Date post: | 22-Jan-2016 |
Category: |
Documents |
Upload: | cole-smead |
View: | 218 times |
Download: | 0 times |
LENIN’S POLICIES FROM 1918 -1924
Origins of the Civil War
Takeover of Lenin and the decreesLed to depopulation of the cities,Widespread famine and a drop in
living standardsFear of workers’ revolutions
spreading to EuropePolitical opposition to Communism
The Bolsheviks controlled the heartland of Russia and faced attacks on all sides.
The capital was moved to Moscow and key Bolsheviks surrounded themselves with bodyguards.
Conservative Generals led
the White Armies in attacks and battles against the Red Army.
M
• The Ukraine, the Poles and Cossacks wanted independence.
• Britain, France, Japan and Czechoslovakia supported the Whites.
• The Red Armies faced a crisis and Lenin and Trotsky were forced to introduce harsh policies to keep the revolutionary army supplied.
• The White Armies also requisitioned supplies.
Trotsky and the Red Army
To horse, Proletarian!
Trotsky formed the Red Army from conscripts, Bolsheviks and anti-tsarist soldiers.
This Civil war poster by Victor Deni depicts Trotsky as Saint George slaying the counter-revolutionary dragon. Using Christian imagery and
mythology to present a revolutionary message was common in the Soviet propaganda.
http://www.fbuch.com/posters.htm
WAR COMMUNISM
• Forced requisitioning of agricultural produce• Strict price controls on agricultural produce• State monopoly on grain purchases• Near nationalisation of manufacturing industries• Nationalisation of retailing• Forced labour for civilians and soldiers• Money based trade replaced by barter due to
hyperinflation. Money became worthless.
Food supply crisis
• WHY? Poor infrastructure and transport
Peasant resistance
Kulak resistance
Disruption caused by WWI and the Civil War.
White Terror
Red Terror
Bolshevik propaganda posters
"The workers and the peasants are finishing off the Polish gentry and the barons, but the workers on the homefront also have not forgotten about help to the peasant economy. Long livethe union of the workers and peasants!" At the bottom: "Week of the Peasant."
(From N. I. Baburina, ed., The Soviet Political Poster, 1917-1980, from the USSR Lenin Library Collection [Harmondsworth:Penguin, 1985], plate 18.)
"Without a saw, axe, or nails you cannot build a home. These tools are made by the worker, and he has tobe fed.“
(From N. I. Baburina, ed., The Soviet Political Poster, 1917-1980, from the USSR Lenin Library Collection [Harmondsworth:Penguin, 1985], plate 21.)
Propaganda used by the White Army
This poster depicts Trotsky as a ‘red skinned demon like caricature’ in this poster. The depiction attempts to appeal to anti-Semitism and Chinese soldiers (below, wearing braids and blue and gold uniforms).
The Bread War
• The Bolsheviks waged a civil war against the peasants for grain.
• Hoarding and black markets arose
• The Cheka and Food Patrols terrorised
peasants.
Shortages became
more widespread.
LENIN: "Merciless war against the kulaks! Death to them."
• Lenin in reality despised the peasantry as ‘petty bourgeoisie’ who were against forced collectivisation of land.
• He favoured the interests of the working class although trade unions and strikes in the cities and towns were also banned.
• The Bolsheviks began a ‘class war’ against the ‘enemies of the State’ while the war raged against the ‘capitalist invaders’.
The Red Terror
• Brutality increased as uncooperative peasants refused to hand over all their grain.
• Grain had to be sold to the State at fixed prices.
• Resisting peasants were branded ‘kulaks’ and were targeted.
Zinoviev 1918
• “We are very well aware that we cannot carry through the proletarian revolution without crushing the village kulaks and without annihilating them psychologically and, if necessary, physically. . . . The revolution in the village should take the kulak by the throat and strangle him according to all the rules of soviet art; it is precisely for this that we need a genuine, operative worker-peasant machine for strangling kulaks."
www.gmu.edu
Consequences
Victims of famine in the Volga region, 1921.
