland, for example, had declared its independence in 1917,
a declaration loudly and repeatedly recognized by the Bolsheviks.
Now, though the white faction that won the Finnish Civil War was, of course, no great friend
of the Russian Reds, they had stuck to neutrality during the Russian Civil War, and in October 1920,
Finland and the Soviet Union, signed a treaty formally recognizing one another and defining
their mutually recognized borders. This was also true of the three Baltic states. During the war with
Poland, Soviet Russia had signed treaties recognizing the independence of Estonia in February
1920, Lithuania in July 1920, and Latvia in August 1920, recognition that would be undisturbed
by the ambiguous end of the Polish-Soviet war.
So Finland, Estonia, Latvia, and Lithuania, all constituent parts of the former Russian Empire,
are now out on their own, recognized as independent sovereign entities.
We're not yet even at the stage where the du jour independence of the Baltic states was merely a legal fiction,
and everyone knew that in point of fact they were merely puppets of the Russians.
That doesn't happen for another 20 years.
For now, they well and truly were.
were independent. Now moving south from the Baltic, we get to one of the big March 1921 pivot points,
the piece of Riga, which was signed on March 18th, 1921 between the Second Polish Republic and Soviet Russia.
This was the treaty that not only ended the Polish Soviet War, but it defined the western
extremities of Soviet influence and solidified the political geography of Eastern and Central Europe
during the interwar period.
And just to drive home the point to precisely how much everything is coming together at the same time,
Poland and Russia signed the peace of Riga on March 18th,
three days after Lenin unveiled the NEP,
two days after the Communist Party issued its ban on factions,
and just one day after the Red Army launched its final assault on the Kronstadt rebels.
The hot phase of the Polish-Soviet War had, of course, ended with the ceasefire back in October 1920,
but now diplomats for the two combatants sign their names to a treaty that left the grander ambitions of both sides totally dissatisfied.
The Polish Republic had gone into the war envisioning the rebirth of the great Polish Lithuanian Commonwealth.
Soviet Russia had gone in believing they would drive the communist revolution all the way to Warsaw as a mere prelude to launching themselves into Western Europe.
Because neither side had really won the war, neither side got what they really wanted.
Poland and Russia signed a treaty that left both well short of their respective territorial ambitions.
Both recognized the independent of the Baltic states, and they drew a line through Belarus and Ukraine,
giving the Poles the western bits and recognizing the eastern parts as independent sovereign states.
In the big picture, this means that the boundaries of Soviet Russia are not going to be anywhere near the boundaries of the old Russian Empire,
which, in addition to encompassing the old Baltic states, had extended all the way to Warsaw.
So at the end of the day, most of what the Russians had renounced during the Treaty of Bresla Tovsk remained renounced, at least for the time being.
Now, this brings us, though, to the status of Ukraine and Belarus in the New Order of Things, a question that was debated at the 10th Party Congress, although that debate got lost in the shuffle a bit because there were much bigger things going on.
The leadership of the Communist Party had decided not to annex these territories directly,
but instead to recognize them as independent national republics,
specifically as Soviet socialist republics or SSRs.
This was a bow to political reality,
as commissar of nationalities Joseph Stalin said to critics,
who claimed there was no such thing as a Belarusian or Ukrainian national identity to recognize.
Stalin said,
Here I have a written note to the effect that we,
communists supposedly artificially forced a Belarusian nation. This is false because a Belarusian nation
exists, which has its own language different from Russian, and that the culture of the Belarusian
nation can be raised only in its own language. Such speeches were made five years ago about Ukraine
concerning the Ukrainian nation. Clearly, the Ukrainian nation exists, and the development of its
culture is a duty of communists. One cannot go against history.
Lenin in particular was very concerned about Russian chauvinism creeping into the Communist Party.
Russian chauvinism that often presented in the language of doctrinaire left-wing ideology,
but which in practice seemed little different from the attitudes of Tsarist colonial officials.
Now, as with all things Lenin, his opinions were driven by strategic and tactical concerns.
That is, how do we grow the influence of Soviet communism throughout the world?
But, for example, he had been very critical of the communist defense.
officials who had failed to establish any kind of popular base in Ukraine during the Civil War
period. The quote-unquote Ukrainian Communist Party had not been founded in Kiev but Moscow,
and it was composed almost entirely of ethnic Russians. They had come into Ukraine as Russians,
speaking and acting as Russians, and effectively denying Ukrainian language and culture existed.
Now, they dressed this up in language of class conflict and international solidarity and rejecting
bourgeois nationalism, but,
to the local Ukrainians, these Russian communists looked very different from the old Tsarist officials.
