The Revolutions of 1917 were mainly Bolshevik in nature and in leadership or were the Revolutions of 1917 mainly due to non-Bolshevik causes, the Bolsheviks merely hijacking the revolution at the last minute?
The popular myth that the Bolsheviks hijacked
the revolution during the last minute suggests that the
Bolsheviks provided little leadership and that it was mainly due
to other causes. This view fails to acknowledge the fact that
'revolutions were often made by active minorities who tap
groundswells of discontent.'
This paper proposes to examine the nature of
the 1917Revolutions, specifically the events leading to the
October coup. First, the paper will look briefly at the events
behind the February abdication. Second, it examines the relative
weakness of the other parties and the Provisional Government.
Next, Lenin's ideologies are shown to be the key in winning the
support of masses. It then shows that the Bolsheviks polished up
their skills in attempting coup both in July and finally in
October. Finally, by looking at the actions taken by the
Bolsheviks when they came into power, the paper will come to an
adequate conclusion.
The collapse of the Romanov Dynasty
(1613-1917) might appear to be the result of WWI, but it was a
catalyst to a process which for decades been sapping the old
order. Military defeats such as Crimean War (1853-6),
Russo-Jap War (1904-5) and W.W.I damaged the reputation of the
Tsar. In Russia, political legitimacy was not one of popularity
nor morality, but invincibility and fear. Nicholas II processed
none of the latter qualities. Even with the removal of
Rasputin, it proved to the masses that their miseries were tied
up with the entire monarchical order. By 1916, with a defeated
army, hungry cities and a stubborn Nicholas refusing to
liberalise the regime, the answer was clear. The Tsar had to go.
Contrary to popular beliefs, social revolution
followed the act of abdication. Had Nicholas cared about only his
own power and not the outcome of the war effort, the military
unrest in Petrograd could be quelled with brutality
characteristic of Lenin. Unfortunately, Nicholass
generals under the influence of the politicians in Petrograd
wanted to stop the mutiny reaching the front-line. The Tsar
abdicated for the sake of a military victory. Once the
mandate of the Tsar was no longer in existence, the peasants,
workers and the soldiers revolted. In their eyes, it was not
oppression of the Tsar that was the last straw, but the weakness
of the monarchy. The subsequent coalitions of the Provisional
government inspired no fear like that of Ivan IV, only Lenin
matched up to the task.
The February Revolution, started
strangely enough by housewives on 23 February 1917 demonstrating
under the banner of International Womens Day. It quickly
turned into a mob riot by 25 February. Orders from the Tsar to
disband the Duma and suppressing the movement by Petrograd
garrison were duly ignored. When the Tsar was toppled, the
left and the right were stupefied by this turn of events.
Certainly, none thought that it would be so fast and easy for a
perceived bread riot to turn into a genuine revolution.
Lenin himself was surprised by the fall of the tsar and he would
not be back until 8 April 1917.
Once the Tsar fell, the next question
was: who would occupy the power vacuum? N. Berdyaev in 'The
Origin of Russian Communism' maintained that moderate
people of liberal and humanist principles can never flourish in
the elemental sweep of a revolution brought by war.
Therefore, the primary events played out in the year of 1917 were
the power struggles between the Provisional Government, the
moderate Socialists and the Bolsheviks.
The response of the masses signalled that
the next government had to make the people identify with the
government. This was one of the main weakness of the
Provisional government and the strength of the Bolsheviks. While
the Bolsheviks would have their success attributed to fulfilling
the needs the masses, evidences pointed otherwise. Lenin
saw the masses as a stepping stone for his craving for power. He
wallowed himself among bourgeois intelligentsia and he never knew
what the masses might do. This was no Achilles heel
as his game plan was power and the speed which he jumped at
unexpected chances landed his Bolsheviks in power. There
was a distinct difference between doing what the masses want and
handling out post-dated cheques. Lenin belonged to the latter.
While the Petrograd Soviet of Workers
Deputies had the power, it was bound to lose out to Lenin who was
even too impatient to be a true orthodox Marxist.
Mensheviks leaders of the Petrograd Executive Committee N.N.
