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Stalin

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Stalin s rise to power Mackerras argues that Stalin s rise to power was achieved by his adroit manipulation of the party discipline . Philips argues that ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Stalin


1
Stalins rise to power
2
Stalins Strengths
  • Comrade Card Index. Was Stalins control over
    the party machine the crucial factor in his rise
    to power? (2004)
  • Stalin rose to power in the 1920s only because
    he was a skilled political manipulator.
    Discuss.(2002)
  • Mackerras argues that Stalins rise to power was
    achieved by his adroit manipulation of the party
    discipline .
  • Philips argues that Stalin did not create the
    party structure, but he was able to use it to his
    advantage.
  • McCauley argues that The party machine was
    Stalins power base
  • Boobbyer argues that Stalins control of the
    party grew so powerful that it was very
    difficult to express a dissonant word publicly.
  • Philips argues that this quality helped him gain
    power due to the Communist Partys fear of a
    Bonaparte figure emerging.

3
Was it Stalins strengths or was it luck?
  • McCauley argues that Luck was also a major
    factor in allowing Stalin to come into power.
    Lenins death meant that he had no one above him,
    keeping him in check and the death of
    Dzerzhinsky, the head of the Cheka, also meant
    that Stalin could gain support within the
    political police and use this support against his
    opponents. However, Pipes argues that Stalin was
    in an unrivalled position before the death of
    Lenin and that this position had already assured
    his future career.

4
General Secretary
  • Payne argues that the post of General Secretary
    was the greatest of all gifts he Stalin
    received from Lenin.
  • Service argues that Stalins rise to supreme
    power was not solely down to his manipulations,
    he argues that Stalin had the ability to convince
    the members of the Central Committee that he was
    a suitable politician to follow
  • Haugen argues that he set up a network of spies
    to keep an eye on thousands of party members and
    he would also wiretap officials phones such as
    Lenins. This was how Stalin knew that he and
    Trotsky were discussing their worries about
    Stalin.
  • Wood states that it was a springboard to
    dictatorship
  • Payne argues that he was the chief filing clerk.

5
Liaison Officer between the Politburo and Orgburo
(1919)
  • Wood argues that these positions gave him
    significant administrative and even executive
    power, he argues that it was the accumulation
    and manipulation of this power that led to
    Stalins rise to power.
  • This involved the overseeing of the work of all
    government departments.
  • This permitted to him monitor all personnel and
    policy
  • Commissar of Nationalities (1918 to 1922)
  • The basic objective of the Commissar was to set
    up an institution which was to try to win over
    the non-Russians in the former empire to the
    Sonarkom
  • National Policy Payne argues that Stalin had
    not the least intention of acting upon it
  • J. Smith also argues that this role gave Stalin
    the opportunity to exercise leadership
  • was only responsible for 22 of the population of
    the Russian Socialist Federated Socialist
    Republic (RSFSR), and this didnt cover the
    Ukraine, Byelorussia and Transcaucasia, which
    were all independent Soviet republics.

6
Lenins funeral
  • Waugh maintains the argument that Trotsky was
    tricked by Stalin into missing Lenins funeral,
    therefore Stalin was an opportunist.
  • Laver argues that Stalin was able to strengthen
    his own position by establishing himself as
    Lenins disciple.
  • However, Tumarkin argues that Stalin truly
    believed that Trotsky could not make it back in
    time and she argues that the funeral was only
    delayed, after Trotsky had been contacted, by a
    day to accommodate the many travellers who
    needed more time to reach Moscow, and to allow
    for the hurried construction of a temporary crypt
    by the Kremlin wall
  • Service argues that, despite Trotskys claim
    years later that he had been tricked by Stalin,
    he does admit that it did not make much
    difference.

7
Lenin Enrolments
  • By 1924 the Communist Party had only around
    350,000 members
  • The scheme added around 240,000 new members, 86
    of them were classed as workers by social
    situation.
  • McCauley argues that the new members would feel
    loyal to Stalin, also, their political education
    was in the hands of men appointed by Stalin and
    his associates.
  • Philips argues that the new members were poorly
    educated and political naïve

8
Leadership contest-TrotskyTo what extent was
Trotsky responsible for his own downfall in the
1920s? (2008)To what extent was Stalins rise to
power due to his opponents weakness? (2005)
  • Conquest argues that Stalin seized every
    opportunity and managed to outmanoeuvre his main
    opponent Trotsky.
  • Service calls him the man who could rally the
    forces.
  • Lenins Testament perhaps the most capable man
    in the present Central Committee Trotsky
    has displayed excessive self-assurance
  • Carr argues that Trotskys main weakness was that
    he could not lead his fellow Bolsheviks.
  • When Trotsky was bored in the Politburo he would
    sit and read a French novel
  • Trotsky did not have much support from other
    Bolsheviks as he had been a Menshevik until 1917
  • Deutscher says that it seemed to Trotsky almost
    a bad joke that Stalin, the wilful and shy but
    shabby and inarticulate man in the background
    should be his rival.
  • Fitzpatrick argues that although Trotsky could be
    seen as the odd one out in the power struggle, he
    was an ambitious contender for the top position.

