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Dead men with beards
The ideas of Lenin
(Part 2) 1914-24: From war to revolution!
The First World War of 1914 to 1918 transformed Europe into a Blood-soaked hell. Four years of gruelling trench warfare in France and a scramble for colonies in the Middle East and Africa left at least 8 million soldiers dead. Hundreds of thousands of teenage conscripts from Germany, Russia, Austria, France, Italy, Britain and its colonies were cut down by machine guns, blasted by shells, choked with poison gas or sliced to ribbons on barbed wire and trodden into the mud of no-man's land.
Civilians suffered horribly too. Five million died if hunger and disease. Another 6 million, weakened by four years of hardship and grief, perished in a flu epidemic that ravaged the continent in 1918-1919.
AGAINST THE WAR
For Lenin, this was an imperialist war: the rich capitalists were fighting each other for greater shares of the world's wealth. And were forcing workers to do the fighting for them. Lenin said: "Picture to yourselves a slaveowner who has owned 100 slaves warring against a slaveowner who owned 200 slaves for a more 'just' distribution of slaves."
The workers of Britain, France, Russia and Germany should not take sides with their 'own' capitalists, but should unite against the imperialist war. They should turn it from a capitalist war for profit into a war of all the workers against the capitalists. Lenin raised his famous slogans:
"The main enemy is at home."
"Turn the imperialist war into a civil war."
But the French socialists, the British Labour Party, the Russian Mensheviks, all backed the war in the name of loyalty to "their own fatherland". Even amongst the tiny number of anti-war Socialists, few supported Lenin's slogans. At best they called for an immediate democratic peace, thinking that the idea of turning war into a civil war against the capitalists was extreme.
Even the great German socialists - the most important and respected socialist party in the world at the time - supported this imperialist war. The German Socialist Party had been cruel to the Socialist (Second) International, which was committed on paper to 'use the economic and political crisis created by war to rouse the masses and hasten the downfall of capitalist rule'. But now they betrayed their principles and the whole idea of workers' internationalism.
Only one socialist party stood out against the war from the start: the Russian Bolsheviks.
In the first months of war there is always a strong mood of patriotism and nationalism. But when thousands of families are shattered, when their sons are being sent home in body bags, when the costs of war are being felt in long bread queues and even longer hours of work
the mood begins to change.
FEBRUARY REVOLUTION
The flag waving and enthusiasm for the war evaporated in Russia. Unrest simmered in factories, on the land and in the army itself. By February 1917 it burst into the open, dragging down the Russian monarchy for good.
The February Revolution began with thousands of women workers in the textile factories walking out on strike, demanding bread. They sent flying pickets to the massive metal factories, calling their brothers out in support. The call for bread was soon drowned out by a cry for an end to the war. The army raised their guns against the crowds, but many soldiers wavered under the pressure of the masses. Unable to depend on the army to protect him, the Tsar resigned.
Anew provisional government was set up, composed of capitalist ministers who were joined by representatives of the moderate socialists (Mensheviks). But this was not the only power in the land. The workers set up soviets: councils of delegates from the factories and the barracks. These bodies were more democratic than any parliament. The workers' and soldiers' delegates could be recalled at any time, and so closely reflected the needs of the mass of people.
Lenin rushed back to Russia from Switzerland. A delegation of moderate socialists met him at the railway station expecting him to back the new government. He brushed them aside with contempt. To their astonishment he made a fiery speech declaring that the revolution was not over, denouncing the government, demanding that they end the war immediately, and calling for the workers' soviets to take power themselves.
Even longstanding Bolsheviks thought Lenin had finally gone mad. But he convinced the party to adopt his point of view. For it was clear: workers and soldiers were losing confidence in the Provisional Government - it refused to hand the land to the peasants, the factories to the workers, and refused to pull Russia out of the war. The workers of one factory proclaimed that "the only power in the country must be the soviets of workers', soldiers' and peasant deputies, which we will defend with our lives.'
ALL POWER TO THE SOVIETS
By June the Bolsheviks slogan "All power to the soviets" was eagerly taken up by tens of thousands of demonstrating workers. But the majority still trusted the Government. A failed uprising took place in July against the advice of Lenin and Bolshevik leaders, who warned that the masses were not yet ready to support the soviets taking power. The Bolsheviks were once again driven underground.
The royalists were not happy either. An extreme right wing plot emerged from within the army, who marched under Kornilov in an attempt to overthrow the Provisional Government and put the tsar back on the throne. The government panicked and hesitated, because the capitalists were far from hostile to the idea of a military coup.