Sukhanov took the revolutionary political theory seriously. They
believed that the power brought by the bourgeois revolution of
February must not be toppled and the workers party should
instead wait for the third stage of the revolution whereby they
would then assume power. On the other hand, the provisional
Government was incapable of exercising real power and its very
existence tenuous. It pushed all important decisions such
as land distribution to the formation of the Constituent
Assembly. This in turn meant that decisions were temporary. Its
numerous laws aimed at combating the excess of the Tsar rule were
not replaced by new institutions. This laissez-faire political
structure did not sit well with a country accustomed to centuries
of autocracy. Dual power was instrumental in creating an
ineffective government.
It would be useful now, to examine
the ideologies behind the Bolsheviks or what Lenin believed in.
Afterall, it was the nature of the Bolsheviks programme that won
the support of the urban population and garrisons and
satisfied the peasantry. In as early as 1902, Lenin (What
Is To Be Done?) argued for a tight, hierarchically organised
party composed of delicated people devoted totally to the
proletarian revolution. This organisation was to be highly
secretive and tightly organised. Consequently, democratic
management of the party was impossible. This 'vanguard of the
revolutionary forces' foreshadowed the course for an elitist and
authoritarian government. Next, he agreed with Sergey
Nechayev that it was necessary for a violent revolution to be
launched as soon as possible. The vanguard should not wait for
the socio-economic conditions described by Marx and Engels.
By next year in the Second congress (RSDWP) in London, Lenin
proposed close co-operation with the poor and landless peasants.
He disagreed that these people should be classified as bourgeois.
In a crisis, the land hungry, revolutionary by instinct and
traditional peasants would side the workers. By contrast, Lenin's
approach was so much closer to the native Russian mentality.
Just as war toppled the Romanovs, it would be
the death knell to the Provisional Government and the subsequent
coalitions. In the first crisis, which lead to the resignations
of Miliukov and Guchkov over the continuation of war, the
liberals lost their last chance to maintain an independent lead
in the government. The first new coalition (May 5th) signified a
partial reversal of the Menshevik stand against taking power,
which proved dangerous. In associating themselves more with the
Provisional Government together with its unpopular and subsequent
doomed Galician Offensive (18th June), they distanced themselves
from the masses.
The Bolsheviks were quick to exploit it.
It was interesting to note that Lenins long term aims in
April Theses (April 7) did not promise peace, but a civil war of
classes to boot. The Bolsheviks wanted to use Russia as a base
for world revolution and they were not too concern what happened
to Russia. Once again Lenin rejected the two stage
revolution and insisted on immediate seziure of power by his
party so as to implement his slogan 'Peace, Land and Bread.' The
Bolsheviks should shed its old name and use 'Communist Party'
instead. His insistence at defying the Provisional
Government helped him to circumvent the war issue. For most
people, didnt opposing the Provisional Government the same
as ending the war? Its usefulness during April was not even
apparent to his immediate Bolsheviks (Stalin & Kamenev) who
were groaning at this stance. To Lenin, war served its
purpose in destabilising the government and if the new regime
chose this line all the better.
This uncompromising stance was adopted
because Lenin believed that the proletariat was not revolutionary
if left to its devices. It fitted well together with
mounting public impatience and a growing breakdown of reliance on
law and government. Lenin used flexible short term aims to
avoid any rigid doctrinaire. He urged for the application of
force at appropriate moments, compromising with the Left SRs if
the situation demanded it and lastly maximum use of violence to
undermine the government. In view of this attractive
flexibility, the people chose the spokesmen, Bolsheviks, through
whom they could air their own solution which incidentally turned
out to be Peace, Land, Bread.
While it was clear that the
Bolsheviks were not a majoritarian movement, but it did have
important pockets of strength. Just who and what were the
nature of the masses that swelled the Bolsheviks ranks in
1917? They were the soldiers, workers and peasants. The urges of
these three unprivileged groups could overthrow the government
because it had nothing to loose. The masses had no stake in the
government and the Bolsheviks seemed to promise a changed where
they have everything to gain and nothing to lose.
