He was born in Gori, Georgia on 21st December, 1879. He was
his mother's fourth child to be born in less than four years. The first three
died and as Joseph was prone to bad health, his mother feared on several
occasions that he would also die. Understandably, given this background,
Joseph's mother was very protective towards him as a child.
Joseph's father was a boot maker and his mother took in
washing. As a child, Joseph experienced the poverty that most peasants had to
endure in Russia at the end of the 19th century. At the age of seven he
contacted smallpox. He survived but his face remained scarred for the rest of
his life and other children cruelly called him "pocky".
Joseph's mother was deeply religious and in 1888 she managed
to obtain him a place at the local church school. Despite his health problems,
he made good progress at school and eventually won a free scholarship to the
Tiflis Theological Seminary. While studying at the seminary he joined a secret
organization called Messame Dassy. Members were supporters of Georgian
independence from Russia. Some were also socialist revolutionaries and it was
through the people he met in this organization that Stalin first came into
contact with the ideas of Karl Marx.
In May, 1899, Stalin was expelled from the Tiflis
Theological Seminary. Several reasons were given for this action including
disrespect for those in authority and reading forbidden books. Stalin was later
to claim that the real reason was that he had been trying to convert his fellow
students to Marxism.
For several months after leaving the seminary Stalin was
unemployed. He eventually found work by giving private lessons to middle class
children. Later, he worked as a clerk at the Tiflis Observatory. He also began
writing articles for the socialist Georgian newspaper, Brdzola Khma Vladimir.
In 1901 Stalin joined the Social Democratic Labour Party and
whereas most of the leaders were living in exile, he stayed in Russia where he
helped to organize industrial resistance to Tsarism. On 18th April, 1902,
Stalin was arrested after coordinating a strike at the large Rothschild plant
at Batum. After spending 18 months in prison Stalin was deported to Siberia.
At the Second Congress of the Social Democratic Labour Party
in London in 1903, there was a dispute between Lenin and Julius Martov, two of
the party's leaders. Lenin argued for a small party of professional
revolutionaries with a large fringe of non-party sympathizers and supporters.
Martov disagreed believing it was better to have a large party of activists.
Julius Martov based his ideas on the socialist parties that
existed in other European countries such as the British Labour Party. Lenin
argued that the situation was different in Russia as it was illegal to form
socialist political parties under the Tsar's autocratic government. At the end
of the debate Martov won the vote 28-23. Lenin was unwilling to accept the
result and formed a faction known as the Bolsheviks. Those who remained loyal
to Martov became known as Mensheviks.
Stalin, like Gregory Zinoviev, Anatoli Lunacharsky, Mikhail
Lashevich, Nadezhda Krupskaya, Mikhail Frunze, Alexei Rykov, Yakov Sverdlov,
Lev Kamenev, Maxim Litvinov, Vladimir Antonov, Felix Dzerzhinsky, Gregory
Ordzhonikidze and Alexander Bogdanov joined the Bolsheviks. Whereas George
Plekhanov, Pavel Axelrod, Lev Deich, Vladimir Antonov-Ovseenko, Leon Trotsky,
Vera Zasulich, Irakli Tsereteli, Moisei Uritsky, Noi Zhordania, Andrei
Vyshinsky and Fedor Dan supported Julius Martov.
In 1904 Stalin escaped from Siberia and within a few months
he was back organizing demonstrations and strikes in Tiflis. Vladimir Lenin was
impressed with Stalin's achievements and in 1905 he was invited to meet him in
Finland.
Stalin returned to Russia and over the next eight years he
was arrested four times but each time managed to escape. In 1911 he moved to
St, Petersburg and the following year became editor of Pravda. Arrested again
in 1913, Stalin was exiled for life to North Siberia.
After the overthrow of Nicholas II, the new prime minister,
Alexander Kerensky, allowed all political prisoners to return to their homes.
Stalin went back to St. Petersburg and once again became one of the editors of
Pravda. At this time, Stalin, like most Bolsheviks, took the view that the
Russian people were not ready for a socialist revolution.
When Lenin returned to Russia on 3rd April, 1917, he
announced what became known as the April Theses. Lenin attacked Bolsheviks for
supporting the Provisional Government. Instead, he argued, revolutionaries
should be telling the people of Russia that they should take over the control
of the country. In his speech, Lenin urged the peasants to take the land from
the rich landlords and the industrial workers to seize the factories.
Lenin accused those Bolsheviks who were still supporting the
Provisional Government of betraying socialism and suggested that they should
leave the party. Some took Lenin's advice, arguing that any attempt at
revolution at this stage was bound to fail and would lead to another
repressive, authoritarian Russian government.
Stalin was in a difficult position. As one of the editors of
Pravda, he was aware that he was being held partly responsible for what Lenin
had described as "betraying socialism". Stalin had two main options
open to him: he could oppose Lenin and challenge him for the leadership of the
party, or he could change his mind about supporting the Provisional Government
and remain loyal to Lenin.
After ten days of silence, Stalin made his move. In Pravda
he wrote an article dismissing the idea of working with the Provisional
Government. He condemned Alexander Kerensky and Victor Chernov as
counter-revolutionaries, and urged the peasants to takeover the land for
themselves.
In November, 1917, Lenin rewarded Stalin for his support of
the October Revolution by appointing him Commissar of Nationalities. Lenin
joked to Stalin that: "You know, to pass so quickly from an underground
existence to power makes one dizzy."
As a Georgian and a member of a minority group who had
written about the problems of non-Russian peoples living under the Tsar, Stalin
was seen as the obvious choice as Commissar of Nationalities. It was a job that
gave Stalin tremendous power for nearly half the country's population fell into
the category of non-Russian. Stalin now had the responsibility of dealing with
65 million Ukrainians, Georgians, Byelorussians, Tadzhiks, Buriats and Yakuts.
