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TIME: Almanac of the 20th Century
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TIME, Almanac of the 20th Century.ISO
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1990
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90
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jan_mar
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0219009.000
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<text>
<title>
(Feb. 19, 1990) Lenin's Legacy:Headed For Dustheap
</title>
<history>
TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1990
Feb. 19, 1990 Starting Over
</history>
<link 07993>
<link 08188>
<link 00017>
<article>
<source>Time Magazine</source>
<hdr>
WORLD, Page 36
Headed for the Dustheap
</hdr>
<body>
<p>Once upon a time, communism claimed to be the future. How
Lenin's party rose to power and then disintegrated is this
century's most gripping tale
</p>
<p>BY Otto Friedrich
</p>
<p> "This music makes me want to speak sweet nonsense and pat
on the head people who can create such beauty while living in
this filthy hell. Nowadays we can't pat heads. We've got to hit
heads, hit them without mercy."
</p>
<p>-- Lenin, on listening to Beethoven
</p>
<p> The first Congress of the Russian Social Democratic Workers'
Party, later to become the Communist Party, consisted of just
nine delegates representing four labor unions, a workers'
newspaper and the Jewish Social Democratic Bund. The nine
delegates met in Minsk on the first three days of March 1898,
proclaimed themselves a party, called for the overthrow of the
Romanov rulers and then returned to their homes, where eight
of the nine were promptly arrested. The fact that the heirs of
this absurd little group actually did overthrow the Russian
government not 22 years later was due largely to the malign
genius of one man who wasn't even present at the Minsk meeting:
Vladimir Ulyanov, who called himself Lenin (also at various
times Meyer, Richter and Jordanov).
</p>
<p> Son of a highly cultured schoolteacher, Lenin was expelled
from school for taking part in a student protest. While idling
at home, he discovered the works of Karl Marx, which prophesied
the inevitable collapse of capitalism and its empires. He did
finally get a law degree, but his fascination with Marxism led
him to Switzerland, to an encounter with the exiled Georgi
Plekhanov, the eminence grise of Russian Marxism; then to
meetings with other radicals in Paris and Berlin; then, on his
return home, to arrest, trial, jail and exile in Siberia. So
Lenin was far away when the Social Democratic Party was born in
Minsk and then nearly destroyed. But when he emerged from
Siberia in 1900, he once again joined forces with Plekhanov and
vowed to start a newspaper that would organize a rebirth of the
Social Democrats beyond the reach of the Czar's police. Lenin's
newspaper, Iskra (Spark), appeared in Munich at the end of that
year, and a second meeting of the party opened in Brussels in
1903.
</p>
<p> The tiny party immediately divided. Lenin was determined
that it should remain small, highly disciplined and "as
conspiratorial as possible." It must be the "vanguard of the
working class" but no more than a vanguard. Lenin's more
open-minded opponents wanted to take in any and all supporters,
find partners and make coalitions. Lenin, as usual, insisted
on getting his way, and he got it. With their majority, the
Leninists took the name of Bolshevik, after bolshoi, big. The
smaller group was called Mensheviks (minority).
</p>
<p> This split in revolutionary strategies lasted for decades,
and though the Bolsheviks claimed a majority, they were often
outvoted within the party. Plekhanov tended to side with the
Mensheviks, and so did an obstreperously brilliant newcomer
named Lev Bronstein, who signed his fiery pamphlets with the
name Trotsky. Lenin fought ruthlessly for control. He denounced
his opponents as not Social Democrats but "Social Chauvinists,"
as "puerile," as "windbags"; after he lost a vote, he would
accuse the winners of spiritless "parliamentarianism." When the
Russian workers rose up in the largely spontaneous revolt of
1905, it was Trotsky, still only 25, who headed St. Petersburg's
first soviet of workers and temporarily seized power in its
name; when the Czar's soldiers crushed the revolt, Trotsky was
sent to Siberia (he soon escaped on a hijacked sleigh). Lenin
remained in Geneva, planning, maneuvering. In 1912 he finally
had the strength to expel all the Mensheviks from his party.
