Anti-Stalin Falsehoods from a “Socialist” Writer
- refuting Alex Skopic’s article “Stalin Will
Never Be Redeemable”
Grover Furr
April – May 2023
In the January – February
2023 issue of Currant Affairs there appears an article titled
“Stalin
Will Never Be Redeemable”. Its subtitle reads:
Stalin was socialism’s worst enemy. History is easily forgotten, so nostalgia
for the “Man of Steel” needs to be guarded against.
A person who knows of my
long interest in Joseph Stalin and the “Stalin years” of Soviet history alerted
me to this article when it appeared online. He wondered what my response to
Skopic’s accusations against Stalin might be.
I have been studying the
Stalin period of Soviet history for many years now
I decided to write a response to Skopic’s
article because it is a brief compendium of many of the allegations made against
Stalin not only by overtly pro-capitalist and anticommunist writers, but by
persons who are, or wish to be, or think that they are, on the anti-capitalist
Left.
I am not “defending” Stalin,
much less “apologizing” for Stalin. I am searching for the truth, as determined
by the best evidence available.
Every accusation Skopic
makes about Stalin is demonstrably wrong.
I prove most of them wrong on the evidence. A few are wrong because they are
anachronistic -- charging Stalin (and the Soviet leadership, which was
collective – Stalin was not a dictator[1]) with
failing to act according to knowledge we have today but that no one had at the
time.
The present essay sets forth
the evidence and my analysis of it. At the end I briefly address the question of
how Skopic could be so wrong and the reasons for anticommunism in the first
place.
* * * * *
In
the wake of Stalin’s death in
1953, the
floodgates of state censorship opened, and a seemingly endless series of
atrocity stories came out—but some socialists, both in the USSR and the West,
simply refused to believe them …
Today we know that those who
refused to believe Khrushchev’s talks of Stalin’s supposed “crimes” were
correct! They “smelled a rat.”
Khrushchev and his followers
produced no evidence to support their accusations. The striking lack of
primary-source evidence is what started me on my quest for the truth about
Stalin and the Stalin-era Soviet Union years ago.
We Must Defend Not Stalin,
But the Truth
Skopic writes:
These are, broadly speaking, the two rationales used by Stalin’s defenders
today. Either the murderous nature of his regime was completely fabricated (the
theme of Grover Furr’s signature book Khrushchev Lied) …
Skopic repeatedly accuses me
of “defending Stalin” and calls me a “Stalinist.” But what is a “Stalinist”?
Either it means someone who “defends” Stalin and “apologizes” for Stalin’s
“crimes”, or it is simply a term of abuse, of dismissal.
I am not a “Stalinist.” I
have been searching for decades for evidence that Stalin committed crimes. If
Stalin committed crimes, I want to know about them. We all need to know
about them – if they exist. But so far I have yet to find any evidence that
Stalin committed even one crime! Every accusation of a crime by Stalin
alleged by anyone from legitimated academic “experts” to people like Skopic is
false.
Regardless of the evidence,
this result is unacceptable, literally “taboo” to anticommunists and
Trotskyists, academics included. The most renowned and respectable academic
authorities such as Stephen Kotkin of Princeton and Timothy Snyder of Yale have
lied and falsified dozens, if not hundreds, of times, rather than accept the
results that flow from the study of primary-source evidence about Stalin.
I call this the “Anti-Stalin
Paradigm”, or ASP. All academic research on Stalin must conform to this
ASP or it will not be published. That would doom the career of any scholar
hoping to teach Soviet history. So, the evidence is ignored and lies and
falsehoods, many of them obvious to those who repeat them, are recycled, or, in
some cases, new lies and falsehoods are invented.
Stalin and his propagandists never missed a chance to slam the United States for
its record on racial injustice, deploying the bitter phrase “А
у
вас
негров
линчуют”
(“And you are lynching Negroes!”) whenever American diplomats criticized the
USSR’s human rights abuses. This was, of course, a cynical ploy …
“Whenever” implies repeated
action. Yet Skopic does not cite a single instance of this (I cannot find any
either). “Cynical plot” implies – without evidence – that Stalin and the Soviet
leadership were not really opposed to racism.
Skopic admits that Paul
Robeson, Langston Hughes, and other Black Americans found the dedication to
anti-racism in the USSR inspiring. So how could Skopic possibly know that
Stalin’s anti-racism was really “a cynical ploy”? He can’t!
Skopic Confuses “Sources”
With Evidence
The Stalinists of the 20th century desperately wanted to believe in the
promise of a new society, and they weren’t given the facts they needed to see
through the illusion. In the 21st century, though, we have no such excuse.
There is ample evidence from dozens of different sources detailing Stalin’s
abuses and betrayals …
This illustrates one of
Skopic’s central errors: he confuses “source” with “evidence.” A “source” is
just where you found some statement or other, regardless of whether that
statement is true or false. Primary-source evidence, usually in documentary
form, is the only valid basis for truthful conclusions. Skopic has no
primary-source evidence of any “abuses” or “betrayals” on Stalin’s part – only
fact-claims from anticommunist and Trotskyist writers who themselves have no
evidence.
…
with the single exception of Hitler—he was the most lethal anticommunist of his
time. In fact, the epitaph of virtually every prominent European socialist to
die in the years 1928-1945 reads either “murdered by Hitler” or “murdered by
Stalin.”
If there were so many, why
doesn’t Skopic name even one of them? Since he cites no names, no one can check
to see whether Skopic is telling the truth or not.
Skopic:
Soon after he was named General Secretary of the Communist Party in 1922, Stalin
began maneuvering against the other Bolshevik leaders who had organized the
October Revolution, packing important positions with his own supporters …
Skopic fails to cite even
one example. I have never found any either.
Leon Trotsky made this
accusation, also without evidence. Trotsky is probably Skopic’s unnamed source
here. Trotsky is the source of a great many false allegations against Stalin of
crimes and misdeeds.
and
arranging various smears and frame-ups against his rivals.
Again, Skopic cites no
examples. There is no evidence to support this allegation.
Skopic:
Leon Trotsky, the leader of the Left Opposition faction, was ejected from the
Party in 1927
after he refused to abandon the idea of global revolution (which Stalin opposed)
…
False. This is another of
Trotsky’s slanders. Stalin did not oppose “global revolution” at all.
In his preface to Stalin’s Letters to Molotov (1996) Robert C. Tucker, an
anti-Stalin historian at Princeton University, wrote::
[Lars] Lih
raises the question: Did Stalin dismiss world revolution in favor of building up
the Soviet state (as Trotsky, for one, alleged at the time), or did he remain
dedicated to world revolution? Lib's answer, based on the letters, is that in
Stalin's mind the Soviet state and international revolution coalesced, and the
letters provide support for this view. (ix)
Lars Lih, the editor of this volume, writes:
Stalin's intense
involvement belies the image of an isolationist leader interested only in
“socialism in one country.” The letters show us that Stalin did not make a
rigid distinction between the interests of world revolution and the interests of
the Soviet state: both concerns are continually present in his outlook.
(5-6)
Skopic:
…
by 1929 he [Trotsky] had been exiled from the USSR altogether, and in 1940
Stalin had him assassinated.
Aren’t the reasons relevant?
Of course, they are! But Skopic omits them.
Trotsky was exiled because
he repeatedly formed a fraction within the Party after Party fractions had been
outlawed at Lenin’s insistence in 1921. Even before Lenin died in January 1924
Trotsky and his followers were actively organizing against the Party.
Trotsky was expelled after the opposition organized a counterdemonstration on
the tenth anniversary of the Revolution in October, 1927.
Many of his fellow
conspirators recanted and promised to be good Party members from then on. It
turned out later that some of them were lying and continued to conspire in
secret.
But Trotsky refused to
recant. Exiled in comfortable conditions to Alma-Ata in Kazakhstan – he was
able to carry on a wide correspondence and even to go hunting -- Trotsky
continued his factional organizing. At length the Party leadership decided to
expel him to Turkey, where they arranged a large house for him to stay on a
Turkish island.
Trotsky was assassinated in
August 1940, probably by Stalin’s order. The general reason was that Trotsky had
conspired with Nazi Germany and militarist-fascist Japan to aid them against the
Soviet army in the event they attacked the USSR.[2]
The proximate reason, according to General Pavel Sudoplatov, was that Stalin
believed that Trotsky’s followers would weaken international support for the
USSR when war broke out.
“There are no important political figures in the Trotskyite movement except
Trotsky himself. If Trotsky is finished the threat will be eliminated,” Stalin
said.[3]
Skopic:
Grigory Zinoviev and Lev Kamenev, close associates of Lenin who were originally
supposed to rule with Stalin in a triumvirate, were accused of the murder of
Sergei Kirov
(for which some historians believe Stalin was also responsible) and summarily
executed in 1936.
…
False. Zinoviev and Kamenev led a clandestine terrorist group of “Zinovievists”
(Party members and former members loyal to Zinoviev when he was head of the
Party in Leningrad) whose Leningrad branch murdered Leningrad Party leader
Sergei Kirov, who had replaced Zinoviev. We have a great deal of evidence about
their activities. I have carefully studied the evidence against the Leningrad
Zinovievists.[4]
In 1935 Zinoviev and Kamenev were tried and sentenced to prison terms. At that
time the NKVD stated that there was no evidence that Zinoviev and Kamenev
themselves had been involved in Kirov’s murder.
However, by mid-1936 some members of the Zinovievist conspiratorial group had
accused Zinoviev and Kamenev of complicity in Kirov’s murder. They confessed in
July 1936. I have put online a
translation of Zinoviev’s confession of August 10, 1936.[5]
The First Moscow Trial was quickly organized in August. Zinoviev and Kamenev
repeated these confessions at trial and were sentenced to death. In their
appeals to the court for clemency, which were never intended for publication,
Zinoviev and Kamenev repeated their guilt. Therefore, it is a lie to say that
Zinoviev and Kamenev were “summarily executed.”[6]
Not even mainstream anticommunist historians “believe” that Stalin was involved
in Kirov’s death. So where did Skopic get this – what was his “source”? Most
important: since “belief” is irrelevant, what is Skopic’s evidence that
Stalin was involved? He has none, because no such evidence exists.
Skopic:
With each year, the
accusations of treachery grew wilder, and the evidence thinner, often relying
entirely on confessions extracted under torture.
There is no evidence either of “thin”
evidence or of confessions “extracted under torture” in the Moscow Trials. No
wonder Skopic does not cite even one example! (For Nikolai Yezhov’s illegal
crimes, see below).
Skopic:
Trials became farces
lasting as little as 15 or 20 minutes.
Trials at which the defendant confesses his guilt, and the court has evidence to
confirm it, were often short, as they are in the United States today when an
accused confesses guilt before a judge. However, in the next sentence Skopic
mentions Nikolai Bukharin. Bukharin was a defendant in the Third Moscow Trial of
March 1938, a public trial that lasted twelve days, from March 2 to March
13.
Skopic:
Nikolai Bukharin, leader of
the moderate Right Opposition, managed to survive until 1938, but in the end he,
too, was sentenced to death for his supposed involvement in a Trotskyist and/or
Nazi conspiracy…
There is no excuse for this falsehood. The transcript of the 1938 Trial in which
Bukharin was convicted was published in 1938. Several of Bukharin’s pre-trial
confessions have been available for years.[7]
At trial Bukharin confessed to some serious crimes while stubbornly refusing to
confess to others. A differentiated confession like this suggests that the
confession of guilt was genuine.[8] It
certainly proves that Bukharin was not threatened with torture or mistreatment
of his family.
Skopic continues:
Bukharin’s last message is
particularly haunting, using Stalin’s personal nickname in
an appeal to their onetime
friendship: Koba, why do you need me to die?
Years ago, my colleague Vladimir Bobrov and I published an article in which we
proved that this is a fake. See Furr and Bobrov, “Bukharin's Last Plea: Yet
Another Anti-Stalin Falsification.”[9] This
article has been available online, in English, since 2010! Couldn’t Skopic have
done a Google search?