The policy of the Bolsheviks was to grant the right of
self-determination to all the various nationalities within Russia. This was
reinforced by a speech Stalin made in Helsinki on November 16th, 1917. Stalin
promised the crowd that the Soviet government would grant: "complete
freedom for the Finnish people, and for other peoples of Russia, to arrange
their own life!" Stalin's plan was to develop what he called "a
voluntary and honest alliance" between Russia and the different national
groups that lived within its borders.
Over the next couple of years Stalin had difficulty
controlling the non-Russian peoples under his control. Independent states were
set up without his agreement. These new governments were often hostile to the
Bolsheviks. Stalin had hoped that these independent states would voluntarily
agree to join up with Russia to form a union of Socialist States. When this did
not happen Stalin was forced to revise his policy and stated that
self-determination: "ought to be understood as the right of
self-determination not of the bourgeoisie but of the toiling masses of a given
nation." In other words, unless these independent states had a socialist
government willing to develop a union with Russia, the Bolsheviks would not
allow self-determination.
Lenin also changed his views on independence. He now came to
the conclusion that a "modern economy required a high degree of power in
the centre." Although the Bolsheviks had promised nearly half the Russian
population that they would have self-determination, Lenin was now of the
opinion that such a policy could pose a serious threat to the survival of the
Soviet government. It was the broken promise over self-determination that was
just one of the many reasons why Lenin's government became unpopular in Russia.
During the Civil War Stalin played an important
administrative role in military matters and took the credit for successfully
defeating the White Army at Tsaritsyn. One strategy developed by Stalin was to
conduct interviews with local administrators on a large barge moored on the
Volga. It was later claimed that if Stalin was not convinced of their loyalty
they were shot and thrown into the river.
In August, 1918, Moisei Uritsky, chief of the Petrograd
Secret Police was assassinated. Two two weeks later Dora Kaplan shot and
severely wounded Lenin. Stalin, who was in Tsaritsyn at the time, sent a
telegram advocating an "open and systematic mass terror" against
those responsible. The advice of Stalin was accepted and in September, 1918,
Felix Dzerzhinsky, head of the Cheka, instigated as the Red Terror. It is
estimated that in the next few months 800 socialists were arrested and shot
without trial.
The Soviet's government's policy of War Communism during the
Civil War created social distress and led to riots, strikes and demonstrations.
The Kronstadt Uprising reinforced the idea that the government was unpopular
and in March, 1921, Vladimir Lenin announced details of his New Economic Policy
(NEP). Farmers were now allowed to sell food on the open market and could now
employ people to work for them.
The New Economic Policy also allowed some freedom of
internal trade, permitted some private commerce and re-established state banks.
Factories employing less than twenty people were denationalized and could be
claimed back by former owners.
Stalin supported Lenin's policy. His view was that as long
as there was only a one party state, the government could allow the
introduction of small-scale private enterprise. As he pointed out: "The
New Economic Policy is a special policy of the proletarian state designed to
tolerate capitalism but retain the key positions in the hands of the
proletarian state."
Lenin found the disagreements over the New Economic Policy
exhausting. His health had been poor ever since Dora Kaplan had shot him in
1918. Severe headaches limited his sleep and understandably he began to suffer
from fatigue. Lenin decided he needed someone to help him control the Communist
Party.
At the Party Conference in April, 1922, Lenin suggested that
a new post of General Secretary should be created. Lenin's choice for the post
was Stalin, who in the past had always loyally supported his policies. Stalin's
main opponents for the future leadership of the party failed to see the
importance of this position and actually supported his nomination. They
initially saw the post of General Secretary as being no more than "Lenin's
mouthpiece".
Soon after Stalin's appointment as General Secretary, Lenin
went into hospital to have a bullet removed from his body that had been there
since Kaplan's assassination attempt. It was hoped that this operation would
restore his health. This was not to be; soon afterwards, a blood vessel broke
in Lenin's brain. This left him paralyzed all down his right side and for a
time he was unable to speak. As "Lenin's mouthpiece", Stalin had
suddenly become extremely important.
While Lenin was immobilized, Stalin made full use of his
powers as General Secretary. At the Party Congress he had been granted
permission to expel "unsatisfactory" party members. This enabled
Stalin to remove thousands of supporters of Leon Trotsky, his main rival for
the leadership of the party. As General Secretary, Stalin also had the power to
appoint and sack people from important positions in the government. The new holders
of these posts were fully aware that they owed their promotion to Stalin. They
also knew that if their behaviour did not please Stalin they would be replaced.
Surrounded by his supporters, Stalin's confidence began to
grow. In October, 1922, he disagreed with Lenin over the issue of foreign
trade. When the matter was discussed at Central Committee, Stalin's rather
Lenin's policy was accepted. Lenin began to fear that Stalin was taking over
the leadership of the party. Lenin wrote to Leon Trotsky asking for his
support. Trotsky agreed and at the next meeting of the Central Committee the
decision on foreign trade was reversed. Lenin, who was too ill to attend, wrote
to Trotsky congratulating him on his success and suggesting that in future they
should work together against Stalin.
Stalin, whose wife Nadya Alliluyeva worked in Lenin's
private office, soon discovered the contents of the letter sent to Leon
Trotsky. Stalin was furious as he realized that if Lenin and Trotsky worked
together against him, his political career would be at an end. In a fit of
temper Stalin made an abusive phone-call to Lenin's wife, Nadezhda Krupskaya,
accusing her of endangering Lenin's life by allowing him to write letters when
he was so ill.
After Krupskaya told her husband of the phone-call, Lenin
made the decision that Stalin was not the man to replace him as the leader of
the party. Lenin knew he was close to death so he dictated to his secretary a
letter that he wanted to serve as his last "will and testament". The
document was comprised of his thoughts on the senior members of the party
leadership.