</p>
<p> It was World War I, which the exiled Lenin fervently
opposed, that finally brought him to the threshold of victory.
Battered by German triumphs, disheartened by bread riots and
other signs of popular hostility, Czar Nicholas II abdicated
in March 1917 and handed over power to a provisional government
headed by the conservative Prince Lvov. Lenin passionately
argued that the time for revolution was now.
</p>
<p> Lenin could hardly lead a revolution from exile in Geneva,
of course, but when he asked Berlin for permission to travel
home through Germany, the Germans happily agreed to provide him
with a sealed railway carriage (rather like a container for a
deadly bacillus) and even allocated secret funds to aid his
plans to stop the war. And so, after ten more years of exile,
Lenin finally arrived by train at the Finland Station in
Petrograd on April 16, 1917. He climbed onto an armored car and
began making a speech. "The people need peace. The people need
bread. The people need land," he cried. "And they give you war,
hunger, no bread...We must fight for the social
revolution."
</p>
<p> When rioting broke out in July, Prince Lvov banned the
Bolsheviks (who grew fourfold, to hundreds of thousands, in
1917), sent Lenin into hiding and arrested Trotsky (newly
arrived from New York City and newly allied with Lenin). Lvov
then resigned in favor of his War Minister, Alexander Kerensky,
who called in troops to maintain order in the capital and shut
down Bolshevik newspapers. Trotsky, out of jail again,
mobilized Red Guards to defend the Petrograd soviet, which he
now headed. The government troops would not fight. Lenin called
for an armed uprising. Almost without opposition, the Bolsheviks
seized government buildings, electric plants, the post office
and finally the Winter Palace, where Kerensky's Cabinet had
taken refuge.
</p>
<p> The next day, Nov. 8, Lenin appeared before the Congress of
Soviets, rejected all talk of a socialist coalition government
and insisted on an all-Bolshevik Cabinet. He became Premier,
with Trotsky as Foreign Minister. This was not because the
Bolsheviks were the biggest or most popular party. In elections
for a constituent assembly, they won only 25% of the votes, in
contrast to about 62% for various moderate socialist groups,
notably the peasant-backed Socialist Revolutionaries, and 13%
for various bourgeois parties. Dismissing that as a "formal,
juridical" matter, Lenin simply disbanded the constituent
assembly after one meeting. And in 1918 he banned all parties
other than his own, which he had renamed the Communist Party.
</p>
<p> In taking such high-handed actions, Lenin now had the weapon
of a new police force known as the Cheka, which authorized
local soviets to "arrest and shoot immediately" all members of
"counterrevolutionary organizations." When a Socialist
Revolutionary named Fanny Kaplan shot Lenin in the neck, the
Cheka rounded up and executed 500 of her party comrades in one
night. Lenin's view: "We have never renounced and cannot
renounce terror." As for the future role of the Communists, the
Eighth Party Congress decreed in 1919 that "the Russian
Communist Party should master for itself undivided political
supremacy in the soviets and practical supervision over all
their work."
</p>
<p> But governing a disintegrating nation was difficult.
Although Trotsky made peace with the Germans in the Treaty of
Brest-Litovsk, Berlin's price was the separation from Russia
of Poland, the Baltic states and the Ukraine. British and
French troops landed in Murmansk to keep Russian supplies out
of German hands. Various anti-Bolshevik "White" armies sprang
up in the south and in Siberia. Japanese and American troops
landed in Vladivostok.
</p>
<p> By the time all those forces were pushed back or negotiated
away, the Soviets' hastily nationalized and collectivized
economy was a shambles. By 1920 industrial production had
dropped to about 15% of the prewar level; runaway inflation had
made the ruble nearly worthless; foreign trade had plummeted
to almost zero. Peasants whose crops were requisitioned for the
cities began hiding their harvests or not harvesting at all,
and in 1921 famine killed uncounted millions.