So twice the Ukrainian Communist Party had followed the Red Army into Ukraine and twice gotten
themselves kicked right back out again. The third time they came into Ukraine, after the Red
Army rolled back to Nican for the last time by the end of 1919, Lenin issued explicit instructions
to recruit ethnic Ukrainians, speak the Ukrainian language, foster and promote Ukrainian culture.
Failure to do this would simply mean facing a war of national liberation led by formidable partisans like Nestor MacKnoe.
Now, this policy may have been cynical and tactical, but it was practical, and this time the communist managed to stay.
The same held true up in Belarus, and so by March 1921 we have these recognized entities, the Belarusian SSR and the Ukrainian SSR.
Clearly, they were allied with the communists in Moscow, but as a very important,
a matter of legality, they were independent sovereign nations. Now, if we stay here with our
Western-facing orientation, there is another critical event that drops here in the middle of March
1921, simultaneous, while all the other critical events dropping in March 1921. Because on March 16th,
the two most apparently implacable ideological opponents that you could possibly think of,
British capitalists and Russian communists, signed an economic trade agreement that turned out to be
the first step towards normalized diplomatic relations between the two countries.
As we saw when we were discussing the Russian Civil War, British Prime Minister David Lloyd George
had soured on a policy of regime change in Russia by the fall of 1919. He cut off military and
economic aid to the Russian whites, he pushed for withdrawing allied troops from Russian soil,
and lifting the naval blockades on Russian ports. Once it had become clear that the Russian
communist government was not on the brink of being overthrown, the British reassessed their policies
and concluded that it was in their interest to normalize economic and political relations with them.
And the Polish Soviet war complicated Lloyd George's plans a little bit, but after the Russians
lost the Battle of Warsaw and the threat of communism spreading into Western Europe evaporated,
he returned to his policy of signing a trade deal with Russia.
months of negotiations over issues like Tsarist era Russian debts to British creditors
and ongoing communist propaganda in Western countries,
the two sides finally found enough common ground that they could sign off on a deal in March 1921.
The Anglo-Soviet trade agreement was just that.
It was a trade agreement that regulated economic commerce between the two countries.
And in no time, British investments and exports were flooding into the devastated Russian economy.
and in fact these investments in exports were a vital part of making the NEP work.
But it was not yet an official political agreement.
The British still withheld official political recognition from the Soviet regime.
But it amounted to de facto recognition,
and it signaled to the rest of the world that the post-World War I diplomatic tables
were going to have to have a seat for Soviet Russia.
So leaving our Western-facing orientation,
I now want to turn our attention south. Specifically, to a former part of the Russian Empire,
I have long neglected the Caucasus. Now, there are good reasons that I neglected the Caucasus,
set well behind the front lines of the Russian Civil War off to the north, and with only the collapsing
Ottoman Empire to their south, Armenia, Azerbaijan, and Georgia all enjoyed autonomous independence
through the spring of 1920.
But with the Red Army having defeated both Admiral Colchuk and General Deneke
by early 1920, and with the foundation of Ataturk's post-Ottoman Empire Grand National Assembly
of Turkey in April 1920, the people of the caucuses once again found themselves squeezed
between larger neighbors who had political, economic, and territorial designs on that
autonomous independence.
Azerbaijan was the first to fall.
In the spring of 1920, the Russians' sense.
70,000 man, 11th Army, started moving south towards the Caucasus.
With the much smaller Azerbaijani army caught up with flare-ups on their border with Armenia,
the Red Army simply marched across the border and captured the critical Baku oil fields in late April 1920.
They pulled this off pretty much without a fight, partly because the British and nationalist Turks
were currently embroiled in the Turkish War of Independence.
So Russia's two great geopolitical rivals in the region were currently focused on the allied occupation of Constantinople, which commenced in March of 1920.
Now, the British had demonstrated some interest in taking the Baku oil fields for themselves, as the victorious allies of World War I divvied up the world's colonized resources, but ultimately they would conclude it wasn't worth the risk or the hassle.
They obviously made no effort to stop the advancing Red Army, and they withdrew their last lingering forces from the area completely,
by July of 1920.
The Turks, meanwhile, saw the Russians as potential allies in their anti-colonial war against
the British and hoped the Caucasus could serve as a conduit for supplies and guns coming down
from Russia.
So when the Red Army rolled into Azerbaijan, the local Turkish population rose up to support
their invasion and occupation.
As would happen with Belarus and Ukraine, Azerbaijan would soon be reconstituted as an SSR.
the Azerbaijani Soviet Socialist Republic.