9
Zinoviev and Kamenev
  • Zinoviev Philips argues that he was an
    unsavoury careerist, weak, vain and ambitious
    and only too eager to occupy the empty throne.
  • Serge agrees stating that he gave an impression
    of flabbinessirresolutionsimply a demagogue.
  • Zinoviev and Kamenev were both seen to be
    disloyal to the Bolsheviks as they had been
    opposed to the armed uprising in October 1917.
    They had a letter published in Novaia Zhizn, a
    Menshevik paper, showing their disapproval, they
    felt that the uprising was too risky and believed
    that the the mass of the soldiers would not
    support them
  • Kamenev was against Lenins April Theses when
    Lenin first announced it, as he felt it was non
    Marxist. Both Kamenev and Zinoviev wanted a
    socialist coalition instead of a one party rule
  • Both joined with Stalin to form the Triumvirate
    in 1922 in order to take down Trotsky, who they
    all believed to be their biggest rival.
  • Kort argues that Zinoviev and Kamenev disliked
    Trotsky as he had replaced Zinoviev as Lenins
    right-hand man.

10
Bukharin
  • Lenin describes him in his Testament as being
    rightly considered the favourite of the whole
    party
  • Philips argues that he was politically
    short-sighted, as he moved from being against
    the Brest-Litovsk Treaty to being pro NEP.
  • Haynes argues that Bukharin had gradually become
    more hostile within the Party, as he was gullible
    and easily believed rumours and gossip and was
    therefore often incorrect in his assumptions.
  • After Stalin left the Triumvirate, Bukharin and
    Stalin collaborated together to get rid of the
    United Opposition which formed in 1926
  • Bukharin said, Stalin changes his theories
    according to whom he need to get rid of next.
  • Service argues that Stalin later described him as
    being worse than a swine.

11
IdeologyHow important were policy issues in
Stalins rise to power? (2007)
  • Deutscher states that Permanent Revolution
    sounded like an ominous warning to a tired
    generation
  • Trotsky was immediately against this, he felt
    that if Communism stayed within one country it
    would collapse and die. Trotsky accused the
    proposal of being un-Marxist.
  • Zinoviev and Kamenev who accused him of
    Factionalism which was illegal.
  • Trotsky was opposed to the New Economic Policy
    (NEP) as he felt it was an unacceptable
    compromise to true Socialism. He proposed
    Permanent Revolution. This is where communism
    spreads from country to country, capitalist
    governments fall like dominoes and the worlds
    proletariat live as equals.
  • Stalin introduced an alternative Socialism in
    One Country.

12
Was Lenin to blame?
  • Conquest argues that Stalin seized every
    opportunity he was given and was therefore able
    to outwit his greatest rival Trotsky.
  • It could be argued that Lenins Testament had
    left the question of who would be the next leader
    open. Perhaps even Lenin could be criticised for
    not making a definite decision about his
    successor and therefore making it possible for
    Stalin to seize power.
  • In 1926, Krupskaya mentioned to a group of left
    communists that If Lenin were still alive,he
    Stalin would probably already be in jail
  • Lenins secret testament had showed that Lenin
    had not trusted Stalin in his post as General
    Secretary, as it held too much power and he had
    urged his comrades to think about a way of
    removing Stalin from that post and appointing
    another man.
  • However, Krupskaya had been discouraged from
    making the secret testament known to the Central
    Committee, as Zinoviev and Kamenev, fearing that
    the testament would lose support for them and
    believing that Stalin was not a real threat,
    urged that it did not become general knowledge.
  • Therefore, it could be argued that although
    Lenin perhaps should have been clearer on his
    original testament about the threats of Stalin,
    it was the other Bolsheviks underestimation of
    Stalin that could be said to have led to his rise
    in power.

13
Historical Arguments about Ideology and Stalins
Policies
  • Deutscher argues that Stalin supported the right
    policies at the right time unlike his opponents.
    The policy of Socialism in one country, which he
    advocated, appealed to the majority of the party.
  • Carr argues that the policy appealed to the
    Russian people, as it made Socialism achievable
    and it made it seem that Stalin was the man who
    would achieve this for them. It also inspired
    patriotism and gave Russia a historical role in
    being the first Socialist state.
  • Meanwhile, Stalins opponents advocated polices
    that were unpopular.
  • Bukharins pro-NEP stance was realistic and was
    backed by big players, such as Rykov, the head of
    the Vesenkha, and Tomsky, the head of the Trade
    Unions, but he never got the support of the
    majority of the party delegates, as his policy
    was perceived to be like a capitalist system.
  • Moreover, it could be argued that it was Stalins
    political cunning that made him a suitable
    candidate to take up the mantle of Leninism, as
    he had never clashed with Lenin, unlike the other
    contenders.
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