The isolated peasants knew no loyalty to any
government. They were steeped in Muscovite culture and were
estranged from the political establishment. Its tradition in
communal landholdings and serfdom gave it little chance to
acquired trappings of modern citizenship. To survive was to be
crafty, it was a everyone for himself world. Its
lack of self-discipline invited despotism. They had no respect
for private property and Lenin exploit this only revolutionary
trait to help him turn the tables on status quo.
The quiet in the country in the days of the
February Revolution was at best temporary. Impatience overtook
the peasants when the Provisional Government postponed the Land
reform. In March, 183 disturbances and 49 cases of arson were
reported in the ethically Russian provinces. Lenins
idea of land distribution was not alien to the Russian tradition
of peasants commune as it was precisely what the peasants wanted.
By promoting anti-war, Lenin effectively aligned the Bolsheviks
with the peasants and the soldiers who were mostly peasants
themselves. Kerenskys attempts to procured gain only served
to disintegrate whatever authority the Provisional Government had
in the countryside.
By May 1917, Bolsheviks had assumed a
dominant position in the Petrograd factory communities. These
workers were only superficially urbanised. They believed that if
their village relatives were entitled to land, they too were
entitled to the factory. The workers pictured the future as
being masters of their own plants. The factory committee was an
expression of this syndicalism. Marxists wanted to put economy
power in the socialist state not in the workers. But the
Bolsheviks did not discourage this deviation. The Bolsheviks were
realists and Lenin called for workers control.
They were not about to alienate strong support among the factory
communities. Hence, they could substantiate the
claim 'party of the proletariat'.
Kerenskys war effort and the
socialists support for it was profound betrayal in the eyes
of troops. They wanted a soviet-based government that would stop
the war. From mid summer, anti war soldiers identified
themselves as Bolsheviks even without formal membership. Reading
their demands in print in the Bolsheviks Pravda convinced many
that the Bolsheviks could be an effective mouthpiece for them.
Small wonder that Bolsheviks strongest support came from
the barracks. For example,The Baltic Fleet (63% at the
Constituent Assembly), Western Front (67%) and the Northern Front
(56%) were Bolshevik strongholds.
On July 3 and 4, disorder and
violence erupted. Lenin tried to use the mob, carefully
controlled, to topple the Provisional Government. Clearly a
fiasco, however this spontaneous Petrograd quasi-insurrection
showed that the Bolsheviks were gaining ground. It also showed
that the Mensheviks and SR were impervious to Bolsheviks
manipulation, thus they began to concentrate on the factory
committee which they already had a sizeable following. Kerensky,
displaying indecisiveness, arrested some Bolsheviks but lacked
the ruthlessness or perhaps the power to suppress them outright.
Although the central Bolshevik was shaken, but by mid-August the
Bolsheviks had 200,000 members, compared with 80,000 in April.
In many ways, the July days was a dress
rehearsal for the October coup. The Control of the Workers
Section was insufficient and it must create some military
executive branch stuffed with Bolsheviks and seize control
through military coup. Trotsky put this knowledge to good
use. Lenin would insist in the immediate future that
only a small well armed and disciplined force was needed in the
October coup.
Like a child of destiny, the Bolsheviks were
to recover from this debacle due to the Kornilov Affair.
Kerensky effectively bit off the only fist that was capable of
smashing up the Bolsheviks. Lenin realised how fatal
Kerenskys mistake was and the Bolsheviks responded
accordingly. Behind the facade of this alleged right coup, it
wrenched from the Soviet an official authorisation to form the
Red Guards units and also formed a Committee for Struggle Against
the Counter Revolution. They maintained that they would
only fight against Kornilov, not for Kerensky. Fortunately, as
the situation turned out they were not required to put their
bravado into action.
The Petrograd Soviet was given little credit,
as most of the organisation was at grassroots where Bolshevik's
influence was the strongest. They were able to respond so readily
because they were the only power at hand not sallied by any
association with the right. More importantly, these events
intensified Lenins distrust of mass organisation and other
parties. The Bolsheviks would tried to stay close to, but
not led or pushed by the masses.