Skopic:
In the same year, Jānis
Rudzutaks, a Latvian revolutionary who had served ten years in Tsarist prisons
for his Bolshevik convictions, was executed despite never having voiced the
slightest objection to the Party line.
Conspirators always “voiced” agreement with the Party’s position in order to
mask their conspiracy.
His [Rudzutak’s] only
offense, according to Stalin’s confidante Vyacheslav Molotov, was that he was
“too easygoing about the opposition” and “indulged too much in partying with
philistine friends,” and was therefore a liability.
Molotov did not say that this was Rudzutak’s “only” offense. Why did Skopic tell
this lie? Moreover, in 1938 Molotov had his hands full as head of state –
Chairman of the Council of People’s Commissars. How would he remember, in
extreme old age, what the specific accusations and evidence against Rudzutak had
been?
Today we have a great deal of evidence against Rudzutak. His NKVD investigation
file has long been available to researchers. It contains Rudzutak’s confessions
along with much other evidence against him.
Rudzutak was also accused by several defendants at the Third Moscow Trial of
1938. In lengthy statements to the court defendant Nikolai N. Krestinsky named
Rudzutak as a conspirator many times. The trial transcript has been available
since 1938. Why didn’t Skopic consult it?
Skopic:
In March of 1938, the
American Marxist newspaper Socialist Appeal ran a memorable photo
gallery, entitled “LENIN’S GENERAL STAFF OF 1917: STALIN, THE EXECUTIONER, ALONE
REMAINS.” As it turns out, they were slightly off; of the 24 people pictured,
Alexandra Kollontai and Matvei Muranov, listed as “missing,” had survived.
Still, this gives some sense of the bloody ruin Stalin made of the Bolshevik
party.
As it happens, I have written an article in which I examine this very document (Socialist
Appeal was a Trotskyist newspaper). It will be published in a future book.
For now let me note that this list was dishonest -- intended to deceive -- when
it was published in 1938.
* Eight of the figures whose photos appear in the “gallery” -- Uritsky, Shaumian
(not “Shomyan”), Sverdlov, Artem (Sergeev), Lenin, Nogin, Dzerzhinsky, and Ioffe
-- were indeed dead by 1938. Stalin had nothing to do with their deaths.
What's the point of including so many people who had died by 1938 except to
imply, without evidence, that Stalin was in some way responsible for their
deaths?
* Three more lived long after 1938. Alexandra M. Kollontai died on March 9,
1952. Matvei K. Muranov died on December 9, 1959. Elena D. Stasova died on
December 31, 1966.
This is a dishonest propaganda technique. It has nothing to do with
understanding history. Yet this kind of duplicity characterizes most
anticommunist and Trotskyite writing on the Stalin period up to the present day.
In my article I examine the evidence against the eleven, all men, who were
indeed executed. Every one of them was convicted at a trial where much evidence
against them was produced. In many cases the accused confessed. It is absurd to
claim that a person who repeatedly confesses his guilt and is impeached
by the testimony of others is nevertheless “innocent.”
Skopic:
With characteristic
chutzpah, Grover Furr attempts to justify the purges in Khrushchev Lied,
asserting that all of the above really were spies and saboteurs, but the numbers
are against him …
I must protest Skopic’s dishonesty here. Most readers of Skopic’s article will
not have read my book Khrushchev Lied (2011) or will not have read it
recently, and so will not know that his statement here about my research is
false.
* I do not discuss “all of the above” in my book Khrushchev Lied.
* I do not assert that “all of the above” were guilty. Indeed, I do not claim
that any of the persons named by Khrushchev as innocent victims of Stalin
were guilty.
What I do in that book, as in all my other books, is examine the evidence
that we now have. In the cases I have examined there is plenty of evidence
of the guilt of the people under discussion and no evidence that they
were innocent.
Skopic clearly does not understand historical research, so a word about that is
relevant here. It is not the job of a historian to assert the guilt or the
innocence of anybody. The historian’s duty is to identify, locate, obtain, and
examine the evidence and, where possible, to draw logical conclusions from that
evidence.
A historian must always be prepared to modify or even reverse his original
conclusion if and when more evidence comes to light and demands it, or a more
convincing interpretation of the currently available evidence is produced.
Skopic:
…
What are the odds,
after all, that essentially everyone but Stalin suddenly turned traitor, leaving
him the only stalwart?
This is just nonsense. Thousands of “old Bolsheviks” (persons who had joined the
Party before the Revolution) and other Party leaders remained. Khrushchev named
only a small number of persons whom he wished to
“rehabilitate” – that is, to declare innocent while never producing
evidence that they were, in fact, innocent. In my book Khrushchev Lied
I examine only those whom Khrushchev names in his “Secret Speech” of
February 25, 1956.
Skopic:
With each new show trial, a
ripple effect ran through Soviet society, as anyone who was tainted by
association with the “guilty” party—from their family members to people who were
merely seen talking to them or reading their books—stood a decent chance of
being arrested, executed, or deported to Siberia in turn.
These statements are false. Skopic gives no examples of even a single person to
whom any of this happened. And no wonder! I have never found an example of
anyone who was executed or deported to Siberia simply because they were “merely
seen talking to” or “reading the books” of a convicted person. Not one!
Wives of high-ranking Party and military figures who had been convicted of
serious crimes like espionage or sabotage were imprisoned or exiled, on the
assumption that they must have known something about their husband’s activities
yet did not report them. In some cases, we have evidence that the wife was also
guilty.
In other cases, we have no such evidence, although it may still be in former
Soviet archives. It is possible that some wives who had been kept in the dark
about their husband’s conspiratorial activities were imprisoned. But we don’t
have the evidence so we cannot tell whether this occurred or not.
I have never found even one example of a person in any of the categories named
here by Skopic who was executed, and Skopic does not cite even a single example.
“Quotas”?
Skopic:
Like American cops today,
Stalin’s secret police worked on a quota system, in which officers were required
to make a certain number of arrests per month …
This is false. American historian Arch Getty has refuted this “quota system”
notion several times.
One of the mysteries of the
field [of Soviet history — GF] is how limity [“limits”] is routinely
translated as “quotas.”[10]
For more about this specific lie see my book Stalin Waiting for … the Truth,
Chapter Ten, “The Falsehood About ‘Quotas’”.
Anticommunist “scholars” continue to lie, claiming that Stalin had “quotas” for
arrests. Obviously they want him to have had quotas so they can condemn
him!
We must ask: If you need to invent spurious crimes in order to find reasons to
condemn Stalin, doesn’t that imply that you could not find any real
crimes of which Stalin was guilty? For if you could find real crimes, why not
just discuss them without inventing phony ones?
Skopic:
In a typical case, one
unlucky woman was arrested as a Trotskyist, then had her charge changed to
“bourgeois nationalism,” on the grounds that the local NKVD had “exceeded4
the quota for Trotskyites, but were short on nationalists, even though they’d
taken all the Tatar writers they could think of.”
The quotation is from Robert Conquest, The Great Terror.[11] In the
revised edition the quotation is on page 284. The reference there is to Evgeniia
Ginzburg, Journey into the Whirlwind, page 105, and this passage is
indeed in Ginzburg’s book.
Abuses of this kind, and on a massive scale, were committed by Nikolai Yezhov’s
men during the time he was head of the NKVD. But we have no way of verifying
what Ginzburg wrote here. She was fiercely anti-Stalin, believed the
Khrushchev-era lies about Stalin, and had little motive to be objective.
Ginzburg was arrested in February 1937, on the testimony of some of her
co-workers, in the immediate aftermath of the Second Moscow Trial or
“Trotskyist” trial of January 16 - 30, 1937. She was accused of being a member
of a clandestine Trotskyist group. We have plenty of evidence that such groups
did exist.
Ginzburg claims that she was innocent. But we really do not know. It is common
for both the guilty and the innocent to claim innocence. The fact that she was
“rehabilitated” does not prove that she was innocent because many persons were
“rehabilitated” during the Khrushchev and Gorbachev eras without any evidence
that they were in fact innocent.
I have examined a number of such cases in Chapter 11 of Khrushchev Lied.
In some cases, like that of Bukharin, we know that the Soviet prosecutor and
judges falsified evidence in order to declare him innocent.[12]
In the early 1990s two NKVD investigative reports of her case were published.[13] These
reports detail the testimony against Ginzburg from co-workers. On the basis of
this evidence, she was convicted and sentenced first to prison and later to a
labor camp.
The “Yezhovshchina”
In late July or early August 1937, Nikolai Yezhov, chief (“People’s Commissar”)
of the Commissariat of Internal Affairs (NKVD), which included the political
police that are often called “the NKVD,” began a 14-month orgy of mass arrests
and executions. Most persons executed must have been innocent, as Yezhov and his
men testified in 1939 when, after replacing Yezhov as head of the NKVD,
Lavrentii Beria began to investigate these massive illegal repressions.
Primary-source documents from former Soviet archives prove that Yezhov deceived
Stalin and his leadership in order to further his own conspiracy. As I conclude
in my book about this period, Yezhov vs Stalin[14],
The version set forth here
absolves Stalin of guilt for the massive repressions. This is what is
unacceptable to mainstream Soviet history. But it was certainly Stalin’s
responsibility, as the principle political leader of the country, to take
decisive action to stop violations of justice, have them investigated, and make
sure those responsible are punished. Stalin did this. Tragically, it took him
many months to fully realize what was really going on, by which time Ezhov and
his men had murdered hundreds of thousands of innocent Soviet citizens. (231)
On January 2, 1939, Stalin wrote Prosecutor Vyshinsky: “A public trial of the
guilty parties in the NKVD is essential.”[15] Such
public trials did not take place. We do not know why. However, there were many
non-public trials of Yezhov’s NKVD men, including of Yezhov himself. Many were
sentenced to death for their crimes. During the first year after he took office,
Beria released at least 110,000 prisoners from the camps (“GULAG”) and prisons.
During the same year [1939]
about 110,000 persons were freed after the review of cases of those arrested in
1937-1938.[16]
Lavrentii Beria
Skopic:
Later, others fell victim
to the sadism of Lavrentii Beria, a truly vile figure who used his position as
head of the secret police to sexually assault hundreds of women and girls, often
threatening a loved one under arrest to secure their silence.
These are lies. Skopic cites no evidence. And no wonder! There has never been
any good evidence that Beria carried out these sexual assaults.
An article in a conservative Moscow newspaper contains the following passage:
One of the experts who had
the opportunity to study the cases of Beria and the head of Stalin's security,
General Vlasik, classified to this day, discovered an extremely interesting
fact. The lists of women in whose rape, judging by the materials of his case,
Beria pleaded guilty, almost completely coincide with the lists of those ladies
with whom Vlasik, who was arrested long before Beria, was accused of having
relations.[17]
On June 26, 1953, Beria was either arrested or – as it increasingly appears –
killed in the act of being arrested, at a Presidium meeting by his colleagues in
the leadership of the CPSU. Beria was not present at the Central Committee
meeting in July 1953, called for the sole purpose of slandering him. Why not?
This was unprecedented for such a high-ranking official – a minister in the
government.
Beria was allegedly tried, convicted, and executed at a trial in December 1953.
But no trial transcript has ever come to light. A lot of evidence that Beria was
murdered at this time or possibly shortly thereafter has been published. Some of
it is summarized in a recent study by two Russian historians.[18]
Concerning the
conduct of the trial of “Beria” – supposedly present but probably already
murdered – and his associates, Colonel-General Aleksandr F. Katusev, Chief
Prosecutor of the USSR from 1989 to 1991, during the time of Gorbachev, has
written:
Считаю своим долгом отметить,
что вновь открывшиеся обстоятельства лишь дополнительно высветили ошибки и
натяжки в приговоре по делу Берии и других. В то время как наиболее серьезные из
них были очевидны и прежде. Чем же объяснить, что крупнейшие наши юристы под
руководством Руденко Р.А. предъявили обвинение, не подкрепленное надлежащими
доказательствами.