</p>
<p> Confronted with this disaster, Lenin zigzagged. According
to the New Economic Policy inaugurated in 1921, private
enterprise was once again permitted, farmers could keep or sell
more of their crops, overtime pay was restored, a new state
bank reformed the currency (sound familiar?). Predictably
enough, improvements soon followed--production up, trade up.
But in this ambiguous moment of success, Lenin suffered a
stroke. He struggled to stay at his post, to finish his work,
but two more strokes increasingly paralyzed him, and after 22
months of decline, he died in 1924, at only 53.
</p>
<p> He left a party deeply divided over the New Economic Policy,
which Trotsky and others criticized as a return to capitalism,
and over its whole future. Many considered Trotsky the natural
heir. But Lenin unfortunately left the party machinery in the
hands of a General Secretary even more ruthless than he had
been. Joseph Vissarionovich Dzhugashvili, who had adopted the
nom de guerre of Stalin (meaning steel), was a Georgian, a
onetime seminarian. He had made himself particularly useful by
staging several armed robberies to replenish the Bolshevik
party treasury. He was smart, tough and a master of intrigue.
</p>
<p> In his political testament, Lenin had urged his heirs to
"remove Stalin" on the grounds that he was rude and abused his
power. Stalin shrewdly formed an alliance with two of Lenin's
oldest comrades, Gregori Zinoviev, who was then chief of the
non-Russian Communist parties assembled in the Comintern, and
Lev Kamenev, a Politburo member. This triumvirate controlled
enough votes to block Trotsky and keep Stalin at the party
helm.
</p>
<p> After defeating Trotsky, Stalin broke with his allies and
joined forces with the more conservative leaders Nikolai
Bukharin and Alexei Rykov. In the late 1920s he drove Trotsky,
Zinoviev and Kamenev out of the party, then turned against
Bukharin and Rykov too. By 1929, without ever having held any
government post, he was master of all he surveyed. He ordered
a relentless program of forced industrialization and collective
farming, a program that cost millions of lives. Trotsky fled
into exile.
</p>
<p> In 1936, as the uncrowned Czar of all the Russias, Stalin
drew up a new constitution that described the Communist Party,
which always remained an elite, never enrolling more than 10%
of the adult population, as "the leading core of all
organizations...both public and state." Between 1939 and
1952, however, Stalin held no party congresses. He preferred
to run things by himself, as demonstrated in the great purge
trials of 1936-38.
</p>
<p> Lenin believed in purges, but he had never attempted
anything on this scale. Before a fascinated and rather
horrified world, one broken old Bolshevik after another stood
up in court and confessed to myriad forms of treason,
corruption and sabotage. Almost 50 of them were sentenced to
death, including Zinoviev, Rykov and Secret Police Chief G.G.
Yagoda. Marshal Mikhail Tukhachevsky, one of the heroes of the
civil war, was sent to a firing squad, along with seven other
generals. Many others died in secret. And as a kind of horrid
climax to the purge, a Soviet agent befriended Trotsky in
Mexico City, then hacked him to death in 1940 with a
steel-bladed alpenstock.
</p>
<p> Despite such crimes, this was a period of great growth and
strength for the Communist Party all around the world. In a
time of global depression and the sinister rise of fascism,
many people regarded both capitalism and democracy as doomed
and Communism as the wave of the future. Precisely because it
was militant and authoritarian and claimed to have all the
answers, Communism attracted people as diverse as Andre
Malraux, Paul Robeson, Bertolt Brecht. Their allegiance took
a severe beating when Stalin negotiated an alliance with Hitler
that enabled the Nazis to start World War II in 1939. But when
Hitler invaded Russia in 1941, the Soviets suddenly became
admired members of the Western alliance.
</p>
<p> When Stalin died in 1953, he was far gone in paranoia,
convinced that a cabal of Jewish doctors was trying to poison
him. Only after shooting Stalin's reptilian police chief,
Lavrenty Beria, did the Kremlin survivors, notably the new
Communist Party Secretary, Nikita Khrushchev, try to shift to
a new policy known as "the thaw." In a four-hour speech before
the 20th Party Congress, supposedly secret but widely leaked,
Khrushchev described to the faithful for the first time the
full range of Stalin's crimes. ("But where were you during all
those years?" one listener asked Khrushchev, according to a joke
at the time. "Who said that?" shouted Khrushchev, who had been
one of Stalin's commissars in the Ukraine. Silence. "That's
where I was," said Khrushchev.)