Lenin was never known for his foresight as
mentioned earlier, but he was opportunist. The Bolsheviks
were the biggest winners and rode on a rising wave of mass
discontent. The Petrograd Soviet approved a Bolshevik resolution
for the first time on 13 September and again on the 18th . This
was repeated in Moscow. Trotsky, released from jail on bail, was
elected chairman when the moderate Executive committee resigned.
Control of principal soviets gave the Bolsheviks a strategic
base. In the aftermath of the July days, Lenin dropped the
slogan All power To the Soviets', as his prospect in the
soviets seemed poor. On 14 September, he issued the same slogan
and a call for armed insurrection from his hiding place in
Finland based on the majorities the Bolsheviks had in Petrograd
and Moscow.
Most Bolsheviks leaders seriously doubted
Lenin. After all, Lenin remained in hiding even when
he returned from Finland, blasting the Central Committee with
angry letters exhorting them to revolt. There were good
reasons why Lenin wanted immediate action. He was afraid that
Kerenskys Constituent Assemble on the 12th November would
pre-empt the Bolsheviks power. It was no good revolting
against a SR Government who had a majority in the countryside and
the cities. The Bolsheviks only had strength in the urban areas.
Hence, They must take power before the Assembly.
Trotsky had mean while laid the foundations
for Lenins coup. He created a Northern Regional Committee
to convene a Soviet Congress on the 20th October. More delegates
were invited if they happened to be from Bolsheviks
strongholds and the city Kiev (anti-Bolshevik) itself was only
allotted 5 seats, less then a small province. In face of this,
Ispolkom feebly protested and postponed it to the 25th. It gave
what the Bolsheviks wanted a gathering of Bolsheviks soviets
under the banner of Second Congress of Soviets. The plan was to
present the fait accompli for the Congress to
ratified. Trotsky, still smarting from the mistakes from
the July days, wanted now militant arm to complete the coup. He
took over the Military Revolutionary Committee and posed it as a
organ defending the Soviets. It even had a Left SR, P.E. Lazimir
as the Chairman. The façade was complete.
However, this did not meant that the
Bolsheviks had a tight highly organised machine built to
Lenins bidding prior to the October coup. That was the
Soviets version. The truth could hardly be further than
that. Bolsheviks central secretariat was a farce and
decision making was democratic though most voted for Lenins
decision anyway and party discipline was scanty. They were only
well organised comparatively. Lenin was right in insisting
for a military coup as it involved smaller number of people. The
key to the myth was the popularity of the Bolsheviks policies,
which enabled Trotsky to overcome both the Ispolkom (Soviet
Executive Committee) and proper Soviet military chain of command.
Events between 24-25 October were much
distorted by Soviet myth. The coup was a relatively quiet,
quick and bungled affair. The remaining troops guarding the
Winter Palace had gone home for dinner after a long wait.
The Bolsheviks hardly seized power, it fell into their laps.
Around 10,000 people would later claimed to have participated,
but they had really came after the coup and most were after the
Tsars Château dYquem 1847 from the Winter
Palaces cellars.
Why was Lenin so anxious in presenting
the fait accompli to the Soviet Congress? It was to provoke the
Mensheviks and SRs to walk out of the Soviet. It was
the first step in uprooting all existing institutions to clear
the ground for Bolsheviks dictatorship. To top it off, the
Bolsheviks on the 26th announced the formation of a new
Council of Peoples Commissars with all Bolsheviks members,
replacing the Central Executive Committee of the Soviets, to the
surprised Congress. The fall of the Tsar had invited a
surge of revolutionary wave, but a small group did the actual
transfer of power.
The workers who had not taken part in the
coup, viewed the Revolution as the establishment of a government
for the working people not of a party. On 29th , Vikzhel, leaders
of the railway union, threatened the Bolsheviks for inter-
party talks. The relatively easy coup had turned into a battle of
attrition for the Bolsheviks against the loyalist. Lenin relented
under such circumstances, but he was to immediately throw out the
talks when Kerenskys offensive failed miserably.
There was never much chance of popular participatory in the new
Soviet government given the lack of political consciousness in
Russia, the traditions of the peasants and the nature of the
Bolsheviks who promptly renege on all their promises.