Ответ лежит на поверхности. Еще
до начала следствия были обнародованы постановления июльского (1953) Пленума ЦК
КПСС и Указ Президиума Верховного Совета СССР, в которых содержалась не только
политическая, но и правовая оценка содеянного».[19].\
I consider it my duty to note that the newly discovered circumstances
only additionally highlighted the errors and exaggerations in the verdict in the
case of Beria and others, while the most serious of them were obvious before.
How can we explain that our most prominent jurists, under the leadership of
Roman A. Rudenko, could have made these charges without proper evidence?
The answer is obvious. Even before the start of the investigation, the
resolutions of the July (1953) Plenum of the Central Committee of the CPSU and
the Decree of the Presidium of the Supreme Soviet of the USSR were made public,
which contained not only a political, but also a legal assessment of the
deed.
Katusev stated
that there was no proper evidence against Beria and the others, and they were
accused, convicted, and executed on the basis of the Central Committee Plenum of
July 1953 and a decree of the legislature! If, in fact, a transcript and
materials of the “Beria trial” of December 1953 exist, Katusev would have had
access to them. He does not mention any transcript. This might mean that
there is none and no trial really took place. But to draw this conclusion would
be an argumentum ex silentio and in this case a logical fallacy.
Skopic continues about Beria:
When this method didn’t
work, Beria simply murdered his victims; in 1993, workers digging a ditch at his
former home found several sets of human remains that had been hastily covered up
with quicklime.
This statement is contradicted by the very source Skopic cites, a 1993 article
in the British newspaper Independent. That article states:
MOSCOW - Building workers
digging a ditch in the centre of the city on Friday unearthed a common grave
near the mansion once occupied by Stalin's secret police chief, Lavrenti
Beria, writes Helen Womack. Since Beria was notorious for carrying out
interrogation and torture in his own home, it is reasonable to assume that
the bones are the remains of his personal victims.
… it is believed that
Beria lured young women there, had sex with them, then had them murdered in
the basement.
… The workers had been
digging for several hours when they came upon a pile of human bones,
including two children's skulls
[20]…
So not “at his former home” as Skopic claims but “near” it, plus "children’s
skulls.” Was Beria raping children too, and then carrying the remains outside
his home to bury them “near” where he lived? Ridiculous!
There is no evidence that these bodies had anything to do with Beria. So why did
Skopic distort what the article says? Is he “grasping at a straw” – trying to
find something that will make Beria look bad? It sure looks that way.
Executions
Skopic:
Even if we grant the most
pro-Stalin interpretation of the facts, counting only the deaths directly
recorded in the Soviet archives (799,455 executions, 1.7 million deaths while
imprisoned, 390,000 during the forced resettlement of rural peasants, and
400,000 people deported to Siberia and elsewhere), we still get a figure of more
than three million.
The source normally cited for numbers of executions from 1921-1953 is Viktor
Zemskov, “Pravda o repressiiakh” (The truth about the repressions), 2009,
republished several times on the internet.[21]
I quote from one of my essays:
In September 1936 Nikolai
Ezhov replaced Genrikh Iagoda as head (Peoples Commissar) of the NKVD. In
November 1938 Ezhov was replaced by Lavrentii Beria. According to the widely
publicized “Pavlov report” prepared for Khrushchev in 1953 and widely reprinted
the number of persons sentenced to death in 1936-1940 were as follows: [6]
1936 – 1,118
1937 – 353,074
1938 – 328,618
1939 – 2,552
1940 – 1,649
In 1939 death sentences
under Beria were less than 1% of those under Ezhov. In 1940 they were less than
½ of 1%. No mass political repression occurred during Stalin’s postwar years.
The “Ezhovshchina” (=“bad time of Ezhov”) was never repeated. The conclusion is
inescapable: It was not Khrushchev, but Stalin and Beria who ended mass
political repression, and they did it in late 1938.[22]
The years of very high numbers of executions are: 1921, the last year of the
bitter Civil War – 9701; 1930 and 1931, the years of collectivization and
violent opposition to it: 20,201 and 10,651; the two years of the
“Yezhovshchina”, 1937 and 1938: 353,074 and 328,618; 1942, the worst year of the
war, when the USSR faced greatest danger of defeat and was under martial law,
23,278.
Executions during these six years out of 32 ½ years equal 745,523, or 93.3% of
the total of 799,455. Executions during 1937 and 1938, the two years of Yezhov’s
mass illegal murders, total 85.3% of the total of 799,455.
For more detailed discussion of Yezhov’s conspiracy and his mass murder of
innocent Soviet citizens, Beria’s investigations of Yezhov and his men, and a
great deal of primary-source evidence-- almost
completely ignored by mainstream anti-Stalin historians -- see Yezhov vs
Stalin.
Deaths in the GULAG
The source used by professional researchers, most of whom are anticommunist and
strongly biased against Stalin, is GULAG. (Glavnoe Upravlenie Lagerei),
1918-1960. (Moscow: MDF, 2000), edited by Kokurin and Petrov of the
anticommunist “Memorial” Society. Document No. 103 of this work gives the
mortality in the GULAG camps by
year. It can be viewed online as a table.[23] This shows that
the higher mortality rates were in 1932 (13,197 or 4.8%),1933 (67,297 or 15.3%),
1942 (352,560 or 24.9 %) and 1943 (267,826 or 22.4 %). The next highest year,
1944, saw a 9.2% mortality, higher than all the remaining years.
Of the total number of deaths in the GULAG from 1930 (the first year we have
statistics) till 1953 (Stalin died on March 5 of that year), we get 1,590,384
deaths in the GULAG between 1930 and 1953. Of these deaths, 43.2% of them or
687,683 occurred in the three years 1933, 1942, and 1943. 1932-33 were the years
of the great famine of ’32-’33 when mortality was very high throughout the USSR.
1942 and 1943 were the worst years of the war. 50.7% of all the deaths in the
GULAG occurred in 1932-33 and 1942-44.
During these periods a great many Soviet citizens were also dying prematurely.
For example: during World War II Soviet workers sickened and died of starvation
at their work, far from any fighting.
The high intensity of work
at the factory and the inadequacy of the food make it a matter of urgency that
[workers receive their rightful days off], as witnessed by the frequency with
which workers are dropping dead from emaciation right on the job. On some days
you see several corpses in the shops. During the two months December 1942 and
January 1943, they observed 16 bodies just in the factory shops. Those dying
from emaciation are mainly workers doing manual labor. (Shliaev, Chief
Prosecutor of Cheliabinsk province, to Bochkov, Prosecutor General of the USSR,
March 29, 1943)
This is from an article by Donald Filtzer, “Starvation Mortality in Soviet Home
Front Industrial Regions During World War II.”[24] Filtzer
is a conventionally anticommunist scholar who specializes in studying the Soviet
working class. He states:
During 1943 and 1944,
starvation and tuberculosis – a disease that was endemic to the USSR and is
highly sensitive to acute malnutrition – were between them the largest single
cause of death among the nonchild civilian population.
Filtzer continues:
The USSR did not have
enough food to feed both its military and its civilians, even with the arrival
of Lend-Lease food aid. The state therefore had to engage in a grim calculus and
decide how it could most efficiently use its limited resources – that is, how
many calories and grams of protein it could allocate to different groups. In
these circumstances it was inevitable that some people would not obtain
enough to eat and many would die. No matter what regime had been in power in
the USSR—Stalinist, Trotskyist, Menshevik, or capitalist—it would have faced the
same set of choices.
Skopic does not identify his source for the figure of 390,000 persons dying
during “forced resettlement of rural peasants” so it is impossible to know
exactly what he means. It probably means
that peasants – mainly rich peasants, or kulaks, and those who, perhaps
under the influence of the kulaks, who were very influential people in their
communities, resisted collectivization, were resettled, and eventually died, not
during resettlement but at their place of resettlement. No doubt
many of them died during the great famine of 1932-33 and the very bad famine of
1946.
Similarly, Skopic does not tell us where he gets the number of 400,000 “people
deported to Siberia and elsewhere” or what it means – deaths during
deportations, or all deaths, including persons who died after
deportation.
We do have some information about mortality during deportations. For
example, we know that very few of the Chechens and Crimean Tatars deported in
1944 for collaboration with the Germans died during deportation.
According to an NKVD report
reproduced in several places, 191, or 0.126%, of the 151,529 Crimean Tatars
deported to Uzbekistan, died in transit. … In the case of the much larger
population of deported Chechens and Ingush, numbering 493,269 persons, we have
primary source evidence that 1272, or 0.25%, died in transport.
See N.F. Bugai and A.M. Gonov. “The Forced Evacuation of the Chechens and
the Ingush.” Russian Studies in History. vol. 41, no. 2, Fall 2002, p.
56.
[25]
The Crimean Tatars and Chechens were deported en masse so as to keep these
linguistically and culturally distinct groups united. To separate them would
have been a form of genocide (though the term did not exist until after the
war).[26]
Skopic:
Under Stalin’s leadership,
many of the hard-won victories of 1917 were undermined and rolled back, in a
downward slide into social and political conservatism.
This was Leon Trotsky’s claim, so it is no surprise that Skopic quotes the
following passage from Leon Sedov’s Red Book on the Moscow Trials (1936)
In the most diverse areas,
the heritage of the October revolution is being liquidated. Revolutionary
internationalism gives way to the cult of the fatherland in the strictest sense.
And the fatherland means, above all, the authorities. Ranks, decorations and
titles have been reintroduced. The officer caste headed by the marshals has been
reestablished. The old communist workers are pushed into the background; the
working class is divided into different layers; the bureaucracy bases itself on
the “non-party Bolshevik,” the Stakhanovist, that is, the workers’ aristocracy,
on the foreman and, above all, on the specialist and the administrator.
The old petit-bourgeois family is being reestablished
and idealized in the most middle-class way; despite the general
protestations, abortions are prohibited, which, given the difficult material
conditions and the primitive state of culture and hygiene, means the enslavement
of women, that is, the return to pre-October times.
We’ll examine these assertions one at a time.
Revolutionary
internationalism gives way to the cult of the fatherland in the strictest sense.
This is false. Internationalism was still vigorously promoted; witness the
Soviet Union’s support for the working class in Spain (discussed below).
It was the whole Soviet Union, not just the communists, that the fascists would
attack. But only a small percentage of Soviet citizens were communists.
Non-communists, the vast majority of the population, were encouraged to be loyal
to their country, the Soviet Union. Furthermore, since the Soviet Union was the
homeland of socialism and the headquarters of the worldwide communist movement,
why shouldn’t communists too be loyal to it?
Officers’ ranks were indeed re-established in the belief that this was necessary
for a strong army. Red Army officers had been trained along the lines of, and in
many cases by, military men from Western capitalist countries. Sharp
differentials in wages for more productive work, as in the Stakhanovite
movement, and “one-man management” for managers, were believed to be necessary
for higher productivity.
These measures contradicted the move towards egalitarianism, a hallmark of
development towards a communist society. But the Soviet Union was not even fully
“socialist” yet. If the fascists defeated it they would never see either
socialism or communism.
So, Stalin and the Party compromised on principle in order to move towards
communism later, after defeating the fascists. Stalin did begin to do this after
the war. But his efforts were cut shot by his death. For more on Stalin’s
post-war efforts to move towards communism see Part II of my essay “Stalin and
the Struggle for Democratic Reform.”[27]
Sedov / Skopic:
The old communist workers
are pushed into the background …
There is no evidence for this, or even an explanation of what it means. Who were
these “old communist workers”? Since this was written by Sedov, Leon Trotsky’s
son and closest political confidant, it probably means that workers loyal to
Trotsky were no longer promoted within the Party or the trade unions.