The move south into Azerbaijan was followed quickly by the stalling out of the Russian advance
west into Poland.
Following the Battle of Warsaw, many high-ranking communists really started coming around
on the idea that a frontal assault on Western Europe was impossible.
But instead of just giving up, they saw huge opportunities to destabilize the Western
capitalists not by staging insurrections in Berlin or Paris, but by going after their colonial
possessions in Central, Southern, and East Asia. As early as August 1919, Trotsky had said,
There is no doubt at all that our Red Army constitutes an incomparably more powerful force in the Asian
terrain of world politics than in the European terrain. Here there opens up before us an undoubted
possibility, not merely of a lengthy weight to see how events develop in Europe, but of conducting
activity in the Asian field. The road to India may prove at this given moment to be more readily
passable and shorter for us. The road to Paris and London lies via the towns of Afghanistan,
the Punjab and Bengal. The idea of reorienting international communist revolution around
anti-colonial campaigns of liberation became a real possibility, now,
that the Western land bridge through Poland to Germany was closed, and now that the defeat of
the Russian whites left the Reds in a commanding position on the Eurasian continent. So in September of
1920, the Soviets used their position in Azerbaijan to host the first of what they called
the Congress of the People's of the East, formerly held under the auspices of the common turn.
as many as 1900 delegates congregated in Baku for this Congress.
Most of them came from the northern and eastern Mediterranean territories that had been under the auspices of the Ottoman Empire,
but many came from as far afield as India and China.
They gathered in a somewhat chaotic assembly of different languages and nationalities,
where speeches had to be immediately translated into a few common languages,
most especially Turkic and Persian.
few of the delegates were communists in any meaningful sense,
but Zinoviev and the other common-turned leaders
hoped to pitch Soviet communism as a friend, ally, and supporter of the anti-colonial struggles
that all of them had in common.
In Zinoviev's keynote speech, he said,
Comrades, brothers, the time has come now when you can set about organizing
a true people's holy war against the robbers and oppressors.
the communist international turns today to the peoples of the east and says to them,
Brothers, we summon you to a holy war in the first place against British imperialism.
Now, an avowed atheist communists invoking the language of holy wars to a mostly Muslim audience
is not exactly orthodox Marxism.
But they did share a common enemy in Western European colonial oppression.
And so for now it hardly mattered if you waged war against,
Western imperialism on behalf of Marx or Muhammad.
What mattered was waging war on Western imperialism.
Now, ultimately, this Congress of the Peoples of the East turned out to be a one-off event
that the Russians struggled to build much of a movement from.
But it did set the tone for a more explicitly anti-colonial liberation Marxism
that would spread throughout the colonized world in East Asia, India, Africa, the Caribbean,
and South America.
a brand of Marxism that would become more sharply pronounced,
as many local groups concluded that the Russians were as unable to quit their European colonial mentality
as any of the Western capitalists.
Shortly after the Congress, the Red Army made their next move in the Caucasus to ensure that that vital region stayed in the Russian orbit.
Not really quitting the European colonial mentality, in November 1920, Stalin told Pravda,
the importance of the caucuses for the revolution is determined not only by the fact that it is a source of raw materials, fuel, and food supplies, but also by its position between Europe and Asia, and in part between Russia and Turkey, as well as the presence of highly important economic and strategic roads.
So, though the ideologies and justifications changed, the mentality didn't change very much at all.
Now, the Soviets saw an opportunity as Armenia had become embroiled in a borderline.
war with Turkey that was founded on generations of mutual ethnic hatred, most grossly expressed
by the Armenian genocide, where between 1915 and 1917, the Turks brutally drove somewhere
between 600,000 and 1.5 million Armenians to death. With the Armenians on the brink of defeat
to the Turks, the Red Army marched over from Azerbaijan and issued a blunt ultimatum to
the Armenian government in late November. Surrender to us or surrender to the Turks.
viewing the Soviets as the lesser of two evils, the government surrendered, and the Armenian
Soviet Socialist Republic was proclaimed in its place.
With Red Army-backed SSRs proclaimed in Azerbaijan and Armenia, this meant that Georgia,
the last of the independent Caucasian states, was now surrounded.
Georgia was a harder nut to crack for the Russian communists, because, if you'll remember from way
back when we introduced young Stalin, Georgia was one of the U.S.
only places where the Mensheviks had a real strong, popular base of support. Georgia was not now,
nor had it ever been friendly to the Bolshevik party. Shortly after the Red Army moved into
Baku, Georgian communists had attempted a coup in Tbilisi, but it had been easily deflected by the
Menshevik government. Moscow considered Georgia to be a resilient enough opponent that on May 7,
1920, they signed a treaty recognizing Georgia's sovereign independence.