Lenin became increasing concerned about Stalin's character
and wrote a testament in which he suggested that he be removed. "Comrade
Stalin, having become General Secretary, has concentrated enormous power in his
hands: and I am not sure that he always knows how to use that power with
sufficient caution. I therefore propose to our comrades to consider a means of
removing Stalin from this post and appointing someone else who differs from
Stalin in one weighty respect: being more tolerant, more loyal, more polite,
more considerate of his comrades."
However, Lenin died before any action was taken. Stalin now
emerged as the leader of the Soviet Union. When he first gained power Stalin
continued Lenin's New Economic Policy. Farmers were allowed to sell food on the
open market and were allowed to employ people to work for them. Those farmers
who expanded the size of their farms became known as kulaks.
In 1928 Stalin began attacking kulaks for not supplying
enough food for industrial workers. He also advocated the setting up of
collective farms. The proposal involved small farmers joining forces to form
large-scale units. In this way, it was argued, they would be in a position to
afford the latest machinery. Stalin believed this policy would lead to
increased production. However, the peasants liked farming their own land and
were reluctant to form themselves into state collectives.
Stalin was furious that the peasants were putting their own
welfare before that of the Soviet Union. Local communist officials were given
instructions to confiscate kulaks property. This land was then used to form new
collective farms. Thousands of kulaks were executed and an estimated five
million were deported to Siberia or Central Asia. Of these, approximately
twenty-five per cent perished by the time they reached their destination.
After the death of Lenin, Stalin joined forces with two
left-wing members of the Politburo, Gregory Zinoviev and Lev Kamenev, to keep
Leon Trotsky from power. Both these men had reason to believe that Trotsky
would dismiss them from the government once he became leader. Stalin encouraged
these fears. He also suggested that old party activists like themselves had
more right to lead the Bolsheviks than Trotsky, who had only joined the party
in 1917.
Leon Trotsky accused Stalin of being dictatorial and called
for the introduction of more democracy into the party. Gregory Zinoviev and Lev
Kamenev united behind Stalin and accused Trotsky of creating divisions in the
party.
Trotsky's main hope of gaining power was for Lenin's last
testament to be published. In May, 1924, Lenin's widow, Nadezhda Krupskaya,
demanded that the Central Committee announce its contents to the rest of the
party. Gregory Zinoviev argued strongly against its publication. He finished
his speech with the words: "You have all witnessed our harmonious
cooperation in the last few months, and, like myself, you will be happy to say
that Lenin's fears have proved baseless." The new members of the Central
Committee, who had been sponsored by Stalin, guaranteed that the vote went
against Lenin's testament being made public.
n 1925 Stalin was able to arrange for Leon Trotsky to be
removed from the government. Some of Trotsky's supporters pleaded with him to
organize a military coup. As commissar of war Trotsky was in a good position to
arrange this. However, Trotsky rejected the idea and instead resigned his post.
With the decline of Trotsky, Joseph Stalin felt strong
enough to stop sharing power with Lev Kamenev and Gregory Zinoviev. Stalin now
began to attack Trotsky's belief in the need for world revolution. He argued
that the party's main priority should be to defend the communist system that
had been developed in the Soviet Union. This put Zinoviev and Kamenev in an
awkward position. They had for a long time been strong supporters of Trotsky's
theory that if revolution did not spread to other countries, the communist
system in the Soviet Union was likely to be overthrown by hostile, capitalist
nations. However, they were reluctant to speak out in favour of a man whom they
had been in conflict with for so long.
When Stalin was finally convinced that Lev Kamenev and
Gregory Zinoviev were unwilling to join forces with Leon Trotsky against him,
he began to support openly the economic policies of right-wing members of the
Politburo such as Nikolay Bukharin, Mikhail Tomsky and Alexei Rykov. They now
realized what Stalin was up to but it took them to summer of 1926 before they could
swallow their pride and join with Trotsky against Stalin.
When Lev Kamenev and Gregory Zinoviev eventually began
attacking his policies, Joseph Stalin argued they were creating disunity in the
party and managed to have them expelled from the Central Committee. The belief
that the party would split into two opposing factions was a strong fear amongst
communists in the country. They were convinced that if this happened, western
countries would take advantage of the situation and invade the Soviet Union.
Under pressure from the Central Committee, Lev Kamenev and
Gregory Zinoviev agreed to sign statements promising not to create conflict in
the movement by making speeches attacking official policies. Leon Trotsky
refused to sign and was banished to the remote area of Kazhakstan.
In 1927 Stalin's advisers told him that with the
modernization of farming the Soviet Union would require an extra 250,000
tractors. As well as tractors there was also a need to develop the oil fields
to provide the necessary petrol to drive the machines. Power stations also had
to be built to supply the farms with electricity.
Since the October Revolution industrial progress had been
slow. It was not until 1927 that production had reached the levels achieved
before the start of the First World War. Stalin decided that he would use his
control over the country to modernize the economy.
The first Five Year Plan that was introduced in 1928,
concentrated on the development of iron and steel, machine-tools, electric
power and transport. Stalin set the workers high targets. He demanded a 111%
increase in coal production, 200% increase in iron production and 335% increase
in electric power. He justified these demands by claiming that if rapid
industrialization did not take place, the Soviet Union would not be able to
defend itself against an invasion from capitalist countries in the west.
Every factory had large display boards erected that showed
the output of workers. Those that failed to reach the required targets were
publicity criticized and humiliated. Some workers could not cope with this
pressure and absenteeism increased. This led to even more repressive measures
being introduced. Records were kept of workers' lateness, absenteeism and bad
workmanship. If the worker's record was poor, he was accused of trying to
sabotage the Five Year Plan and if found guilty could be shot or sent to work
as forced labour on the Baltic Sea Canal or the Siberian Railway.