Naturally enough – Trotsky’s followers within the USSR were involved in serious
anti-Party and anti-Soviet conspiracies.
Sedov / Skopic:
The old petit-bourgeois
family is being reestablished and idealized in the most middle-class way …
This is incoherent. When was the family every disestablished? Skopic does
not tell us. But see comments on “socialism” below.
… abortions are prohibited,
which, given the difficult material conditions and the primitive state of
culture and hygiene, means the enslavement of women, that is, the return to
pre-October times.
Abortion on demand was made illegal -- see the more detailed discussion
below. However, the benefits granted to mothers shows that Skopic is wrong --
there was no “return to pre-October times.”
The “Trotsky Cult”
Trotsky hated Stalin. He had no incentive to be objective or truthful about
Stalin and Soviet society of his day. In my books I have shown in detail that
Trotsky lied about Stalin too many times to count. If Skopic doesn’t know this
he has no business writing about the Stalin-era Soviet Union at all.
Skopic himself admits that “there are layers of irony to this passage” from
Sedov’s book. Why then does he quote from it? Critical of the “great man” cult
around Stalin – rightly so – Skopic has fallen prey to the “great man cult”
around Trotsky!
The Stalin “cult of personality” thankfully died decades ago. Stalin himself
strongly opposed it, as I have shown in Khrushchev Lied. But the “Trotsky
cult” lives on, nourished by the falsehoods of overtly anticommunist historians
and an uncritical attitude towards Trotsky’s own writings. I have published four
books in which I show that Trotsky lied to an extent scarcely believable,
especially about Stalin and anything to do with him.[28]
Trotsky incited his clandestine supporters to assassinate Soviet leaders and
sabotage the economy, conspired with Marshal Tukhachevsky and other high-ranking
military commanders to sabotage the Red Army, and with Nazi Germany and fascist
Japan to stab the army in the back in the event of invasion.[29] Trotsky
agreed to abolish the Communist International, and to divide up the country to
give Ukraine to Germany and the Pacific coast to Japan. Some communist!
Skopic:
…
the working class found itself increasingly micromanaged and exploited
under Stalin.
Skopic does not know what
“exploitation” means. It is the private appropriation of the surplus value
produced by the working class. Nothing of the kind occurred in the Soviet Union
during Stalin’s time. Salary differentials between managers and workers, whether
desirable, necessary, or not, are not “exploitation.”
Skopic:
…
new labor-discipline laws introduced in 1938 and 1940 made it a criminal offense
to be more than 20 minutes late to work, punishable by dismissal at minimum and
sometimes actual imprisonment.
By 1938 the Soviet Union was
preparing for the inevitable war that Stalin, with uncanny accuracy, had
predicted in 1931 would happen in ten years.
We
are 50 or 100 years behind the advanced countries. We must make good this
distance in 10 years. Either we do it, or we shall go under.[30]
Military men were drafted
and then subject to discipline. Why should workers, whose production would be a
make-or-break matter in the upcoming war, be permitted to be absent or to move
to try for a better job somewhere else? Production for the social welfare took
precedence over the individual desire to “get ahead.”
Skopic:
The
hated “domestic passports” used by the Tsars were reintroduced, forcing workers
to show their “papers” to police at a moment’s notice, and justify why they were
in a given area. If they couldn’t, this too could lead to arrest and prison
time.
Passports were instituted,
but not like under the Tsars. Pre-Soviet Russia was indeed an exploitative
society. In the Soviet Union there was no appropriation of the value produced by
the working class to private capitalists. All production benefited the working
class as a whole.
The Soviet Union ran on a
planned economy, not a market-based capitalist economy. Unlike in the capitalist
world, jobs were guaranteed. But moving around to get the best job sabotaged the
economic plan and production, so it was restricted.
Passports were also needed
to control the movement of population, particularly to prevent a flood of
immigration to the big cities. It was essential to develop the trans-Ural USSR,
the Asian areas and Siberia, and to guarantee sufficient labor power on the
collective farms that fed the whole society..
Skopic:
The
government even resorted to strikebreaking and the suppression of labor power,
arresting workers en masse in the cotton-mill town of Teikovo when they
organized a short-lived strike against food rationing.
The state had an economic
plan for the allocation of scarce resources. The plan called for shared
scarcity. It was not an attempt at super-exploitation to make a rich boss even
richer, as under capitalism.
The Teikovo strike and a few
others were indeed protests against an increase in food prices. This was 1932,
when industrialization was just beginning, collectivization was still under way,
and the economy was very fragile.
Bolshevism had offered a promise of total liberation for working people, but
now, Stalinism delivered the opposite.
Skopic has a bourgeois –
i.e., a capitalist – idea of liberation.
The working class in the
Stalin-era Soviet Union was indeed liberated from exploitation of
worker-produced value by private capitalists. However, communist liberation
cannot mean “freedom to do what you want, when you want.” Real liberation is
only possible when there is a strong commitment to the collective good.
Skopic:
The point about
“revolutionary internationalism,” too, deserves a closer look. At first glance,
this might seem like an arcane Trotskyist grievance, but the consequences for
people around the world were very real. To the extent that he believed in
anything, Stalin was a firm believer in “socialism in one country”—that is, the
idea that the Soviet Union should focus on its own industrial development,
compete with the West on that basis, and remain detached from any form of global
class struggle. The old slogan “workers of the world, unite!” was abandoned, and
the Soviet state became either indifferent or actively hostile to the efforts of
socialist movements in other countries, even as those movements looked to it for
support and guidance.
This is simply a series of outright lies. Skopic has no evidence to support any
of these allegations. Skopic has chosen to believe Leon Trotsky’s unsupported
claim that building socialism in one country was in contradiction to building
for revolution in other countries. This is not true (see the quotations from
Robert Tucker and Lars Lih above).
During Stalin’s time the Communist International, or Comintern, was established
in virtually every country in the world. The Soviet Union committed vast
resources to supporting communist parties worldwide.
After Adolf Hitler smashed the Communist Party of Germany, the largest communist
party in the world at that time outside of the Soviet Union, the Comintern saw
that there was no chance for a socialist revolution any time soon in the
industrialized countries of the world. It decided that fascism was the greatest
danger to the world’s working class, so it downplayed organizing for communist
revolution in order to try to make alliances with anti-fascist capitalist
governments. Soviet and Comintern leaders were convinced that the USSR, the only
country in the world that had no allies, could not defeat the impending fascist
attack alone.
This strategy worked to a degree, in the sense that the Soviet Union managed to
create an alliance with the major capitalist powers in World War II against the
fascist powers. Victory against the Axis led to communist revolutions in China,
Yugoslavia, Albania, and ultimately in Vietnam after the defeat of the United
States.
The Soviet Union and the Comintern were also the principle forces behind
anti-colonial struggles throughout the world. The Western imperialist countries
of the so-called “Free World,” all of them self-styled “democracies,” never
permitted democracy in their colonies, which they exploited with a murderous
hand.
Soviet Aid to the Spanish Republic
Skopic:
In the Spanish Civil War,
for example, the USSR lent a limited amount of military aid to the Republican
forces battling Francisco Franco.
Skopic is in error. The USSR sent massive amounts of aid to Spain despite its
own need to build up its military in advance of the inevitable war with the
Axis.
The Soviet Union was generous in supplying military equipment to the Spanish
Republic even though it was building up its own military as fast as possible
too. On November 2, 1936, Kliment Voroshilov, Commissar for Defense, wrote to
Stalin as follows:
Dear Koba! I am sending a
letter of the property which, though it will hurt us, may be sold to the
Spaniards... You will see that the list is for a rather substantial number of
weapons. This can be explained not only by the great needs of the Spanish army
and artillery, but also because Kulik (in my opinion, rightly) decided to
finally free ourselves of some foreign-made artillery—British, French and
Japanese—totaling 280 pieces, or 28% of the weapons of the category in our
artillery parks. The most painful of all will be sending off the
aircraft, but this is needed more than anything else, and therefore it must be
given.[31]
This private note, never intended for publication, proves Stalin’s commitment to
proletarian internationalism in Spain.
The Spanish Republican government paid for some of this aid with gold. But the
Soviets kept sending military equipment in 1938 and even in 1939, when there was
no hope that the Republic could pay for it. Helen Graham, a world expert in the
Spanish Civil War, has written:
… the Soviet Union actually
also gave some big credits to the Republic in the course of 1938 which it must
have known it would have absolutely NO chance of recouping (especially by the
second half of that year) …[32]
In her 2002 book The Spanish Republic at War 1936-1939 Graham writes:
In July [1938] [Prime
Minister] Negrín sent his former ambassador to the Soviet Union, Marcelino
Pascua (from spring 1938 ambassador in Paris) back to Moscow with the request.
Stalin agreed to make a $60 million loan available to the Republic. This was in
addition to the $70 million agreed the previous February. But this second loan
was made when there was virtually no gold to back it. Without the July credit
the Republican war effort could not have survived through the second half of
1938.[33]
In The Spanish Civil War: A Very Short Introduction (2005) Graham writes:
In 1937 Soviet industrial
production was still in a turmoil of reorganization, made worse by the purges,
and throughout the war in Spain real Soviet production levels remained anything
up to 50% below the published ones. Given this situation, it is surprising that
Stalin sent even as much domestically produced materiel to the Republic as he
did. This was high quality – most crucially the planes and tanks – and, as we
have seen, it was vital to Republican survival, especially at the start. (88)
These scholars and documents give the lie to Skopic’s claim. In fact, the Soviet
Union “gave even though it hurt.”
Skopic continues:
But at the same time,
Stalin dictated the policy line of the Spanish Communist Party (Partido
Comunista de España, or PCE), which was fiercely loyal to Moscow, and through
this mouthpiece, he made it painfully clear that there would be no workers’
revolution as a result of the war. Instead, the PCE mandated a “united front”
with a so-called “progressive bourgeoisie”—in other words, any part of the
ruling class that wasn’t actively fascist …
The Soviets and the PCE believed that no workers’ and peasants’ revolution was
possible as long as Nazi Germany and fascist Italy were arming and fighting
alongside Francisco Franco’s army. Western powers feared a Bolshevik-type
revolution in Spain much more than they feared Franco, a fellow capitalist and
imperialist.
All the Spanish Republic’s governments were firmly capitalist. What they really
wanted was aid from the non-fascist European powers, mainly Britain and France.
They accepted Soviet aid because the Western powers, including the United
States, refused them.
The hope of the Soviets and the Comintern was to defeat Franco, leaving the
Spanish Republic as a liberal democracy with a strong and militant working-class
movement and a large communist party. Then they could organize for revolution.[34]
But this was exactly what the Western imperialist countries, together with the
leaders of the Republican government, did not want. They much preferred a
fascist, anticommunist, and capitalist Spain.
Understandably, many
Spanish communists refused to follow these high-handed orders, especially in the
POUM (Partido Obrero de Unificación Marxista, or Workers’ Party of Marxist
Unification—the other, non-Stalinist communist party in the mix). So, the
Stalinists pressured the Republican government to declare the POUM an illegal
organization, causing open conflict between the two factions.
This is false. Dominated by anti-Soviet Trotskyists, the POUM was one of the
forces that led a rebellion – in fact, an abortive attempt at a revolution --
against the Spanish Republic while the war against Franco was going on. This
1937 revolt, called the “Barcelona May Days,” was a stab in the back of the
Republic that had to draw resources from the anti-Franco war to suppress it.
Franco and Nazi agents were also working to bring about a split in the
Republican forces that culminated in the “May Days’ revolt. The Soviets knew
this from their agents. Trotsky had sent Erwin Wolf, his most trusted aide, to
Spain, where he became a top adviser to POUM. POUM
leader Andres Nin had also been a top political aide of Trotsky’s. Kurt Landau,
another Trotskyist, was a POUM adviser too.