While the new freedom liberated the
long-surpressed spontaneity of the people of Russia, it could not
led to greatness in world politics. Lenin through various means
began to suppress this spontaneity as it might even endanger
himself. Lenin was largely successful because he treated
local and foreign politics as warfare. He did not bother to
compel, he annihilated.
He achieved this on two levels. One by
centralising power in the Bolsheviks and wiping out opposition.
On January 1918, Bolsheviks bayonets dispersed Russia first
democratically elected parliament, the Constituent Assembly.
Prior to this, he refused Bolsheviks Central Committee suggestion
to form a coalition in November 1917 even when left-SR members
resigned in protest of the Brest-Litovsk Treaty (9March
1918). It did not matter if the Bolsheviks had won less
than 25% of the seats in that Assembly because they moved swiftly
to institutionalise terror. Two, at the grass roots level, he
encouraged local soviet power to take matters into their own
hands. The peasants against the landed, the workers against the
employers and the soldiers against the officers. Lenin
created a Revolution to establish a dictatorship.
The formation of All-Russian Extraordinary
Commission (Cheka, 7 December 1917) and the Brest-Litovsk Treaty
highlighted the direction Revolution was heading. The usage of
abuse and repression to deal with political dissent and
maintenance of power. Cheka, formed under the
auspices of Trotsky who believed, we shall not entered into
the kingdom of socialism in white gloves on a polished
floor, was in charge of counter-revolution and
sabotage. Under Felix Dzerzhinsky, Cheka had the strength
of 250,000 full-time agents just under three years compared to
the Tsars Okhrana (secret police) of 15,000. It executed
1,000 political offenders a month between 1918-19 and had a
concentration camp running with in weeks. After killing the
Tsar and his family (July 1918) Lenin was to discard the concept
of individual responsibility of actions. Cheka killed by a
persons class. The bourgeoisie by its existence was guilty
of counter-revolution. The Nazis did not have a monopoly on
genocide.
When Lenin was wounded by a SR
assassination on 30th August 1918. The Cheka moved swiftly and
launched the Red Terror. While it might be politically
encouraged, the Red Terror came from the masses. As Cheka was
initially decentralised, it responded and capitalised on social
pressures to rob and humiliate the privileged and to replace the
unjust social order with a republic of equals. Most of the time
Cheka agents were just to supervise the carnage. In Evpatoria (a
Crimean coastal town), soldiers killed 800 officers and
bourgeoisie residents under three days.
While Lenin was prepared to use
application of force at appropriate moments', he was also
prepared to cede territories to Germany if signing the
peace terms now can prevent signing the death
sentence of the Soviet Government three weeks later.
No sacrifice was too big for him to make if it preserved his
power. Lenin was paranoid coward. This time, he shifted his
whole government to Moscow, as he believed the Germans were going
to topple him. The Brest-Litovsk Treaty was the biggest land
cedes given by the Russian government. Nevertheless, Lenin
credited himself for prophetic vision by conveniently renouncing
the treaty when the Allies won on 11 November 1918.
In conclusion, the nature the
revolution of 1917 was in every way Bolshevik in nature. From the
onset, Lenin had already identified his party as the ' vanguard
of the revolution'. Its nature was clearly demarcated by the
refusal to believe in two-stage revolution and the incorporation
of the peasants into their support base. Its subsequent actions
reflected this ideology. Although there were non-Bolshevik
causes such as war and the failure of the Provisional government,
one can see that the other parties were reluctant to assume
power. It was left to the Bolsheviks with the gall and a clear
ideology to take the wheels of the revolution.
Another important myth was that the
Bolsheviks' victory were seen as 'freak', but from the 'Kornilov
Affair' one can see that Bolsheviks provided ample radical
leadership and therefore had popular support. By the time of the
October coup, the Bolsheviks had learnt from their mistakes and
staged a successful quiet coup. The Bolsheviks had schemed all
the way from staging the bogus Soviet Congress on the 20th
October to the dissolving of the Constituent Assembly. From the
moment, it came into power, it effectively consolidated power and
such actions were indications of a determined party that would
stop at nothing to determine the destiny of Russia.
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