With the modernization of industry, Stalin argued that it
was necessary to pay higher wages to certain workers in order to encourage
increased output. His left-wing opponents claimed that this inequality was a
betrayal of socialism and would create a new class system in the Soviet Union.
Stalin had his way and during the 1930s, the gap between the wages of the
labourers and the skilled workers increased.
In the summer of 1932 Stalin became aware that opposition to
his policies were growing. Some party members were publicly criticizing Stalin
and calling for the readmission of Leon Trotsky to the party. When the issue
was discussed at the Politburo, Stalin demanded that the critics should be
arrested and executed. Sergey Kirov, who up to this time had been a staunch
Stalinist, argued against this policy. When the vote was taken, the majority of
the Politburo supported Kirov against Stalin.
In the spring of 1934 Sergey Kirov put forward a policy of
reconciliation. He argued that people should be released from prison who had
opposed the government's policy on collective farms and industrialization. Once
again, Stalin found himself in a minority in the Politburo.
After years of arranging for the removal of his opponents
from the party, Stalin realized he still could not rely on the total support of
the people whom he had replaced them with. Stalin no doubt began to wonder if
Sergey Kirov was willing to wait for his mentor to die before becoming leader
of the party. Stalin was particularly concerned by Kirov's willingness to argue
with him in public, fearing that this would undermine his authority in the
party.
As usual, that summer Kirov and Stalin went on holiday
together. Stalin, who treated Kirov like a son, used this opportunity to try to
persuade him to remain loyal to his leadership. Stalin asked him to leave
Leningrad to join him in Moscow. Stalin wanted Kirov in a place where he could
keep a close eye on him. When Kirov refused, Stalin knew he had lost control
over his protégé.
On 1st December, 1934. Sergey Kirov was assassinated by a
young party member, Leonid Nikolayev. Stalin claimed that Nikolayev was part of
a larger conspiracy led by Leon Trotsky against the Soviet government. This
resulted in the arrest and execution of Lev Kamenev, Gregory Zinoviev, and
fifteen other party members.
In September, 1936, Stalin appointed Nikolai Yezhov as head
of the NKVD, the Communist Secret Police. Yezhov quickly arranged the arrest of
all the leading political figures in the Soviet Union who were critical of
Stalin. The Secret Police broke prisoners down by intense interrogation. This
included the threat to arrest and execute members of the prisoner's family if
they did not confess. The interrogation went on for several days and nights and
eventually they became so exhausted and disoriented that they signed
confessions agreeing that they had been attempting to overthrow the government.
In 1936 Nickolai Bukharin, Alexei Rykov, Genrikh Yagoda,
Nikolai Krestinsky and Christian Rakovsky were arrested and accused of being
involved with Leon Trotsky in a plot against Stalin. They were all found guilty
and were eventually executed.
Stalin now decided to purge the Red Army. Some historians
believe that Stalin was telling the truth when he claimed that he had evidence
that the army was planning a military coup at this time. Leopold Trepper, head
of the Soviet spy ring in Germany, believed that the evidence was planted by a
double agent who worked for both Stalin and Adolf Hitler. Trepper's theory is
that the "chiefs of Nazi counter-espionage" took "advantage of
the paranoia raging in the Soviet Union," by supplying information that
led to Stalin executing his top military leaders.
In June, 1937, Mikhail Tukhachevsky and seven other top Red
Army commanders were charged with conspiracy with Germany. All eight were
convicted and executed. All told, 30,000 members of the armed forces were
executed. This included fifty per cent of all army officers.
The last stage of the terror was the purging of the NKVD.
Stalin wanted to make sure that those who knew too much about the purges would
also be killed. Stalin announced to the country that "fascist
elements" had taken over the security forces which had resulted in
innocent people being executed. He appointed Lavrenti Beria as the new head of
the Secret Police and he was instructed to find out who was responsible. After
his investigations, Beria arranged the executions of all the senior figures in
the organization.
Stalin supported the Popular Front government in Spain.
After the outbreak of the Spanish Civil War he sent large quantities of Soviet
tanks and aircraft to the Republicans. They were accompanied by a large number
of tank-drivers and pilots from the Soviet Union. All told, about 850 Soviet
advisers, pilots, technical personnel and interpreters took part in the war.
Stalin became increasingly concerned that the Soviet Union
would be invaded by Germany. Stalin believed the best way to of dealing with
Adolf Hitler was to form an anti-fascist alliance with countries in the west.
Stalin argued that even Hitler would not start a war against a united Europe.
Neville Chamberlain, the British prime minister, was not
enthusiastic about forming an alliance with the Soviet Union. He wrote to a
friend: "I must confess to the most profound distrust of Russia. I have no
belief whatever in her ability to maintain an effective offensive, even if she
wanted to. And I distrust her motives, which seem to me to have little
connection with our ideas of liberty, and to be concerned only with getting
everyone else by the ears."
Winston Churchill, an outspoken critic of British foreign
policy, agreed with Stalin: "There is no means of maintaining an eastern
front against Nazi aggression without the active aid of Russia. Russian
interests are deeply concerned in preventing Herr Hitler's designs on eastern
Europe. It should still be possible to range all the States and peoples from
the Baltic to the Black sea in one solid front against a new outrage of
invasion. Such a front, if established in good heart, and with resolute and
efficient military arrangements, combined with the strength of the Western
Powers, may yet confront Hitler, Goering, Himmler, Ribbentrop, Goebbels and co.
with forces the German people would be reluctant to challenge."