For more details and evidence see my article “Leon
Trotsky and the Barcelona 'May Days' of 1937.”[35]
Skopic:
As Jesús Hernández, a
high-ranking member of the PCE, recalls in his memoirs, POUM founder Andreu Nin
was captured by agents of Stalin’s NKVD, who tried to make him confess to being
a fascist traitor …
Skopic goes on to quote from this former Spanish Communist who claims that Nin
was tortured and then killed when he would not confess. But Jesús Hernández is
not a reliable source.
According to Paul Preston, one of the greatest historians of the Spanish Civil
War,
Unfortunately, Jesús
Hernández fell into the clutches of Joaquín Gorkín and the Congress for Cultural
Freedom. In consequence, his work
was manipulated by Gorkín and, I believe, contains several falsifications.[36]
Preston recommends a study by Herbert Southworth and another by Fernando
Hernández Sánchez. Both question the objectivity of Jesús Hernández’s book.
Southworth:
According to Gorkin … José
Bullejos, Secretary-General of the Spanish Communist Party from 1925 until his
expulsion in 1932, informed him that Jesús Hernández wanted to talk with him. It
was common knowledge among the Spanish groups in Paris that Gorkin could help to
publish anti-Communist books. Gorkin, according to Gorkin, replied to Bullejos:
‘I cannot clasp the hand of Jesús Hernández so long as he has not denounced in a
book the Stalinist crimes in Spain and, precisely, the details about the
imprisonment and assassination of Andrés Nin’.
Gorkin, in effect, had
indicated to Hernández the conditions under which his book could be published.
‘Six months later’, Gorkin continued, ‘after my return to Paris, I received the
text of Hemández’s book ‘Yo fui un ministro de Stalin’. Hernández had followed
the instructions given by Gorkin … (267)
[Gorkin’s book] contained …
thirty pages from Jesús Hemández’s Yo fui un ministro de Stalin, the
manuscript of which, as I have indicated above, was corrected following Gorkin’s
instructions to overstate the significance of the murder of Andrés Nin, turning
it into the pivotal incident of the Spanish Civil War. Unsurprisingly, these
pages from Hernández’s opus gave exaggerated importance to the POUM and to the
political role of Julián Gorkin. (290-1)
… since the CIA, and its
affiliate the Congress [for Cultural Freedom – GF], grouped together,
constituted a major world-wide influence for right-wing causes, its centralizing
force ineluctably, however haphazardly, pulled into its orbit all those persons
interested in besmirching the Spanish Republicans. Among the leading candidates
for this kind of work were Julián Gorkin and Burnett Bolloten.[37] (307)
Hernández Sánchez doubts that Jesús Hernández simply followed Gorkin’s hints in
order to get his book published. But he does not deny that the Congress for
Cultural Freedom, a front of the American C.I.A., was involved in publishing his
book. No genuine communist would accept support from such a source. Hernández
Sánchez also records that Ricardo Miralles, a biographer of Juan Negrin,
questions the accuracy of Jesús Hernández’ book on several grounds.[38]
No one claims that Jesús Hernández was a witness to Nin’s interrogation, so his
account is hearsay in that regard. But the story of Nin’s arrest, supposed
“torture,” and murder by communist and Republican police have become a mainstay
of anticommunist historiography of the Spanish Republic.
There is no evidence that Nin was tortured. Paul Preston
believes he was not.
The often-unreliable Jesús
Hernández claimed that Nin was tortured and interrogated by Orlov and others for
several days, in an effort to make him sign a ‘confession’ of his links with the
fifth column. This is highly unlikely; a confession was needed as the basis for
a trial, and, for that, Nin would have to be seen to be in good physical shape
and testify that he had not been tortured.[39]
Preston assumes here that Nin had no relation to the fifth column (Francoist
forces within the Republic). It is more accurate to say that we don’t know
whether he did or not. There is good evidence that Trotskyists and German and Francoist agents were both involved in the “May Days” revolt in Barcelona.[40] (See my
article for more details and documentation.)
Far from securing a united
front, Stalin’s meddling had snuffed out any hope of resistance, and Spanish
fascism reigned supreme.
No one has ever cited any evidence that a proletarian revolution could
have been victorious in Spain in 1937, much less one led by an unstable
coalition under anticommunist leadership, Trotskyist (POUM) and anarchist. Even
George Orwell, whose Homage to Catalonia was a Cold War-anticommunist
hit, later conceded that the Spanish Republic was doomed by the “democratic”
Allies, who blockaded aid to the Republic while allowing Hitler and Mussolini to
send enormous amounts of materiel, airmen, and soldiers, to aid Franco. In 1942,
Orwell wrote:
The Trotskyist thesis that
the war could have been won if the revolution had not been sabotaged was
probably false. To nationalize factories, demolish churches, and issue
revolutionary manifestoes would not have made the armies more efficient. The
Fascists won because they were the stronger; they had modern arms and the others
hadn’t. No political strategy could offset that …
in the most mean, cowardly, hypocritical way the British ruling class did
all they could to hand Spain over to Franco and the Nazis. Why? Because they
were pro-Fascist, was the obvious answer. Undoubtedly they were ...[41]
Skopic recognizes that “nobody, not even the Yugoslav Communists, spoke of
revolution.” But Skopic knows better! Sure, he does! So, he still blames Stalin
for the fact that
it took until 1945 for
Yugoslavia to actually become a socialist nation—a much longer and bloodier
struggle than it might have been.
No one believed that socialist revolution was possible while a country, whether
Yugoslavia or Spain, was occupied by Hitler’s army. Yugoslav partisans were not
able to expel German troops until 1945. They could only do it then because
three-quarters of Hitler’s army was fighting the Red Army. This was the help
that “Stalin” (read: the Red Army and Soviet people) gave to make the revolution
possible in Yugoslavia.
Skopic:
When Greek communists
begged Stalin for help in their own civil war, their pleas fell on deaf ears.
Stalin, it turned out, had promised to stay out of Greece and Turkey in a
backroom deal he made with Churchill, in exchange for greater influence over the
Balkans—and he valued his word to an arch-imperialist more than the lives of the
Greek partisans. Across the ocean, Harry Truman had no such qualms, and supplied
the Greek far right with both military advisors and napalm. The revolution
burned to ash.
Skopic falsely assumes that the Soviet Union had the capability of facilitating
a revolution in Greece. But Stalin knew that the Red Army was not prepared for a
war with the US and Great Britain. The Soviets were probably aware that within a
month or so of the end of the war the Western capitalists were considering a
joint Allied attack on Soviet forces in Europe – “Operation Unthinkable.”[42] Stalin
appears to have also harbored an
illusory hope that the USSR could maintain a peacetime Grand Alliance with the
“Allies.”[43]
Homophobia and Abortion
Skopic discusses the law of 1933 criminalizing homosexuality and the later law
outlawing abortion on demand while permitting exceptions for medical reasons.
What Skopic does not reveal is that the Soviet policy on (male) homosexuality
was in accord with medical – that is, scientific – opinion in the advanced
capitalist countries.
In the 1930s virtually all Soviet doctors had been trained before the
Revolution. The few doctors trained after the Revolution had been educated by
the older doctors. Soviet medical science followed that of the European
capitalist countries.
It is idealism to fault the Bolsheviks for not somehow knowing that the best
contemporary medical opinion was based more on age-old prejudice than on
science. Homosexuality and abortion were not legalized in capitalist countries
until 40 years later or more.
Skopic:
When the Scottish Marxist
Harry Whyte, then working for the Moscow Daily News, wrote his own
impassioned letter to Stalin defending gay rights, Stalin’s answer was blunt,
scrawled across the letter in pencil: “An idiot and a degenerate.” (To the
archives the letter went.)
But even Whyte himself expressed in this letter what we would regard today as
prejudiced views about certain types of homosexuality:
When we analyze the nature
of the persecution of homosexuals, we should keep in mind that there are two
types of homosexuals: first, those who are the way they are from birth … second,
there are homosexuals who had a normal sexual life but later became
homosexuals, sometimes out of viciousness, sometimes out of economic
considerations.
As for the second type, the
question is decided relatively simply. People who become homosexuals by
virtue of their depravity usually belong to the bourgeoisie, a number of
whose members take to this way of life after they have sated themselves with all
the forms of pleasure and perversity that are available in sexual relations with
women.[44]
Skopic:
The homophobic law remained
on the books until 1993, and it decimated the Soviet LGBT community, sending
thousands to the Gulag …
Skopic hasn’t even read the text of this law! It does not mention lesbian sex,
bisexual persons, or transsexuals. Only sexual relations between men were
illegal. Moreover, Skopic does not know how many people were imprisoned under
this law. The article linked at this point in Skopic’s essay refers to the 1970s
and 80s, not to the much-earlier Stalin period.
Abortion
Abortion on demand was made illegal -- as it was in capitalist societies at that
time, and for the same reason: medical opinion opposed it (abortion for medical
reasons was of course permitted).
Skopic mentions that the Soviet state provided “paid maternity leave and cash
allowances for childcare supplies.” He comments that this Soviet provision of
aid to mothers was more progressive even than many capitalist states today, much
less at the time.
In today’s capitalist
world, where increasing numbers of young people simply can’t afford to have
children and are pressured to return immediately to work when they do, some of
this might sound genuinely nice.
But then Skopic claims that being supportive to mothers was not Stalin’s
intention:
But Stalin was less
concerned with helping women or children as such, and more with replacing the
devastating loss of population the USSR had suffered in the first World War (to
say nothing of his own purges and manufactured famines).
Skopic is determined to portray Stalin in negative tones. But the text of the
Soviet law (see below) goes far beyond anything in contemporary capitalist
societies at the time. This law was
clearly progressive for its time! So Skopic claims that Stalin did not
support it for progressive reasons! Skopic cannot possibly know what Stalin’s
intentions were – what he was “concerned with.”
Skopic refers to “manufactured famines” -- plural. But there were no
“manufactured famines.” There were four famines in the USSR during the
1920s, all due to the devastation of war, disease, and natural causes. The great
famine of 1932-33 was entirely due to natural causes. The last famine of Soviet
times was in 1946, due to weather conditions that high Western Europe hard as
well. I discuss Soviet famines and the research on them in the first two
chapters of Blood Lies[45] and the
first chapter of Stalin Waiting for … the Truth.[46]
Skopic also doesn’t know that a “purge”—”chistka” in Russian -- was a periodic
process of verification of Party membership cards to make sure that Party
members were active and not engaged in anything immoral or illegal. The penalty
for failing the purge was expulsion from the Party, usually with a chance to
reapply after a certain period.
Skopic quotes from a 1946 article by Soviet revolutionary and ambassador
Alexandra Kollontai promoting motherhood for Soviet women. Famous for her
feminism, Kollontai’s support for motherhood reflects the progressive opinion
of that time.
Skopic then quotes from an account by Anna Akimovna Dubova, a Soviet woman who
recalled her own illegal abortions. Dubova’s father was a kulak, and her
parents were Old Believers who considered the Bolshevik Revolution to be the
work of Antichrist. Her anticommunist background may help to explain why
Dubova’s account contains an important falsehood (see below).
In the source from which Skopic got Dubova’s story she reveals that she had one
child with her husband, who went off to war. Then she lived with another man who
abandoned her. Then her husband returned, and she had another child. Later she
married at least twice more, and had two abortions. She said:
… So many women died,
leaving small children, and so many were sent to prison. Women who had the
abortions and suffered were sent to prison, and those who performed the
abortions were also sent to prison. …
This is not true. Women who had illegal abortions were not imprisoned.
Dubova herself was not imprisoned. Either her memory failed her here, or she
deliberately lied to make the Soviet policy appear worse.
The law reads in part:
4. В отношении беременных женщин, производящих аборт в нарушение указанного
запрещения, установить как уголовное наказание, общественное порицание, а при
повторном нарушении закона о запрещении абортов — штраф до 300 рублей.
4. With regard to pregnant
women who have an abortion in violation of the said prohibition, to establish as
a criminal punishment, public censure, and in case of repeated violation of the
law on the prohibition of abortion - a fine of up to 300 rubles.
