From the June 1956 issue of the Socialist Standard
‘On March 5th, 1953, one Jospeh Vissarionovich Djugashvili, alias Stalin, died.
In the Soviet Weekly (12:3:53), under a large photograph of the late Russian dictator, the following words were written:—
"The immortal name of STALIN will always live in the hearts of the Soviet people and all progressive mankind!"
And
in a statement published on the same day as Stalin's death, by the
Central Committee of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union, the
Council of Ministers of the U.S.S.R. and the Presidium of the Supreme
Soviet, we are told that: The heart of Jospeh Vissarionovich
Stalin, comrade, in arms and continuer of genius of the cause of
Lenin, wise leader and teacher of the Communist Party and the Soviet
people, no longer beats." The Russian Communists, in their
statement, also inform us that: "Comrade Stalin led our country
to victory over Fascism during the Second World War . . . "
In
his funeral oration Georgi M. Malenkov, now Soviet Minister of Power
Stations, spoke of Stalin—the "Great" Stalin—as the
greatest genius of mankind, the great thinker of our epoch and the
greatest theoretician on national questions. And he continued:—
"The strengthening of the country's defence capacities and the consolidation of the Soviet armed forces have been the object of Comrade Stalin's tireless concern."
Malenkov
then bid farewell to "our teacher and leader, our beloved friend
. . . !"
After Malenkov had finished Beria, who has
since been shot as a traitor and an enemy of the Soviet State,
reminded those present that:—
"Our great leaders Lenin and Stalin taught us untiringly to increase and sharpen the vigilance of the Party and the people, against the designs and intrigues of the enemies of the Soviet State. We must now still further intensify our vigilance."
And
they did—against the Secret Police Chief, Beria, himself!
Three
Years Later
Three
years after the death of the "great" Stalin, "Comrade"
Khrushchev, first secretary of the Central Committee of the Communist
Party of the Soviet Union, in his report to the twentieth Congress of
the Party, shocked many of the "comrades" present by
saying:—
"Many
of the shortcomings we are now working to eliminate would never have
arisen of not for the complacency that at one time gained currency in
some links of the Party, and for the tendency to give a rosy picture
of the real state of affairs . . .
"If Party
unity was to be further consolidated and Party organisations made
more active, it is necessary to reestablish the Party standards
worked out by Lenin, which in the past had frequently been
violated.
"It was of paramount importance to
re-establish and to strengthen in every way the Leninist principle of
collective . . .
"The Central
Committee was concerned to develop the creative activity of Party
members . . . It vigorously condemned the cult of the
individual as being alien to the spirit of Marxism-Leninism, a cult
which tends to make a particular leader a hero and miracle worker and
at the same time belittles the role of the Party and the masses and
tends to reduce their creative effort. Currency of the cult of the
individual tended to minimize the role of collective leadership in
the Party, and at all times resulted in serious drawbacks in our
work."
(Cominform Journal, 17.2.56).
This
was only the first shot against the late "leader and genius"
of the Soviet Union—Joseph Stalin.
M. A. Suslov also
condemned the cult of the individual: and said that collective
leadership had at least been re-established. And A. I. Mikoyan
admitted that in the past three years "after
a long interruption, collective leadership has been created."
(Applause).
(Cominform
Journal,
2.3.56, emphasis theirs). He continued by saying: " . . . for
approximately 20 years we had no collective leadership . . . "
And:
"In analyzing the economic position of present-day capitalism it is doubtful whether Stalin's well-known thesis in the 'Economic Problems of Socialism in the U.S.S.R.' can be of any help to us or is correct—in relation to the United States, Britain and France—the thesis that with the break-up of the world market the volume of production in these countries will shrink! This assertion does not explain the complex and contradictory phenomena of present-day capitalism and the fact of the growth of capitalist production in many countries after the war."
(Cominform Journal. 2.3.56).
Dealing
with Stalin's book 'The
Short History of the Communist Party (Bolsheviks) of the Soviet
Union'
Mikovan says that it is inadequate and inaccurate. After attacking
other books on Party History and the Civil War, he admits that "Such
historical scribbling has nothing whatever in common with Marxist
history."
Stalin
the Terrorist
Since
the termination of the twentieth Communist Party Congress in Moscow,
it has been reported that Khrushchev made another—more
pointed—attack on Stalin at a secret session. He is reported to
have accused Stalin of making mistakes in regard to Soviet
agriculture, of weakening the Russian Army prior to the Second World
War by killing 5,000 Russian army officers—and of terrorism. Even
Harry Pollitt, the British Communist, admits that "Stalin . . .
ignored warnings about Hitler's invasion plans . . . " (Daily
Worker,
24.3.56). He also admits in his first article condemning Stalin, that
Stalin made serious mistakes in connection with agricultural policy,
and later in his relations with Jugoslavia.
According to
the Manchester
Guardian (28.3.56),
the first reliable report of what Mr. Khrushchev actually said about
Stalin appeared in the Polish Communist Party paper Trybuna
Lubu.
In an article bu Jerzy Morawski, a leading Polish Communist, he
says:—
" . . . the degeneration of the security organs could, and indeed did take place. They became independent of the Party authorities and were used to consolidate the personal power of Stalin."
And:—
"Later on repression was used automatically and blindly."
And further:—
"As
a result many honest people were sent to prison penal camps or
shot."
"Almost all the leaders and the active
members of the Polish Communist Party then in the Soviet Union were
arrested and sent to camps."
For
many years both Socialist and non-Socialist critics of the
Russian régime have said that Russia was in fact a
dictatorship, that Stalin was a ruthless dictator, that the Soviet
Union was a police State, that many innocent people had been thrown
into slave camps, and that neither democracy nor Socialism existed
there. And for as many years Communists, in
all countries,
have denied these allegations. Yet now, scarcely three years after
Stalin's death, the Communists themselves are admitting much, if not
all, of the truth about Stalin and his bloody dictatorship.
Perhaps
in time more will be admitted. The Communists may even deny that
Socialism exists in Russia.’
Peter E. Newell
https://socialiststandardmyspace.blogspot.com/search?q=stalin
3 comments:
Sorry to be an Actual Lee, but Stalin was Georgian.
You are absolutely correct Mathew S. but he was overlord of all of Russia. It could perhaps have been titled, Soviet Dictator Dies, but that, besides being correct, would have removed the ambiguity in it. Who knows, perhaps as it is more readers might have been drawn to it thinking it was someone other than Stalin. Thanks for your comment, we are always open to correction where appropriate.
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