Stalin's own interpretation of Britain's rejection of his
plan for an antifascist alliance, was that they were involved in a plot with
Germany against the Soviet Union. This belief was reinforced when Neville
Chamberlain met with Adolf Hitler at Munich in September, 1938, and gave into
his demands for the Sudetenland in Czechoslovakia. Stalin now believed that the
main objective of British foreign policy was to encourage Germany to head east
rather than west.
Stalin realized that war with Germany was inevitable.
However, to have any chance of victory he needed time to build up his armed
forces. The only way he could obtain time was to do a deal with Hitler. Stalin
was convinced that Hitler would not be foolish enough to fight a war on two
fronts. If he could persuade Hitler to sign a peace treaty with the Soviet
Union, Germany was likely to invade Western Europe instead.
On 3rd May, 1939, Stalin dismissed Maxim Litvinov, his
Jewish Commissar for Foreign Affairs. Litvinov had been closely associated with
the Soviet Union's policy of an antifascist alliance. Meetings soon took place
between Vyacheslav Molotov, Litvinov's replacement and Joachim von Ribbentrop,
the German foreign minister. On 28th August, 1939, the Nazi-Soviet Pact was
signed in Moscow. Under the terms of the agreement, both countries promised to
remain neutral if either country became involved in a war.
Stalin now ordered the Red Army into Poland and reclaimed
land lost when the Brest-Litovsk Treaty was signed in 1918.
Another aspect of the Brest-Litovsk Treaty that made the
Soviet Union vulnerable to attack was the loss of Finland. Leningrad was only
thirty-two kilometres from the Finnish border. This made Leningrad and its 3.5
million population, a potential target of artillery fire. Stalin therefore
began to consider the Invasion of Finland.
After attempts to negotiate the stationing of Soviet troops
in Finland failed, Stalin ordered the Red Army to invade. Adolf Hitler, who
also had designs on Finland, was forced to standby and watch the Soviet Union
build up its Baltic defences. It took the Soviet troops three months to force
the Finnish government to agree to Stalin's original demands. Although the
world was now aware of Stalin's shrewdness in foreign affairs, Finland's small
army of 200,000 men had exposed the Soviet Union's poorly trained and equipped
army.
Stalin believed that Germany would not invade the Soviet
Union until Britain and France had been conquered. From Stalin's own
calculations, this would not be until the summer of 1942. Some of his closest
advisers began to argue that 1941 would be a much more likely date. The surrender
of France in June, 1940, also cast doubts on Stalin's calculations.
Stalin's response to France's defeat was to send Vyacheslav
Molotov to Berlin for more discussions. Molotov was instructed to draw out
these talks for as long as possible. Stalin knew that if Adolf Hitler did not
attack the Soviet Union in the summer of 1941, he would have to wait until
1942. No one, not even someone as rash as Hitler, would invade the Soviet Union
in the winter, he argued.
Germany was now in a strong negotiating position and Molotov
found it impossible to agree to Hitler's demands. As soon as talks broke-up,
Hitler ordered his military leaders to prepare for Operation Barbarossa. The
plan was for the invasion of the Soviet Union to start on the 15th May, 1941.
Hitler believed that this would give the German Army enough time to take
control of the country before the harsh Soviet winter set in.
Information on the proposed invasion came to Stalin from
various sources. Richard Sorge, an agent working for the Red Orchestra in
Japan, obtained information about the proposed invasion as early as December,
1940. Winston Churchill sent a personal message to Stalin in April, 1941,
explaining how German troop movements suggested that they were about to attack
the Soviet Union. However, Stalin was still suspicious of the British and
thought that Churchill was trying to trick him into declaring war on Germany.
When Sorge's prediction that Germany would invade in May,
1941, did not take place, Stalin became even more convinced that the war would
not start until 1942. The reason for this delay was that Germany had invaded
Yugoslavia in April. Adolf Hitler had expected the Yugoslavs to surrender
immediately but because of stubborn resistance, Hitler had to postpone
Operation Barbarossa for a few weeks.
On 21st June, 1941, a German sergeant deserted to the Soviet
forces. He informed them that the German Army would attack at dawn the
following morning. Stalin was reluctant to believe the soldier's story and it
was not until the German attack took place that he finally accepted that his
attempts to avoid war with Germany until 1942 had failed.
The German forces, made up of three million men and 3,400
tanks, advanced in three groups. The north group headed for Leningrad, the
centre group for Moscow and the southern forces into the Ukraine. Within six
days, the German Army had captured Minsk. General Demitry Pavlov, the man
responsible for defending Minsk, and two of his senior generals were recalled
to Moscow and were shot for incompetence.
With the execution of Pavlov and his generals, Stalin made
it clear that he would punish severely any commander whom he believed had let
down the Soviet Union. In future, Soviet commanders thought twice about
surrendering or retreating. Another factor in this was the way that the German
Army massacred the people of Minsk. Terrified of both Stalin and Adolf Hitler,
the Soviet people had no option but to fight until they were killed.
The first few months of the war was disastrous for the
Soviet Union. The German northern forces surrounded Leningrad while the centre
group made steady progress towards Moscow. German forces had also made deep
inroads into the Ukraine. Kiev was under siege and Stalin's Chief of Staff,
Georgi Zhukov, suggested that the troops defending the capital of the Ukraine
should be withdrawn, thus enabling them to take up strong defensive positions
further east. Stalin insisted that the troops stayed and by the time Kiev was
taken, the casualties were extremely high. It was the most comprehensive defeat
experienced by the Red Army in its history. However, the determined resistance
put up at Kiev, had considerably delayed the attack on Moscow.
It was now September and winter was fast approaching. As
German troops moved deeper into the Soviet Union, supply lines became longer.
Stalin gave instructions that when forced to withdraw, the Red Army should
destroy anything that could be of use to the enemy. The scorched earth policy
and the formation of guerrilla units behind the German front lines, created
severe problems for the German war machine which was trying to keep her three
million soldiers supplied with the necessary food and ammunition.