It’s worthwhile citing the title of the law (we won’t reproduce the text of the
law in full – it’s too long):
Decree on the Prohibition
of Abortions, the Improvement of Material Aid to Women in Childbirth, the
Establishment of State Assistance to Parents of Large Families, and the
Extension of the Network of Lying-in Homes, Nursery schools and Kindergartens,
the Tightening-up of Criminal Punishment for the Non-payment of Alimony, and on
Certain Modifications in Divorce Legislation.[47]
As far as I can determine, no capitalist state at the time provided such
benefits to mothers.
Skopic uses this quotation for an anti-Stalin rant:
This, to put it mildly,
does not sound like the actions of any socialist state worthy of the name.
Instead, it sounds like something Ted Cruz or Ron DeSantis would do if you gave
them unlimited power.
When it comes to Stalin and the Soviet Union Skopic is incapable of being
objective. His absurd statements here and elsewhere show that he is prejudiced
against Stalin to the point where his judgment is disordered. The anti-abortion
movement in the US – “Cruz and DeSantis” -- shows no interest in providing the
benefits to mothers that the Soviet state was providing in the 1930s.
We must evaluate the Soviet – Stalin’s – policy on abortion on demand not
according to the views of progressive people today but in the context of its
time and in total, including the benefits to mothers. Viewed
historically, Soviet policy was indeed progressive.
Skopic:
One starts to suspect
there’s a reason most of the Stalinists you encounter today are straight men;
certainly you can’t call yourself any sort of feminist and defend policies like
this.
This further illustrates the fallacy of taking things out of historical context.
Even Skopic concedes that well-known Soviet feminist Alexandra Kollontai, a
progressive in her day, supported this policy in the 1940s.
Art
Skopic doesn’t know or, evidently, care anything about Soviet arti.
But these currents existed
in an uneasy tension with “socialist realism,” the brainchild of Anatoly
Lunacharsky—a Bolshevik commissar who believed that art should be used for
didactic purposes, to depict “ideal” workers and communities and instruct people
in how they ought to be living their lives.
Skopic gives no evidence for this statement. I cannot find any either. But here
is what scholar of Soviet art K. Andrea Rusnock says about Lunacharsky:
Verbally. Lunacharsky was
proclaiming [in 1922] that realist art was the appropriate vehicle for conveying
the events of the Bolshevik revolution, its achievements, and the heroes and
heroines, of the new Soviet state. Despite his words, however, and the party's
increasing pressure, Lunacharsky did continue to support avant-garde art
until his 1928 resignation as Commissariat of Enlightenment.[48]
Skopic does not cite any source for his misunderstanding of socialist realism.
Indeed, there is no single authoritative definition. Here is what Maksim Gorky
wrote about it in 1934:
Социалистический реализм утверждает бытие как деяние, как творчество, цель
которого — непрерывное развитие ценнейших индивидуальных способностей человека
ради победы его над силами природы, ради его здоровья и долголетия, ради
великого счастья жить на земле, которую он, сообразно непрерывному росту его
потребностей, хочет обрабатывать всю, как прекрасное жилище человечества,
объединённого в одну семью.[49]
Socialist realism affirms
being as an act, as creativity, the purpose of which is the continuous
development of the most valuable individual abilities of mankind for the sake of
his victory over the forces of nature, for the sake of his health and longevity,
for the sake of the great happiness of living on the earth, all of which he, in
accordance with the continuous growth of his needs, wants to cultivate
everything, like a beautiful dwelling of mankind, united in one family
Elsewhere in his essay, but not in this context, Skopic quotes Sheila
Fitzpatrick, a mainstream anticommunist historian of the Soviet Union. Here is
what Fitzpatrick writes about socialist realism:
The formula of “socialist
realism’? which the [Soviet Writers’] Union adopted was not originally conceived
as a “party line,” any more than the Union was conceived as an instrument of
total control over literature. Both were initially intended to cancel out the
old RAPP line of proletarian and Communist exclusiveness and make room for
literary diversity
[50]…
According to literary historian Lawrence Schwartz,
There is direct evidence to
support the contention of liberalization. It is true that a plan for literature
was devised, but also that it was not devised by Stalin as a devious ploy for
dictatorial control over literature. The guidelines on literature were
established not as a separate category but as part of a general Party effort to
create a working relationship with fellow travelers.[51]
Skopic:
When Stalin took power, he
favored this more authoritarian take on art and put strict new restrictions on
both the styles that could be used and the content that could be depicted.
Non-representational art came to be viewed as “decadent” (just as it was
“degenerate” to the Nazis), and it was usually forbidden to display it.
This is all wrong. Stalin had “taken power” by 1927; socialist realism dates
from the All-Union Writers’ Congress of 1934. Moreover, no one suggests that
Stalin had anything to do with socialist realism or that he – Stalin – put any
restrictions on the style and content of art. Nor does Skopic document his claim
that non-representational art was considered “decadent”?
Instead, public space
became an endless gallery of kitsch, with propaganda posters showing muscular
Soviet workmen hammering rocks, driving tractors, and gazing sternly into the
distance. Predictably, many of the posters were tacky heroic portraits of Stalin
himself: Stalin marching with happy workers, Stalin holding a baby, Stalin
steering a big boat marked “CCCP.”
Skopic does not like socialist realism and representational art. But who cares
what Skopic believes? “Kitsch” is simply a term of insult, a way of avoiding
historical accuracy.
Skopic confuses fine art with poster art. The Soviets reproduced paintings on
postcards for mass distribution and in larger formats for local exhibitions.
Exhibitions of original art works took place mainly in cities.
Art for Whom?
Moreover, Skopic fails to understand a basic question: What kind of art should
be encouraged? What kind of art can best serve not the individual vision of the
artist, but the working class? Skopic values the individual vision. Socialist
realism promoted art that was intelligible to and reflected the interest of the
collective.
Skopic:
If any artist refused to
work in socialist realism, or wanted to use a different style, their work as a
whole could be banned; this happened to [Pavel] Filonov, who lived in grinding
poverty until his death in 1941.
This is not true. According to the biography of Filonov by Anna Laks:[52]
Филонов все 1930-е бедствует, недоедает, одалживает у жены и сестры деньги,
судорожно ищет заказы ... Но позиций не сдает, своих работ не продает, потому
что знает, заказ — это заработок, а его личное, свободное творчество вместе со
школой — это святое, это его миссия, это его пространство, это его храм, где не
место ни иноверцам, ни торговцам.
Throughout the 1930s
Filonov lived in poverty, malnourished, borrowing money from his wife and
sister, frantically looking for orders … But he doesn’t give up his positions,
he doesn’t sell his works, because he knows that an order means wages, and his
personal, free creativity, together with his school, is sacred, this is his
mission, this is his space, this is his temple, where there is no place for
non-believers or merchants.
Ему часто хотят заплатить деньги, приручить, „законтрактовать”, купить его
работы из мастерской. Он отказывается от очень многих заманчивых предложений,
если в их „идеологии” чувствует что-то не свое, „нефилоновское” …
(75)
People often want to pay
him money, to tame him, to give him a “contract”, to buy his works from the
workshop. He refuses very many tempting offers if in their “ideology” he feels
something not his own, “non-Filonovian” …
The Soviet state – “Stalin” – did not condemn him to this life. Filonov chose
to live in poverty, begging for money from his family, refusing orders for his
paintings, refusing to sell his works.
Filonov died during the Siege of Leningrad, where over a million Soviet
civilians died.
Skopic:
In some cases, artists who
annoyed Stalin were even framed and executed in the same way as his political
rivals, as with the poet Titsian Tabidze—a close friend of Boris Pasternak, who
barely escaped execution himself.
This is an outright lie. Not one single artist was “framed and executed”
during the Stalin period. In fact, there is no evidence that Stalin ever
“framed and executed” anyone. By “political rivals” Skopic probably means
the defendants in the three Moscow Trials of 1936, 1937, and 1938. These
defendants were not Stalin’s “political rivals;” and were not “framed.” On the
contrary, we have a great deal of evidence against them. They were certainly
guilty of at least those crimes to which they confessed their guilt.[53]
According to his Russian-language Wikipedia page Titsian Tabidze enjoyed a
celebration of his poetry in in Moscow and Leningrad at the beginning of 1937.
Later that year he was named as a participant in an anti-Soviet conspiracy by
several important Georgian nationalists such as Budu Mdivani. Someone has seen
his trial transcript, since the witnesses against him are named.[54]
There is no evidence that Boris Pasternak “barely escaped execution.” On the
contrary! According to Evgenii Gromov, author of Stalin: Art and Power
(2003):
And he [Pasternak] spoke
just as sincerely about the revolution in the poems “The Nine Hundred and Fifth
Year” and “Lieutenant Schmidt.” Genuine feeling permeated his “Stalinist” poems.
People close to Pasternak noted that he had a kind of love for Stalin. And he
believed in him … (306)
Gromov goes on to relate the famous story about how Pasternak telephoned Stalin
to intercede – successfully, as it turned out -- on behalf of his friend the
poet Osip Mandel’shtam.
Skopic:
In yet another area of
life, freedom, playfulness, and exploration had been replaced with grim
conformity and fear, and these would be the aesthetic markers that defined the
USSR in the eyes of the world.
This is just slander. There was nothing “grim,” “conformist” or “fearful” about
Soviet art. Exhibitions and reproductions of social realist art drew mass
audiences in the Soviet Union and influenced art worldwide including W.P.A. art
in the USA.
World War II
Skopic:
Stalinist authors like Furr
and Ludo Martens devote many pages to the war years …
This is false. I have never written about the war years. And I am not a
“Stalinist,” as I explain at the beginning of this essay. I defend not Stalin,
but the truth.
Skopic:
The images of Red Army
soldiers throwing open the gates of Auschwitz will live in human history
forever, and at Stalingrad alone, more than a million of them gave their
lives—more than the U.S. lost in the entire war. But crucially, these are not
Stalin’s victories, nor his sacrifices. He, like Churchill and Roosevelt, was
sitting safely behind his desk when the real heroism happened.
Stalin himself publicly recognized the fact that the victory over the Axis was
due not to himself or other leaders but to the ordinary Soviet people, without
whom the leaders are nothing. Here is what Stalin said at the Kremlin reception
in honor of the participants in the victory:
I am not going to say
anything extraordinary. I have the simplest, most ordinary toast. I would like
to drink to the health of the people who have little rank and no distinguished
title. To the people who are considered the “cogs” of the great state mechanism,
but without whom all of us marshals and commanders of fronts and armies, to put
it bluntly, are not worth a damn thing. Some little “screw” goes wrong - and
it's all over. I raise a toast to the simple, ordinary, modest people, to the
“cogs” that keep our great state mechanism in active condition in all branches
of science, economy and military affairs. There are a great many of them, their
name is legion, because they are tens of millions of people. These are humble
people. No one writes about them, they have no title, are of low rank, but these
are the people who hold us like the foundation holds the structure. I drink to
the health of these people, our respected comrades.[55]
Skopic continues:
Apart from this, there’s
evidence that Stalin and his paranoia actively harmed the Soviet war effort.
Because Trotsky had been the original architect of the Red Army, Stalin always
viewed its officer corps with deep suspicion and carried out extensive purges in
the years 1937-8 just as he had within the Bolshevik Party itself. “Three of the
five marshals, thirteen of the fifteen army commanders, and eight of the nine
fleet admirals” were executed, according to one account, together with more than
40,000 men who were dismissed from their posts for various small infractions and
accusations of disloyalty.
See below about the high-ranking officers who were, in fact, guilty as charged
of conspiring with the German General Staff and Leon Trotsky, who also conspired
with Germany and Japan..
The best scholarly study of the officers dismissed from service is by G.I.