PRODUCTION OF GRAIN
1913 80 MILLION TONS
1921 37.6 MILLION TONS
INDUSTRIAL OUTPUT (millions of tons)
1913 1921
Coal 29 9
Oil 9.2 3.8
Iron 4.2 0.1
Steel 4.3 0.2
Sugar 1.3 0.05
Elec (in million kWh) 2039 520
29 MILLION RUSSIANS EXPERIENCED FAMINE. 5 MILLION DIED
Concentration camps – The Gulag
• “In April 1919, following Dzerzhinsky’s recommendation and with Lenin’s approval, the Soviet government ordered the establishment of a network of concentration camps, at least one per province, the first of its kind in history, which served as a model and inspiration to Hitler and his Nazis and was later to become infamous as the GULAG. By 1923 the number of these camps had reached 315.” (Warren H. Carroll, The Rise and Fall of the Communist Revolution, p. 142)
A man who froze to death
Alexander Solzhenitsyn wrote The Gulag Archipelago about his experiences..
THE KRONSTADT REBELLION1921
THE FIRST OPEN
REBELLION
AGAINST THE
COMMUNIST
REGIME.
The fortress and naval base at Kronstadt
Alarm bells for the Communists!
• Kronstadt sailors sympathised with the striking workers and the victims of War Communism.
• Drew up a 15 point petition including free elections to the soviets and freedom of the press.
• Held a mass meeting of 15 000 people to discuss frustrations with Lenin’s regime.
Course of events
• Elected a committee to lead rebellion.
• Adopted the 1917 slogan “All power to the soviets- not to parties.”
• Word got out of a “Third Revolution”
• Lenin issued an ultimatum but the rebels continued with a peaceful revolt.
• The Bolsheviks attacked the fortress and after 10 days the revolt was crushed.
• 10 000 of Lenin’s troops died
• 4 000 rebels deported to labour camps
• 74 leaders publicly shot
• 8 000 soldiers, sailors and people escaped to Finland.
• Families of the rebels either killed or deported to Siberia.
Call in the Red Army, the Cheka and Trotsky.
• The sea was frozen and the Red Army attacked with machine guns ready.
• The Cheka kept back and shot any soldiers who refused to attack.
THREAT OF COUNTER-REVOLUTION AND ECONOMIC COLLAPSE
MADE LENIN INTRODUCE
THE
NEW ECONOMIC POLICY
TO SAVE THE REVOLUTION.
The New Economic Policy 1921-1924
• An economic policy that was:- pragmatic- market-related- recovery measure- compromise with some capitalistic
measures- intended to be an interim measure- NOT aimed at abandoning Communism.
Measures
• Limited private ownership in agriculture and industry – surpluses could be sold for profit. A grain tax was introduced.
• Small industries could employ up to 20 workers but NEPMEN lost their right to vote.
• Kulaks could hire labour and lease land.
• Agricultural production increased
Encourage agricultural production by abolishing food requisitioning and price controls. Surpluses could be sold on the open market.
Create an interdependence between the countryside and the urban areas.
The Communists still controlled the commanding heights of the economy – banking, shipping, large industrial plants and foreign trade.
Collectivisation was relaxed.
"From the NEP Russia will come the socialist Russia."
An assessment of the NEP
POSITIVE NEGATIVE
1924-1928 economic growth
Unemployment not solved
More stability experienced
Prices still too high for peasants
Electrification of Russia Classes were reintroduced
Some peasants e.g. kulaks became wealthy
Many peasants still farmed with backward equipment.
Class distinction led to discrimination and a lack of unity.
Many people were angry about personal gain of Nepmen and Kulaks.
By 1926 economy had reached pre-WW I levels.
Food supply still a problem; methods not socialistic enough.
Lenin’s death
Lenin suffered four strokes and died in 1924.
His brain was removed to study the origins of his ‘genius’.
His body was embalmed and placed on permanent exhibition in the Lenin Mausoleum in Moscow.
Despite requesting no memorials or statues in his honour, many were erected to honour him.
Petrograd was renamed Leningrad in his honour.