By October, 1941, German troops were only fifteen miles
outside Moscow. Orders were given for a mass evacuation of the city. In two
weeks, two million people left Moscow and headed east. Stalin rallied morale by
staying in Moscow. In a bomb-proof air raid shelter positioned under the
Kremlin, Stalin, as Supreme Commander-in-Chief, directed the Soviet war effort.
All major decisions made by his front-line commanders had to be cleared with
Stalin first.
In November, 1941, the German Army launched a new offensive
on Moscow. The Soviet army held out and the Germans were brought to a halt.
Stalin called for a counter-attack. His commanders had doubts about this policy
but Stalin insisted and on 4th December the Red Army attacked. The German forces,
demoralized by its recent lack of success, was taken by surprise and started to
retreat. By January, the Germans had been pushed back 200 miles.
Stalin's military strategy was basically fairly simple. He
believed it was vitally important to attack the enemy as often as possible. He
was particularly keen to use new, fresh troops for these offensives. Stalin
argued that countries in western Europe had been beaten by their own fear of
German superiority. His main objective in using new troops in this way was to
convince them that the German forces were not invincible. By pushing the German
Army back at Moscow, Stalin proved to the Soviet troops that Blizkrieg could be
counteracted; it also provided an important example to all troops throughout
the world fighting the German war-machine.
The German Army was severely handicapped by the Soviet
winter of 1941-42 and once spring arrived they began to advance once again.
German forces were particularly successful in the south and they were able to
close in on Stalingrad.
Stalin was horrified to hear reports that the Red Army in
the Ukraine had been in such a hurry to retreat that they had left behind their
weapons and equipment. Not only were soldiers shot for desertion but Stalin
gave permission for highly critical articles of the army to be published in the
newspapers. The army, which had been praised during the early stages of the
war, was now accused of betraying the Soviet people. It was an extremely risky
move on Stalin's part, but it had the desired effect and its performance
improved.
Stalingrad was Stalin's city. It had been named after him as
a result of his defence of the city during the Russian Civil War. Stalin
insisted that it should be held at all costs. One historian has claimed that he
saw Stalingrad "as the symbol of his own authority." Stalin also knew
that if Stalingrad was taken, the way would be open for Moscow to be attacked
from the east. If Moscow was cut off in this way, the defeat of the Soviet
Union was virtually inevitable.
A million Soviet soldiers were drafted into the Stalingrad
area. They were supported from an increasing flow of tanks, aircraft and rocket
batteries from the factories built east of the Urals, during the Five Year
Plans. Stalin's claim that rapid industrialization would save the Soviet Union
from defeat by western invaders was beginning to come true.
General Georgi Zhukov, the military leader who had yet to be
defeated in a battle, was put in charge of the defence of Stalingrad. The line
held and on 19th November, 1942, Stalin gave the order to counterattack from
the north and the south. Although the German 6th Army continued to make
progress towards Stalingrad, they were gradually becoming encircled. General
Friedrich Paulus, the German commander, asked permission to withdraw but AdolfHitler refused and instructed him to continue to advance on Stalingrad. This
they did, but with their supplies cut-off from the west, they were unable to
take the city.
In recognition of his commander's bravery, Adolf Hitler made
Friedrich Paulus a Field Marshal on 30th January, 1943. Hitler was furious when
a couple of days later Paulus surrendered. The German losses at Stalingrad were
1.5 million men, 3,500 tanks and 3,000 aircraft. It marked the turning point of
the war. From this date on, Germany began to retreat.
It was only when the Red Army regained territory previously
controlled by the Nazis that the Soviet Government became fully aware of the
war crimes that had been committed. Soviet soldiers who had been taken prisoner
had been deliberately starved to death. Of the 5,170,000 soldiers captured by
the Germans, only 1,053,000 survived.
Women and children were also killed in large numbers. The
Jews were always the first to be executed, but other groups, especially the
Russians, were also killed. German soldiers were given the instructions that
the "Jewish-Bolshevik system must be destroyed". Adolf Hitler was
aware that to control the vast population of the Soviet Union would always be
an extremely difficult task. His way of dealing with the problem was by mass
exterminations.
Soviet authorities estimated that in all, over twenty
million of their people were killed during the Second World War. However, it
has been argued that Hitler's policy of exterminating the Soviet people guaranteed
his defeat. Stories of German atrocities soon reached Red Army soldiers
fighting at the front. Faced with the choice of being executed or being killed
fighting, the vast majority chose the latter. Unlike most other soldiers, when
faced with defeat in battle, the Soviet army rarely surrendered.
This was also true of civilians. When territory was taken by
the German Army, women, children and old men went into hiding and formed
guerrilla units. These groups, who concentrated on disrupting German supply lines,
proved a constant problem to the German forces.
In November, 1943, Stalin, Winston Churchill and Franklin D.
Roosevelt met together in Teheran, Iran, to discuss military strategy and
post-war Europe. Ever since the Soviet Union had entered the war, Stalin had
been demanding that the Allies open-up a second front in Europe. Churchill and
Roosevelt argued that any attempt to land troops in Western Europe would result
in heavy casualties. Until the Soviet's victory at Stalingrad in January, 1943,
Stalin had feared that without a second front, Germany would defeat them.
Stalin, who always favoured in offensive strategy, believed
that there were political, as well as military reasons for the Allies' failure
to open up a second front in Europe. Stalin was still highly suspicious of
Winston Churchill and Franklin D. Roosevelt and was worried about them signing
a peace agreement with Adolf Hitler. The foreign policies of the capitalist
countries since the October Revolution had convinced Stalin that their main objective
was the destruction of the communist system in the Soviet Union. Stalin was
fully aware that if Britain and the USA withdrew from the war, the Red Army
would have great difficulty in dealing with Germany on its own.