Gerasimov, originally published in Rossiiskii istoricheskii Zhurnal No. 1
(1999).[56]
His
estimate
is 15,557:
В 1937 году было репрессировано 11034 чел. или 8% списочной численности
начальствующего состава, в 1938 году - 4523 чел. или 2,5%.
In 1937, 11,034 people were
repressed. or 8% of the payroll of the commanding staff, in 1938 - 4523 people.
or 2.5%.
Gerasimov explains his use of the term “repressed” as follows::
К репрессированным автор относит лиц командно-начальствующего состава, уволенных
из РККА за связь “с заговорщиками”, арестованных и не восстановленных
впоследствии в армии.
The author refers to the
repressed persons of the commanding and commanding staff dismissed from the Red
Army for their connection “with the conspirators”, arrested and not subsequently
reinstated in the army.
Not a small number, but far from Skopic’s 40,000.
Skopic continues:
A particularly
consequential loss was Marshal Mikhail Tukhachevsky, a military genius who had
done more than anyone to modernize the Soviet armed forces, introducing
revolutionary tank and aircraft tactics that earned him the title “the Red
Napoleon.” For his troubles Tukhachevsky was, like so many, tortured into a
false confession of treason and shot.
This is false. Hundreds of pages the investigative materials in the
“Tukhachevsky Affair” case of May – June 1937 have now been declassified by
Russian authorities. This evidence proves that Marshal Tukhachevsky and the
seven other officers tried, convicted, and executed with him on June 11, 1937,
were certainly guilty.
Skopic says:
(The confession, on file in
Moscow today, still has visible bloodstains on it.)
The tale about “bloodstains on one of Tukhachevsky’s confessions” originated in
a report to Khrushchev in 1964[57] and has
circulated widely since its publication in 1994. But it is not true.
The document in question has been available to researchers for years now.
There are no bloodstains on it. My colleagues Vladimir L. Bobrov, Sven-Eric
Holmström, and I devote an entire chapter on the “bloodstains” question in our
2021 book.[58]
Skopic:
These purges left an
enormous talent vacuum at the top, which the USSR’s enemies could hardly fail to
notice. At the time, General Konstantin Rokossovsky—who was imprisoned for two
years, but survived and became a military hero during WWII—said that “this is
worse than when artillery fires on its own troops …”
Perhaps Rokossovsky said this, though I can’t find a source. However,
Rokossovsky had immense respect for Stalin.
Но настоящий плевок будет впереди, когда Хрущев развернул антисталинскую
кампанию. Он попросил Рокоссовского написать что-нибудь о Сталине, да
почерней, как делали многие в те и последующие годы. Из уст Рокоссовского
это прозвучало бы: народный герой, любимец армии, сам пострадал в известные
годы... Маршал наотрез отказался писать подобную
статью, заявив Хрущеву:
— Никита Сергеевич, товарищ Сталин для
меня святой!
На другой день, как обычно, он приехал на работу, а в его кабинете, в его
кресле, уже сидел маршал К. С. Москаленко, который предъявил ему решение
Политбюро о снятии с поста заместителя
министра. Даже
не
позвонили
заранее...
[59]
… when Khrushchev launched
an anti-Stalinist campaign. [H]e asked Rokossovsky to write something about
Stalin, but in blacker tones, as many did in those and subsequent years. From
the lips of Rokossovsky it would have resounded: a national hero, the favorite
of the army, he himself suffered in certain years ... The Marshal flatly refused
to write such an article, saying to Khrushchev:
- Nikita Sergeevich, for me comrade
Stalin is a saint!
The next day, as usual, he
arrived at work, and Marshal K.S. Moskalenko was already sitting in his office,
in his chair, and showed him the decision of the Politburo to remove him from
the post of deputy minister. They didn't even call ahead to tell him.
Stalin personally apologized to Rokossovsky when the latter was released from
prison where Yezhov’s men had beaten him.[60]
Skopic:
… and at the Nuremberg
Trials, Wehrmacht field marshal Wilhelm Keitel testified that Hitler’s decision
to invade the USSR was based partly on his belief that “the first-class
high-ranking officers were wiped out by Stalin in 1937, and the new generation
cannot yet provide the brains they need.”
Once again, Skopic cites no source. If Keitel did say this, it would have been
out of ignorance.
Hitler and Heinrich Himmler knew that Tukhachevsky had been conspiring with
Germany, as did others in the German Foreign Ministry. For quotations from the
primary sources see Chapters 6 and 12 of Trotsky and the Military Conspiracy.
Skopic:
So not only did Stalin’s
“tough decisions” not win the war, but they actually played a part in getting
his country attacked and leaving it with a limited capacity to fight back.
Exactly the opposite is the case. In August 1937 Hitler himself told some of his
generals that their reliance on Tukhachevsky and the others had failed – the
treasonous Soviet generals were “under the ground.”[61]
Fascists Like Not Stalin, But the False Portrayal of Stalin
In the following paragraph Skopic notes that some contemporary fascists and
white supremacists claim to admire Stalin. Skopic concludes: “In other words,
the two [Stalin and Hitler] were more alike than different.”
Nonsense! These contemporary fascists believe the same phony history that Skopic
does. They imagine Stalin as anticommunists like Skopic, Trotskyists,
Khrushchev, Gorbachev, and anticommunist “scholars” portray him.
That is, these latter-day racists and fascists are reacting to this false
portrayal of Stalin. If they knew the truth about Stalin they would hate him
just as the racists and fascists of his day hated him.
Not “Hitler and Stalin” But Hitler and Churchill
It is more accurate to compare to Hitler not Stalin, but political leaders like
Winston Churchill and other British leaders, and any or all of the presidents of
France, Belgium, Italy, the Netherlands, and the United States of America. These
supposedly “democratic” leaders killed millions of workers and peasants in their
empires. To hundreds of millions of people around the world, the Soviet Union
was a beacon in the fight for independence and freedom from the savage
repression by Western colonial powers.
Skopic’s final paragraph summarizes many
of the lies he has written, and no doubt believes.
Stalin offered the world
nothing but weakness: constantly jumping at imaginary threats, alienating
potential allies, and dividing the working class against itself.
These claims by Skopic are false on the evidence, as we have demonstrated in
detail in published research.
A “strong” movement does
not need to arrest poets for using a different style to the approved one. For
anyone skeptical of the police or prisons, the idea that it even could is
monstrous.
This is a lie. Stalin never did any of these things. It is significant that
Skopic himself does not name even one such incident.
… aspects of the Stalinist
idea keep popping up—in defenses of dictators like Vladimir Putin and Bashar
al-Assad as opponents of “imperialism,” in disdain for feminism and LGBTQ rights
as distractions, and in the attitude that anything is justified if it leads to
power.
Shortly after Stalin’s death the American C.I.A. reported that Stalin had not
been
a dictator,[62] Nor does Skopic
even attempt to argue that Stalin believed that the quest for power justifies
“anything.”
Skopic concludes:
All of this is a poisonous
dead end for the left, and the question “how can we be sure you won’t create
another Stalin?” is a serious one for future parties and movements to address.
Here is the problem: Stalin has been slandered, falsely accused of many crimes
that he never committed. The reasons for this slander are obvious.
Capitalists hate the communist movement because of its magnificent successes.
The Revolution of 1917 throughout Russia and the victory against the Whites and
the Allied interventionists took place when Lenin was alive. But the rest of the
successes of the Soviet Union and the Comintern took place after Lenin’s death
when Stalin was in the leadership.
These include:
* Collectivization of agriculture, which put an end to the primitive individual
peasant cultivation and ended the cycle of devastating famines that had plagued
Russia (including the Ukraine) for at least a thousand years;
* Rapid industrialization, which created an industrial society and a modern army
within ten years; Paul Krugman, a leading US economist and columnist, wrote in
September 2022: “
Indeed, in the 1950s, and
even into the 1960s, many people around the world saw Soviet economic
development as a success story; a backward nation had transformed itself into a
major world power.[63]
* Through the Third Communist International, or Comintern, led by and
headquartered in the USSR, the worldwide anti-imperialist movement in colonial
possessions of the phony “democracies.”
* Socialist revolutions in China, Vietnam, Albania, and elsewhere, all led by
local communists but inspired and aided by Soviet agents.
* The defense of the Spanish Republic against the fascist and Nazi forces during
the Spanish Civil War, the single greatest act of proletarian internationalism
in history.
* The defeat of the fascists in World War II.
* Material security for workers: low-cost housing, education, and public transportation,
guaranteed employment, vacations, medical care, pensions.
* The promotion of women into jobs and professions traditionally reserved for
men.
* The commitment to oppose racism against minority ethnicities and nonwhite
peoples.
Conclusion: How Could Skopic
Be So Wrong?
Skopic is wrong on every
charge he makes against Stalin. But how is this possible? The charges of crimes
and misdeeds that Skopic levels against Stalin are generally consistent with
what we hear and read about Stalin almost everywhere -- from the mass media,
from textbooks, from academic specialists in history. How could all these
sources of historical information be wrong? Here is a brief explanation.
The field of “Soviet
Studies” has always been the servant of
anticommunist propaganda combined with the aim to understand the communist
movement for the purposes of maligning and weakening it. The contradiction
between understanding Soviet reality and providing anticommunist and anti-Stalin propaganda intensified with the Cold War. It continues today.
A second stream of
anticommunist propaganda has concentrated on the figure of Joseph Stalin, the
leading political figure in the USSR between the death of Vladimir Lenin in
January, 1924, until his own death in March, 1953. The most important forces
here are Leon Trotsky, Nikita Khrushchev, and Mikhail Gorbachev.
I first encountered the
“Stalin vs Trotsky” conflict within the anti-Vietnam War movement of the ‘60s. During
the past two decades I have done a great deal of research on Trotsky’s writings
between the mid-20s until his assassination in 1940. Contrary to what I had
expected, my research has revealed that Trotsky lied about Stalin so flagrantly
and so frequently that at first I found it hard to believe.
Trotsky’s lies became a
major source for Nikita Khrushchev, starting with his famous “Secret Speech” to
the XX Party Congress of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union (CPSU) on
February 25, 1956. During and especially after the XXII Party Congress in
October 1961, Khrushchev sponsored an avalanche of phony “research” by equally
phony historians who accused Stalin of innumerable crimes. This material became
“evidence” for generations of historians.
About a year after becoming
First Secretary of the CPSU Mikhail Gorbachev inaugurated a campaign of
accusations and vilification of Stalin that outdid Khrushchev’s. It too was
carried out by a phalanx of dishonest historians who published hundreds of books
and articles in which Stalin was accused of many terrible crimes.
Instead of exposing this
phony research, post-Soviet historians have doubled down on it, accepting
Trotsky-, Khrushchev- and Gorbachev-era allegations against Stalin and adding
yet more. They have done so despite the enormous number of primary-source
documents, largely from former Soviet archives, that have made it possible to
examine accusations against Stalin and either verify or – in all, or almost all,
cases – disprove them.
Today most falsehoods about
Stalin and the Stalin years come from academic historians. These academics draw
heavily upon the mountain of anti-Stalin and anticommunist lies produced by
Trotsky and under Khrushchev and Gorbachev, and also concoct some of their own.
On the Left Trotskyists
repeat Trotsky’s proven lies and repeat the anticommunist lies of “legitimated”
academics, while “socialists” – anticommunist social-democrats like Skopic is –
do likewise, without the cultlike repetition of the Trotskyists.
* * * * *
I have been studying the
allegations of crimes against Joseph Stalin for many years. My intention is to
research every one of them.
When I began years ago I
thought that it would be only a matter of time – perhaps a year or two – before
I discovered that at least one of these allegations against Stalin was true,
could be confirmed by primary-source evidence. I was wrong. So far, after
several decades of searching, I have yet to evidence that Stalin committed even
one crime, much less the myriad crimes that Trotsky, Khrushchev’s men,
Gorbachev’s men, and academic researchers have confidently asserted.