</p>
<p> That same year, 1956, the thaw melted too quickly as far as
the Kremlin was concerned. Polish crowds demonstrated to demand
a change of leadership. The Hungarians even overthrew their
government and enjoyed one heady week of independence. Then
Khrushchev sent in Soviet tanks to restore the old order. When
he was forced out in 1964, Leonid Brezhnev seemed even more
determined to maintain that old order forever, sending more
tanks to suppress Czech independence in 1968 and warning that
he would do so again whenever necessary. He too proclaimed a
new constitution in 1977, declaring more strongly than ever
that the Communist Party was "the leading and guiding force of
Soviet society."
</p>
<p> It sometimes seemed that the tank-backed Communist Party
monolith was now immovable, impenetrable, even immortal. But
Brezhnev died, and so did his two successors, and the
unthinkable idea of Communists actually surrendering power
slowly began to become thinkable.
</p>
<p>-- Reported by Peter Hawthorne/Cape Town and Scott
MacLeod/Johannesburg
</p>
<p>RED-LETTER YEARS
</p>
<p> 1898. The Russian Social Democrat Worker's Party is formed.
</p>
<p> 1902. Vladimir Lenin, editor of the Social Democrats,
newspaper Iskra (Spark) writes his seminal What Is to Be Done?,
detailing the concept and role of the party.
</p>
<p> 1903. The party splits into the Lenin-led Bolsheviks (the
majority) and the Mensheviks (the minority).
</p>
<p> 1917. Czar Nicholas II abdicates, and political parties are
legalized. Lenin leads the Bolsheviks to power in the October
Revolution.
</p>
<p> 1918. The Bolsheviks disband the freely elected assembly,
establish one-party rule and rename themselves the All-Russian
Communist Party.
</p>
<p> 1922. The U.S.S.R. is officially formed.
</p>
<p> 1924. Lenin dies, and during the next three years Josef
Stalin outmaneuvers his rivals for power.
</p>
<p> 1929. The collectivization of agriculture begins, and
results in the deaths of millions of peasants by murder and
starvation.
</p>
<p> 1934. Stalin consolidates his authority and starts mass
political purges that claim millions of more lives during the
next four years.
</p>
<p> 1941. Stalin assumes the post of Prime Minister to accompany
his role as head of the party.
</p>
<p> 1952. The party is renamed the Communist Party of the Soviet
Union (C.P.S.U.).
</p>
<p> 1953. Stalin dies and later that year is succeeded by Nikita
Khrushchev, 60.
</p>
<p> 1956. Khrushchev details the horrors of Stalin's rule at a
closed session of the 20th Party Congress and begins his
destalinization policies, inspiring a generation of party
officials, including Mikhail Gorbachev.
</p>
<p> 1964. Khrushchev is ousted and replaced by Leonid Brezhnev,
58.
</p>
<p> 1977. The new Soviet constitution formally recognizes the
</p>
<p> 1982. Brezhnev dies and is replaced by Yuri Andropov, 68.
</p>
<p> 1984. Andropov dies and is replaced by Konstantin Chernenko,
74.
</p>
<p> 1985. Chernenko dies and is replaced by Mikhail Gorbachev,
54.
</p>
<p> 1986. Gorbachev spells out his reform programs of glasnost
and perestroika.
</p>
<p> 1988. Party members approve Gorbachev's proposals for a
dramatic revamping of the political system.
</p>
<p> 1989. A new legislative body, the Congress of People's
Deputies, is elected, and Gorbachev becomes its President.
</p>
<p> 1990. At Gorbachev's urging, the Central Committee votes to
surrender the party's monopoly on power.
</p>
</body>
</article>
</text>