But the Bolsheviks didn't hesitate. They came out of hiding and fought Kornilov arms in hand, calling on the workers and their soviets to boycott all Kornilov's troop movements and stop him using the railways and the telegraphs. The coup plot collapsed.
The Bolsheviks' whole approach to the right-wing coup had been a brilliant success. The Bolsheviks hated the Provisional Government, but they fought alongside the workers and peasants who still supported the Provisional Government, to stop General Kornilov from overthrowing it. This policy - the united front - was crucial to the Bolsheviks' eventual victory, and was a fundamental part of Lenin's politics. They fought hand in hand with the government supporters, in order to gain the trust of the mass of workers and peasants, and lead them to a new revolution that would overthrow the capitalists altogether.
RED OCTOBER
Finally, the majority of soviet delegates across Russia were convinced of the need to take power themselves. On 24 and 25 October, under the leadership of Bolsheviks like Leon Trotsky, armed workers loyal to the soviets took over the railway stations, food stores, telephone exchanges, post offices and power stations. The insurrection was swift and decisive with surprisingly little bloodshed. At a Congress of Russian soviets the next day the revolution was greeted with wild enthusiasm. Lenin took the platform and declared simply: "We shall now proceed to construct the socialist order."
The new Soviet Government gave land to the peasants, brought in workers' control of the factories, took away the private property of the rich and brought in new laws to help free women, lesbians, gays and oppressed nationalities. It was run entirely as a working class democracy - nothing like the bureaucratic dictatorships that disgrace the name of socialism in countries like China, Serbia and North Korea today. The Bolsheviks did not set up a one-party state but governed jointly at first with another party (the "Left SR's"). Other parties were banned only when they took up arms against the workers revolution.
Nor was Lenin a dictator, whose every word was obeyed. On the crucial question of signing an immediate peace treaty with Germany, Lenin was outvoted and remained in a minority until he eventually persuaded the party and Russian government to pull out of the war (in Treaty of Brest Litovsk in 1918).
When the armies of 14 different capitalist states invaded Russia and helped arm pro-Tsarist "White Armies", the Soviet Republic fought back, organising a Red Army and finally crushing the Whites.
The world's first workers' state had survived, but at an enormous cost.
Russia was an isolated and backward country that had been devastated by years of war against those that fought to restore capitalism. Lenin recognised the need to make a painful but necessary retreat. His "New Economic Policy" involved a temporary encouragement of private capitalism in agriculture in order to repair the damage as quickly as possible and stop the peasants from sabotaging food production. But Lenin never believed this would be a way of creating socialism. He always realised it was a retreat that would have to be brought to an end.
FOR A WORLD REVOLUTION
Lenin stressed, as Karl Marx had done before him, that in order for Socialism to succeed, capitalists would need to be overthrown in several advanced countries too. He took the lead in organising a new world revolutionary party, the Communist (Third) International in 1919 after the betrayal of the Socialist (Second) International. The Third International bound revolutionary parties from all over the world in a common fight to repeat the successes of October 1917 and open the road to world socialism.
Lenin in his last years, despite being crippled by a stroke and barely able to work, also took up the fight against the slide of Soviet Russia into bureaucratic dictatorship. With greater foresight than anyone else, Lenin warned of the dangerous growth of an undemocratic bureaucracy in the party and the Soviet state. He described Soviet Russia as a workers' state "with bureaucratic deformations" and fought a campaign to stop the Russian party and state from lording it over other nationalities like the Georgians, that had been oppressed under Tsarism and were now starting to be treated as inferior again. In particular, he singled out Stalin - the man who was to become the sole dictator and head of the bureaucracy - as a man unfit for office in a socialist government and called for him to be removed.
Lenin died after a long illness in January 1924. Today we know that his last fight failed, and Soviet Russia finally succumbed to the cancer of bureaucracy and Stalinism, which eliminated all workers rights. It has ended by bringing the madness of the capitalist market back to Russia, along with unemployment, poverty and crime.
But the great Russian Revolution and Lenin's work show revolutionary youth today that capitalism can be overthrown; that internationalism and building a world socialist party is not impossible. With a disciplined revolutionary party like the Bolsheviks at its head, the working class can conquer all obstacles. In the future struggles that the 21st century will bring, a new generation of communists must learn the lessons of Lenin's life. We must study his writings and struggle for new October Revolutions, matching and exceeding the scale of 1917.
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Karl Marx
Lenin Part 1
Lenin Part 2
Leon Trotsky (1)
Leon Trotsky (2)
Rosa Luxembourg
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