I intend to
keep looking. Perhaps some day I will discover at least one genuine crime
by Stalin that I can truthfully say is supported by the best evidence we have. If and when
I do, I will publish it and the evidence to support it.
[1] See my
essay “Marxists Behaving Badly. Anti-Stalinism on the 'Left'".
Cultural Logic 25 (2021), pp. 51-71. At
https://ojs.library.ubc.ca/index.php/clogic/article/view/197798
Accessed 05.15.2023.
[2] See Grover
Furr, with Vladimir L. Bobrov and Sven-Eric Holmström, Trotsky and
the Military Conspiracy. Soviet and Non-Soviet Evidence with the
Complete Transcript of the “Tukhachevsky Affair” Trial. Kettering,
OH: Erythrós Press and Media, LLC, 2021.
[3]
Sudoplatov, Special Tasks (1994), 67. Sudoplatov claims that
Stalin gave to him the assignment of planning Trotsky’s assassination.
Sudoplatov’s memoir is not always reliable but may well be so in this
case.
[4] Grover
Furr. The Murder of Sergei Kirov. History, Scholarship and the
Anti-Stalin Paradigm. Kettering, OH: Erythrós Press and Media, LLC,
2013.
[5] At
https://msuweb.montclair.edu/~furrg/research/zinovievstatement0836.html
Accessed 04.23.23.
[6] For much
more detail see my book The Murder of Sergei Kirov: History,
Scholarship, and the Anti-Stalin Paradigm, Kettering, OH: Erythrós Press
& Media, LLC, 2013.
[7]
See Grover Furr and Vladimir L. Bobrov, "Nikolai Bukharin's First
Statement of Confession in the Lubianka" Cultural Logic 2007. At
https://ojs.library.ubc.ca/index.php/clogic/issue/view/182857
[8] See Furr
and Bobrov. "Stephen Cohen's Biography of Bukharin: A Study in the
Falsehood of Khrushchev-Era 'Revelations'". Cultural Logic 2010. At
https://ojs.library.ubc.ca/index.php/clogic/article/view/191531/188643
[9] At
https://msuweb.montclair.edu/~furrg/research/bukhlastplea.html (English
translation 2010). The original Russian version of this article was
published in the online journal Aktual’naia Istoriia (= “Current
History”). Now archived here:
https://web.archive.org/web/20090220205239/http://actualhistory.ru/bukharin_last_plea
[10]
Practicing Stalinism 340 n.
109.
[11] I am
using the revised edition, subtitled “A Reassessment”, Oxford University
Press, 1990.
[12]
See the chapter “Reabilitatsionnoe moshenichestvo” [= “Rehabilitation
swindle”] in Furr and Bobrov, 1937. Pravosudie Stalina. Obzhalovaniiu
ne podlezhit! Moscow: Eksmo, 2010.
[13] Dva
sledstvennykh dela Evgenii Ginzburg. Ed. A. Litvin. Kazan’, 1994.
[14]
Kettering, OH: Erythrós Press & Media LLC, 2016.
[15]
Lubianka. Stalin i NKVD-NKGB-GUKR “Smersh”. 1939 – mart 1946.
Moscow: MDF, 2006, Doc. #2 p. 9. The note to this document on p.562 is
inaccurate, no doubt deliberately.
[16] Ibid. p.
564 n. 11. See Yezhov vs. Stalin 113.
[17]
"Oni
rastvorili Beriu v shchelochi" Kommersant-Vlast' 06.06.00. At
https://www.kommersant.ru/doc/17027
Accessed 04.09.23.
[18] M.A.
Marusenko and V.V. Petrov, “Forensic analysis of some aspects of the
Beria case” (in Russian). Klio (SPb) № 5(149) 2019, 71-80.
[19] At
https://www.chitalnya.ru/work/1228900/
[20] Helen
Womack, “Mass grave may hold Beria’s sex victims.” Independent
April 4, 1993. At
https://www.independent.co.uk/news/world/mass-grave-may-hold-beria-s-sex-victims-1453126.html
Accessed 05.08.23.
[21] I am
using this copy: https://www.politpros.com/journal/read/?ID=783
Other sites include
https://prometej.info/pravda-o-repressiyah-v-sssr/
[22]
“Rejoinder to Roger Keeran.” MLToday December 7, 2011. At
https://mltoday.com/rejoinder-to-roger-keeran/
Following the practice of international libraries, I chose to
spell Yezhov as “Ezhov” here.
[23]
At https://www.alexanderyakovlev.org/fond/issues-doc/1009320
Accessed 04.10.23.
[24] In Wendy
Z. Goldman and Donald Filtzer, eds., Hunger and War. Food
Provisioning in the Soviet Union During World War II. Bloomington,
IN: Indiana U. Press, 2015.
[25] Furr, “My
Reply to Reviews of Two of my Books by Jean-Jacques Marie in Historical
Materialism”, text and footnotes 9 and 10. At In Defense of Communism,
http://www.idcommunism.com/2022/01/jean-jacques-marie-vs-grover-furr-on-.html
and The Greanville Post,
https://www.greanvillepost.com/2022/01/04/historian-grover-furr-responds-to-trotskyist-slanders/
Also on my own home page at
https://msuweb.montclair.edu/~furrg/research/reply_to_marie_12.21.html#_ftn9
[26] See my
discussion in Khrushchev Lied, 96-101 and 364-366.
[27] In
Cultural Logic 2005, at
https://ojs.library.ubc.ca/index.php/clogic/article/view/191862/188831
Accessed 04.23.23.
[28]
Trotsky’s Lies, Leon Trotsky’s Collaboration with Germany and Japan, The
Fraud of the Dewey Commission, New Evidence of Trotsky’s Conspiracy.
[29] See
Trotsky and the Military Conspiracy for a great deal of evidence.
[30] Stalin,
“The Tasks of Economic Executives.” At
http://www.marx2mao.com/Stalin/TEE31.html page 526.
Accessed 04.23.23.
[31] Yuri
Ribalkin, Operatsiia X. Sovetskaia voennaia pomoshch’ respublikanskoi
Ispanii 1936-1939. Moscow: AIRO-XX, 2000, p. 30. English translation
from Daniel Kowalsky, Stalin and the Spanish Civil War. Cambridge
University Press 2004, Chapter 6. At
http://www.gutenberg-e.org/kod01/kod14.html
Accessed April 26, 2023.
[32] Helen
Graham, email to Grover Furr September 5, 2001.
[33] Cambridge
University Press, 2002, 369.
[34] See the
report by Georgii Dimitrov, head of the Comintern, Document 5 in Ronald
Radish, Mary Radosh Habec, Grigory Sevostianov, eds., Spain Betrayed:
The Soviet Union in the Spanish Civil War. New Haven: Yale
University Press, June 2001. One important phrase is mistranslated – no
doubt deliberately – here. For discussion of this phrase see Grover
Furr, “Anatomy of a Fraudulent Scholarly Work: Ronald Radosh’s Spain
Betrayed.” Cultural Logic 2003. At
https://ojs.library.ubc.ca/index.php/clogic/article/view/191915/188876
Accessed 05.01.23
[35] Journal
of Labor and Society, 2019; 1-20. At
https://msuweb.montclair.edu/~furrg/research/gf_trotsky_maydays_0519.pdf
[36] Paul
Preston, enail to Grover Furr April 6, 2023.
[37]
Southworth, “The Grand Camouflage’: Julián Gorkin, Burnett Bolloten and
the Spanish Civil War.” Chapter 10 of Paul Preston, ed., The Republic
Besieged. Civil War in Spain 1936-1939. Edinburgh University Press,
1996. 261-310.
[38] Fernando
Hernández Sánchez, Comunistas sin Partido. Jesús Hernández Ministro
en la Guerra Civil, Disidente en el Exilio. Madrid: Edición
Raíces, 2007, pp. 28, 35.
[39] Preston,
The Spanish Holocaust: inquisition and extermination in
twentieth-century Spain. Norton, 2012, page 411.
[40] See Furr,
“Leon Trotsky and the Barcelona 'May Days' of 1937" cited above.
[41] Orwell,
“Looking back on the Spanish War.” (1942). At
https://www.orwellfoundation.com/the-orwell-foundation/orwell/essays-and-other-works/looking-back-on-the-spanish-war/
[42] See
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Operation_Unthinkable and the section
“Possible Soviet awareness.”
Accessed 04.26.23
[43] See
Geoffrey Roberts, “Moscow's Cold War on the Periphery: Soviet Policy in
Greece, Iran, and Turkey, 1943-8.” Journal of Contemporary History
46(1) 2011, p. 59.
[44] “Mozhet
li gomoseksualist sostoiat’ chlenom kommunisticheskoi partii?’ G. Uait –
I.V. Stalinu. Mai 1934 g.” Istochnik 5-6 (1993), 186.
[45] Blood
Lies. The Evidence that Every Accusation Against Joseph Stalin and the
Soviet Union in Timothy Snyder’s Bloodlands Is False. New
York: Red Star Publications, 2014.
[46]
Stalin. Waiting for … the Truth.
Exposing the Falsehoods in Stephen Kotkin’s Stalin. Waiting for
Hitler, 1929-1941. New York: Red Star Publishers, 2019.
[48] Socialist
Realist Painting During the Stalinist Era (1934-1941). Edwin Mellen
Press, 2010, p. 97.
32-[49]
Quoted in Nadezhda Viktorovna Dubrovina, “Sotsialisticheskii realism:
metod ili stil’.” Vestnik Tamboskogo universiteta. Seria:
Gumanitarnye nauki. 7 (99), 2011. Quoted at
https://cyberleninka.ru/article/n/sotsialisticheskiy-realizm-metod-ili-stil
[50] Sheila
Fitzpatrick, “Culture and Politics under Stalin: A Reappraisal,” Slavic
Review 35 (June 1976) p . 218. ,
[51] Lawrence
H. Schwartz. Marxism and Culture. The CPUSA and Aesthetics in the 1930s.
Port Washington, NY: Kennikat Press, 1980, p. 33.
[52] Pavel
Filonov. Ochevidets nezrimogo. St. Petersburg: Palace editions,
2006.
[53] For much
evidence, see Furr, The Moscow Trials as Evidence. (2018).
[54] https://ru.openlist.wiki/Табидзе_Тициан_Юстинович_(1893) Accessed
04.16.23.
[55] Pravda
June 27, 1945. At http://www.hrono.ru/libris/stalin/15-5.html
Accessed 04.30.23
[56] For
example, at http://www.hrono.ru/statii/2001/rkka_repr.php
Accessed 04.16.23.
[57] In the “Spravka”
(Report) of the Shvernik Report. See “Spravka Komissii Prezidiuma TsK
KPSS ‘O Proverke Obvinenii, Pred”iavlennykh v 1937 Godu Sudebnymi i
Partiinymi Organami tt. Tukhachevskomu, Iakiru, Uborevichu i Drugim
Voennym Deiateliam, v Izmene Rodiny, Terrore i Voennom Zagovore.” In
Reabilitatsiia. Kak Eto
Bylo. Febral’ 1956 – nachalo 80-kh godov.
Т. 2.
Moskva: “Materik”, 2003, 671- 788.
[58]
Trotsky and the Military Conspiracy. Kettering, OH: Erythrós Press &
Media, LLC, 2021, Chapter 8.
[59] Feliks
Chuev, Soldaty imperii (1998), 353.
[60] Ibid,
336.
[61] See
Trotsky and the Military Conspiracy Chapter 8; for Hitler’s
statement of August 1937, see Chapter 6.
[62] "Marxists
Behaving Badly. Anti-Stalinism on the 'Left'". Cultural Logic 25
(2021), pp. 51-71
[63] To leave
it at that is taboo, of course, so Krugman added this falsehood:
“(killing millions in the process, but who's counting?)” Krugman
newsletter 09.2022.
https://www.nytimes.com/2022/09/02/opinion/russia-economy-mikhail-gorbachev.html
Accessed 05.12.2023.