At Teheran, Stalin reminded Churchill and Roosevelt of a
previous promise of landing troops in Western Europe in 1942. Later they
postponed it to the spring of 1943. Stalin complained that it was now November
and there was still no sign of an allied invasion of France. After lengthy discussions
it was agreed that the Allies would mount a major offensive in the spring of
1944.
From the memoirs published by those who took part in the
negotiations in Teheran, it would appear that Stalin dominated the conference.
Alan Brook, chief of the British General Staff, was later to say: "I
rapidly grew to appreciate the fact that he had a military brain of the very
highest calibre. Never once in any of his statements did he make any strategic
error, nor did he ever fail to appreciate all the implications of a situation
with a quick and unerring eye. In this respect he stood out compared with
Roosevelt and Churchill."
The D-Day landings in June, 1944, created a second front,
and took the pressure off the Soviet Union and the Red Army made steady progress
into territory held by Germany. Country after country fell to Soviet forces.
Winston Churchill became concerned about the spread of Soviet power and visited
Moscow in October, 1944. Churchill agreed that Rumania and Bulgaria should be
under "Soviet influence" but argued that Yugoslavia and Hungary
should be shared equally amongst them.
The most heated discussion concerned the future of Poland.
The Polish Government in exile, based in London, had a reputation for being
extremely anti-Communist. Although Stalin was willing to negotiate with the
Polish prime minister, Stanislaw Mikolajczyk, he insisted that he was unwilling
to have a government in Poland that was actively hostile to the Soviet Union.
In February, 1945, Stalin, Winston Churchill and Franklin D.
Roosevelt met again. This time the conference was held in Yalta in the Crimea.
With Soviet troops in most of Eastern Europe, Stalin was in a strong
negotiating position. Roosevelt and Churchill tried hard to restrict postwar
influence in this area but the only concession they could obtain was a promise
that free elections would be held in these countries.
Once again, Poland was the main debating point. Stalin
explained that throughout history Poland had either attacked Russia or had been
used as a corridor through which other hostile countries invaded her. Only a
strong, pro-Communist government in Poland would be able to guarantee the
security of the Soviet Union.
Stalin also promised that the Soviet Union would enter the
war against Japan three months after the war with Germany ended and in return
would recover what Russia had lost at the end of the Russo-Japanese War
(1904-05).
At Yalta, the decision at Teheran to form a United Nations
organization was confirmed. It was only on this issue that all three leaders
were enthusiastically in agreement.
At the time of Yalta, Germany was close to defeat. British
and USA troops were advancing from the west and the Red Army from the east. At
the conference it was agreed to divide Germany up amongst the Allies. However,
all parties to that agreement were aware that the country that actually took
control of Germany would be in the strongest position over the future of this territory.
The main objective of Winston Churchill and Stalin was the
capture of Berlin, the capital of Germany. Franklin D. Roosevelt did not agree
and the decision of the USA Military commander, General Dwight Eisenhower, to
head south-east to Dresden, ensured that Soviet forces would be the first to
reach Berlin.
The leaders of the victorious countries met once more at
Potsdam in July, 1945. Franklin D. Roosevelt, who had died in April, 1945, had
been replaced by the Vice-President, Harry S. Truman. While the conference was
taking place, the British General Election results were announced. The
landslide victory of the Labour Party meant that Clement Attlee replaced
Winston Churchill as Britain's main negotiator.
Although Germany had been defeated, the USA and Britain were
still at war with Japan. At Yalta, the Allies had attempted to persuade Stalin
to join in the war with Japan. By the time the Potsdam meeting took place, they
were having doubts about this strategy. Churchill in particular, were afraid that
Soviet involvement would lead to an increase in their influence over countries
in the Far East.
At Yalta, Stalin had promised to enter the war with Japan
within three months of the defeat of Germany. Originally, it was planned that
the conference at Potsdam would confirm this decision. However, since the
previous meeting the USA had successfully tested the Atom Bomb. Truman's
advisers were urging him to use this bomb on Japan. They also pointed out that
its employment would avoid an invasion of Japan and thus save the lives of up
to two million American troops.
When Harry S. Truman told Stalin that the USA had a new
powerful bomb he appeared pleased and asked no further questions about it.
Truman did not mention that it was a atomic bomb and it appears that Stalin did
not initially grasp the significance of this new weapon. However, with the
dropping of the Atom Bomb on Hiroshima and Nagasaki in August, 1945, the
Japanese quickly surrendered and the Allies were successful in preventing
Soviet gains in the Far East.
Stalin's main concern at Potsdam was to obtain economic help
for the Soviet Union. Nearly a quarter of Soviet property had been destroyed
during the Second World War. This included 31,000 of her factories. Agriculture
had also been badly hit and food was being strictly rationed. Stalin had been
told by his advisers that under-nourishment of the workforce was causing
low-productivity. He believed that the best way to revive the Soviet economy
was to obtain massive reparation payments from Germany.
Unlike at Yalta, the Allies were no longer willing to look
sympathetically at Stalin's demands. With Germany defeated and the USA now
possessing the Atom Bomb, the Allies no longer needed the co-operation of the
Soviet Union. Stalin felt betrayed by this change of attitude. He believed that
the death of Franklin D. Roosevelt was an important factor in this.
The ending of lend-lease supplies to the Soviet Union
immediately the war ended with Germany in May, 1945 and the insistence that
Henry Wallace, the US Secretary of Commerce, resign after he made a speech in
support of Soviet economic demands, convinced Stalin that the hostility towards
the Soviet Union that had been in existence between the wars, had returned.