But it's very clear the Russian communists sign this treaty only as a delaying tactic
to lull the Georgian Mensheviks into complacency.
One of the few demands they put into the treaty was that the Mensheviks agree to not
outlaw the Georgian Communist Party, that they would be allowed to freely organize, assemble,
and publish. After the Mensheviks agreed, the Georgian Communist Party said about doing everything
it could to overthrow the Menshevik government. And they were aided by the diplomatic corps sent by
Moscow. Subversive activities were regularly concocted right inside the Russian embassy in Tbilisi.
But Georgia was a tough nut to crack, and the local communist subversion wasn't really getting them
anywhere. So by January 1921, local leaders convinced two key members of the Politburo,
Stalin and Trotsky, that taking over Georgia was going to require external force.
And in fact, local communists in the region actually sent Red Army units over the border into Georgia a few days before they received official permission to do so.
They sent the Red Army units in there to stage a phony local uprising that would then call for Red Army assistance.
So on February 14, Lenin and the Politburo gave their final permission for the invasion that had kind of already started,
and the Red Army proceeded to roll across the border into Georgia from the north and from the east.
By the end of February, the Menshevik leaders evacuated Tbilisi and allowed the Red Army to occupy the capital city to avoid it being shelled.
Once the capital was taken, a Georgian SSR was proclaimed, and it would now sit alongside the Armenian SSR and the Azerbaijani SSR.
So that brings us back to our pivotal month of March 1921, when the communists completed their takeover of the caucuses.
The Menshevik government and their armed forces had retreated to Batum, a port on the Black Sea in the extreme southwest of the country.
Here they plan to base their resistance campaign to the communists, but by now they found themselves back into their old historical position, stuck between two much larger regional powers.
On March 16th, the Turks announced that they planned to annex Baton for themselves, and they sent up a garrison to occupy the city.
But for all their resistant hostility to Bolshevism, the Mensheviks concluded it would be better for the city to fall to the communists than to the Turkish nationalists.
So the 10,000-man Menshevik army disarmed the would-be Turkish garrison and opened the doors instead to the Red Army.
Then Menshevik government ministers, officials, military commanders, and refugees boarded French and Italian ships that carried them west across the Black Sea to Constantinople, which was by now positively overflowing,
with Russian refugees of every shape, size, and ideology.
Now, from Moscow's perspective,
a communist takeover of Georgia may have been preferable to the alternative,
which is leaving the Menshevik government in place.
Before the invasion, Western socialists who were opposed to communism
had called Menshevik Georgia the only true socialist government in the world,
a deliberate snub of Soviet Russia.
Now they would use the invasion as proof of insatiated.
communist aggression. Moscow had, after all, signed a treaty not even one year earlier pledging to
respect the independence of Georgia. The invasion was clear proof of the value of such communist
promises. Inside Georgia, this invasion had done very little to curry favor with a local population
that wasn't inclined towards Bolshevism in the first place. In July 1921, Stalin returned to his
old hometown stomping ground in Tbilisi and was greeted with undisguised hostility.
When he tried to address a mass meeting, they heckled him, shouting murderer and traitor.
One got up and said,
Who asked you to come here?
What happened to our treaty?
At the order of the Kremlin, blood is shed here and you talk of friendship?
So, so, he said, referring to Stalin by the name Stalin had used when he was down here in Georgia operating Bolshevik bank robberies.
You give us a good laugh.
Humiliated, Stalin ordered check agents to arrest about 100 Social Democrats and mention.
because while the Mensheviks may have made the mistake of allowing political freedom to the
communists, the communists were not about to return the favor. As you may have noticed, it's not exactly
Communist Party policy to allow people to get in their way. And with that in mind, they completely
ignored local opinion and formed the three Caucasian republics into a single entity called the
Federative Union of Socialist Soviet Republics of Transcaucasia. A union, none of the three member
groups were particularly happy about, but about which there was very little they could do.
With the conversion of the Caucasian states into SSRs, and then their merger into this single thing that we call
the Transcaucasian SFSR, means that we now have our four initial signatories of the Union of Soviet Socialist
Republics in place. When the time comes in December 1922, Russia will sign a treaty of union with the
ostensibly independent Belarusian SSR, Ukrainian SSR, Ukrainian SS,
S-S-R and trans-Caucasian SFSR.
So where I want to end today is by answering the question,
okay, we understand these other three units,
but what do we mean when we talk about Russia now?
What is the Russian component of the coming USSR?
Because believe me, it was not then and is not now a simple thing.
Now, when we speak of Russia or Soviet Russia,
what we are talking about is a thing called the Russian Soviet Federated Socialist Republic, or R-S-F-S-R.
But it's not simply a Russian SSR, because the Russian Soviet-F-Sovic was itself technically a federal union of many different recognized subunits.
At this point, fully 22 percent of the population of this thing we call the RSFSR was not ethnically or culturally Russian.
As a matter of practical administration and sound politics, the communist leaders in Moscow were willing to recognize the autonomy of various minority nationality groups, even if they were not willing to grant them the kind of full independent status that they granted the Belarusians, Ukrainians, and Transcaucasians, which is to say the Georgians, Armenians, and Azerbaijani.
As Moscow's reach extended beyond Central Russia proper following Red Army victories in the Civil War, they created Zyzeres.
zones of ethnic autonomy, mostly as a means of inducing the local population to accept
Moscow's ultimate authority and not rise up and revolt against them. Larger regions would be
called autonomous socialist Soviet republics, with smaller carve-outs called autonomous ablasts. So, for
example, some of the most important of these ethnic enclaves were the Muslim populations
of the Ural steppes north of the Caspian Sea, specifically the Bashkir and Tatars.
The Bashkir were awarded the Bashkir Autonomous Soviet Socialist Republic in 1919
as a reward for abandoning Admiral Kolchuk at a key moment in the Russian Civil War
and the following year the Tatars were given the same status.
They were granted the Tatar Autonomous Soviet Socialist Republic.
A similar process was carried out in what was then collectively referred to as Turkestan,
an area encompassing a huge population of Turkic peoples
who had been relative late-comers to the Russian Empire.
For several years, they were organized into a single large Turkestan autonomous Soviet socialist republic,
a constituent part of the RSFSR, but whose single umbrella covered a multiplicity of nationalities.
So the Turkestan autonomous Soviet socialist republic would soon be divided into now-recognizable states,
like Uzbekistan, Tajikistan, Kyrgyzstan, and Turkmenistan.
By the early 1920, some 30 of these autonomous ethnic subdivisions had been created.
So at least on paper, the Russian, Soviet, better-rated socialist republic was a union of all these
autonomous zones and republics, with Russia proper simply being the largest subdivision,
merely the first among equals, if you catch my drift.
Because despite many lofty promises from Moscow about autonomy, that autonomy was severely curtailed.
And for example, the boundary of the autonomous Tatar Republic was drawn specifically to exclude 75% of the Tatar population, but include a large population of Russians to make sure that autonomy from Moscow was never taken too seriously.
So coming back around now to March 1921, we get a real sense of where Soviet Russia sits in the world.
They had by now signed formal treaties of mutual recognition with Poland, Lithuania, Latvia, Estonia, Finland, Ukraine, and Belarus, and the three Transcaucasian Republics.
And then in February 1921, they added a couple more, a pact with the government in Afghanistan, and a treaty of friendship with a short-lived revolutionary government in Iran.
Then, on March 16, 1921, we get another big deal kind of in the history of diplomacy.
see, a treaty of friendship between Russia and Turkey.
A treaty of friendship between Russia and Turkey.
This is something that is absolutely unprecedented, right?
The Turks and Russians haven't been on the same side of anything,
except that one time Napoleon tried to take over Egypt.
But now here they were, once again, friends.
At least on paper.
Soviet Russia also now enjoys de facto recognition from Britain,
de facto recognition that would pave the way for northern,
for normalized relations with the other great powers.
Germany would follow with formal diplomatic recognition in 1922,
and then France and Britain would both come along with formal recognition in 1924.
The United States would be the hold out here,
doing that thing where we stubbornly close our eyes tight
to the face of obvious reality.
The United States will not formally recognize the existence of Soviet Russia
until November 1933.
The point, though, is that as we head beyond 1930,
We can see that the most perilous days of revolution and civil war are receding into the
review mirror. There are still great crises to face, but Soviet Russia is looking pretty stable.
It's in fact looking like the Bolshevik Revolution of October 1917 may have been kind of a big deal,
world historically speaking, after all. There will be no episode next week, as I am off to Milwaukee
to do the premier performance of this live monologue I've written.
But when we come back in two weeks, we will wrap up the Russian Revolution.
I got to tell you, when we come back, we are entering the final set of episodes.
Because following today's episode, there will be just eight more new episodes left,
which means that we will be walking away from this at episode 10.103.
So, you know, I hope you don't feel too cheated on this final season, even though it is all about to end.