Stalin once again became obsessed by the threat of an
invasion from the west. Between 1945 and 1948, Stalin made full use of his
abilities by arranging the setting up of communist regimes in Rumania,
Bulgaria, Hungary, East Germany, Poland and Czechoslovakia. He now had a large
buffer zone of "friendly states" on his western border. Western
powers interpreted these events as an example of Stalin's desire to impose
communism on the whole of Europe. The formation of NATO and the stationing of
American troops in Western Europe was a reaction to Stalin's policies and
helped ensure the development of the Cold War.
In 1948, Stalin ordered an economic blockade of Berlin. He
hoped this measure would help him secure full control over Berlin. The Allies
airlifted supplies to the beleaguered Berlin and and Stalin was eventually
forced to back down and allow the land and air routes to be reopened.
Stalin also miscalculated over Korea. In 1950, he encouraged
Kim Il Sung, the communist ruler of North Korea, to invade South Korea. Stalin
had assumed that the USA would not interfere and that Kim IL Sung would be able
to unite Korea as a communist state.
Stalin's timing was particularly bad on this occasion as the
Soviet representative had at that time been ordered to boycott the Security
Council. With the Soviet Union unable to use its veto, it was powerless to stop
the United Nations sending troops to defend South Korea.
The Korean War ended in 1953. Not only had the communists
failed to unite Korea, the war also provided support for those right-wing
American politicians such as Joseph McCarthy who had been arguing that the
Soviet Union wanted to control the world. Hostility between the Soviet Union
and the United States continued to increase as the world became divided between
the two power blocks. Harry S. Truman and Winston Churchill may have been
responsible for the start of the Cold War but Stalin's policies in Eastern
Europe and Korea had ensured its continuance.
At home, Stalin was closely associated with the Soviet
Union's victory in the Second World War and so his prestige and status remained
high. His only possible rival for the leadership was Georgi Zhukov, who had
played such an important role in the defeat of Germany. Stalin's response to
the public acclaim that Zhukov received was to accuse him of "immodesty,
unjustified conceit, and megalomania." After the war Zhukov was demoted
and once again Stalin had removed from power someone who was potentially his
successor.
Now in his seventies, Stalin's health began to deteriorate.
His main problem was high blood-pressure. While he was ill, Stalin received a
letter from a Dr. Lydia Timashuk claiming that a group of seven doctors,
including his own physician, Dr. Vinogradov, were involved in a plot to murder
Stalin and some of his close political associates. The doctors named in the
letter were arrested and after being tortured, confessed to being involved in a
plot arranged by the American and British intelligence organizations.
Stalin's response to this news was to order Lavrenti Beria,
the head of the Secret Police, to instigate a new purge of the Communist Party.
Members of the Politburo began to panic as they saw the possibility that like
previous candidates for Stalin's position as the head of the Soviet Union, they
would be executed.
Fortunately for them, Stalin's health declined even further
and by the end of February, 1953, he fell into a coma. After four days, Stalin
briefly gained consciousness. The leading members of the party were called for.
While they watched him struggling for his life, he raised his left arm. His
nurse, who was feeding him with a spoon at the time, took the view that he was
pointing at a picture showing a small girl feeding a lamb. His daughter,
Svetlana Alliluyeva, who was also at his bedside, later claimed that he
appeared to be "bringing a curse on them all". Stalin then stopped
breathing and although attempts were made to revive him, his doctors eventually
accepted he was dead.
Three years after his death, Nikita Khrushchev, the new
leader of the Soviet Union, made a speech at the Twentieth Party Congress,
where he attacked the policies of Stalin. Khrushchev revealed how Stalin had
been responsible for the execution of thousands of loyal communists during the
purges.
In the months that followed Khrushchev's speech, thousands
of those people imprisoned under Stalin were released. Those who had been in
labour camps were given permission to publish their experiences. The most
notable of these was the writer Alexander Solzhenitsyn, whose powerful novel,
One Day in the Life of Ivan Denisovich, became a world-wide bestseller.
In 1962 the official party newspaper published a poem by the
poet Yevgeni Yevtushenko called the Heirs of Stalin. The poem describes the
burial of Stalin but at the end suggests that the problems are not yet over:
"Grimly clenching his embalmed fists, just pretending to be dead, he
watched from inside. He was scheming. Had merely dozed off. And I, appealing to
our government, petition them to double, and treble, the sentries guarding the
slab, and stop Stalin from ever rising again."
After Khrushchev's revelations, attempts were made to erase
Stalin's image from the Soviet Union. Statues and portraits of Stalin were
removed from public places. Towns, streets and parks named after him were
changed. Stalingrad, which had been closely associated with his generalship
during both the Civil War and the Second World War, was renamed Volgagrad. Even
his ashes were takes from the Kremlin Wall and placed elsewhere.
Although the superficial aspects of Stalinism was removed,
the system that he created remained. Stalin had developed a state apparatus
that protected those in power. It was a system that the Soviet leaders who were
to follow him for the next thirty years, were only too pleased to employ in
order to prevent any questioning of their policies. Writers like Alexander
Solzhenitsyn and Yevgeni Yevtushenko were free to criticize Stalin but not
those currently in power. The excesses of Stalinism had been removed but the
structure of his totalitarian state remained until the emergence of Mikhail
Gorbachev in the 1980s.
Joseph Stalin's Photo Gallery
Joseph Stalin, 1918, Tsaritsyn front |
Vladimir Lenin and Joseph Stalin, 1919 |
Joseph Stalin, 1949 |
Joseph Stalin and Nikita Khrushchev, 1936 |
L-R Joseph Stalin, Franklin D Roosevelt |
Joseph Stalin with daughter Svetlana 1935 |
Joseph Stalin and Maxim Gorky, 1931 |
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L-R Winston Churchill, Franklin D. Roosevelt, and Joseph Stalin |
Stalin and Ribbentrop |
Joseph Stalin and Georgi Dimitrov, 1936 |
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