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Speeches commemorating the sixtieth anniversary of Trotsky's
assassination
Trotsky's struggle against Stalin and the tragic fate of the
Soviet Union
By Vladimir Volkov
27 October 2000
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At two meetings commemorating the sixtieth anniversary of
the assassination of Leon Trotsky, speakers illuminated the contemporary
significance of Trotsky's work. The International Committee of
the Fourth International and the World Socialist Web Site
hosted the meetings in Berlin and London in September.
WSWS Editorial Board member Vladimir Volkov gave the following
speech on September 23 in Berlin. Tomorrow we will post the speech
by Chris Talbot, a regular contributor to the WSWS from
Britain, concluding our coverage of the meetings.
Trotsky once said that ideas are stronger than even the most
powerful general secretary. The tragic event we have gathered
here to commemorate might seem to refute this claim. But if we
examine the significance of historical events since Trotsky's
assassination 60 years ago, we will see that his statement has
been fully justified.
Between the end of the 1980s and the beginning of the 1990s
the Soviet Union suddenly fell to pieces as a world super power.
The enormous country that emerged victorious from the Second World
War and put the first man into space disintegrated without any
particular interference from either the domestic or international
scene. Ten years later, hardly a trace remains of its former great-power
status. In an incredibly short time it has fallen into catastrophic
economic and social decline, while simultaneously a comprehensive
redistribution of former state property has taken place. As a
result, a small criminal class of nouveaux riches has come into
being, while the overwhelming majority of the population has sunk
into povertya calamity that seems utterly absurd in light
of the prodigious technological achievements of modern civilisation.
The whole of the former Soviet Union has descended into endless
ethnic and religious conflicts. Disasters like those experienced
in August with the loss of the nuclear submarine the Kursk in
the Barents Sea and the fire at the Moscow Ostankino television
tower are not only signs of the grave sickness of the entire post-Soviet
society, they are evidence of the advancing collapse of the social,
economic and technological infrastructure of the country.
Trotskyism versus Stalinism
How was this possible? What cruel fate brought about the end
of the Soviet Union?
To answer these questions we will have to return to the conflict
that occurred in the Soviet Union in the mid-1920s and involved
two contrasting perspectives for the future development of the
USSR: Stalin's hypothesis of building socialism in one country
and Trotsky's theory of the permanent revolution. If we examine
this debate and its consequences from today's vantage point, it
soon becomes clear that it provides us with the key to an understanding
of our own contemporary problems.
Ten years ago it was widely believed throughout the world that,
with the collapse of the USSR, socialism too had finally gone
bankrupt. In reality, it was not socialism that foundered but
its antithesisStalinism. What came to an end was the attempt
to build an isolated, self-sufficient, national economy.
A massive historical experiment was carried out in the Soviet
Union under the leadership of Stalin and his political heirs.
Although this entailed significant achievementslargely the
result of the genuine enthusiasm of ordinary workers and entailed
great sacrifices, whose importance it would be folly to minimisethe
experiment suffered a terrible defeat in the long run.
Does this mean that the 1917 Revolution was also meaningless:
that it was doomed to failure?
Absolutely not! The international perspectives underlying the
1917 Revolution had nothing in common with the politics of national
autonomy sanctioned by the Soviet Union from the mid-1920s. The
possibility that the revolution might degenerate into reactionary
nationalism was, in fact, predicted long before it happened.
All of this leads us to an appreciation of the intellectual
and political contribution of Leon Trotsky, one of the leaders
of 1917 and the foremost opponent of Stalinism in the international
workers movement. In light of the experience of the rise and fall
of the Soviet Union, we can refer to three of Trotsky's forecasts
that have stood the test of history.
The first of these predictions concerns the question of the
future tasks and driving forces of the Russian Revolution. Trotsky
scrutinised the social and economic contradictions inherent within
the tsarist empire and its position in the economy of the world
and, around 1907, came to the conclusion that the completion of
the democratic tasks in Russiathe dissolution of the monarchy
and the implementation of agricultural reformwas only possible
if the proletariat, supported by the peasantry and under the leadership
of a revolutionary party, were to seize power. That is exactly
what happened in 1917.
However, the historically backward condition of Russia did
not allow for the building of socialism without the support of
the European proletariat. Trotsky predicted that if the revolution
remained isolated it would inevitably degenerate if such support
came too late. Consequently, Trotsky and his followers well understood
the dangers already apparent in the advancing bureaucratisation
of the Bolshevik Party and the Soviet state as the revolutionary
wave began to recede in Europe in the 1920s and Soviet Russia
remained isolated in its backwardness.
We come finally to the third prediction. Trotsky analysed the
various stages and significance of this bureaucratic decay leading
to a revival of many of the phenomena from tsarist times and,
later, to the physical annihilation of a whole generation of Bolsheviks.
He warned that if the working class failed to topple it in a political
revolution, the bureaucracy would, sooner or later, destroy the
USSR and transform itself into a new class based on the acquisition
of private property.
Trotsky's internationalist perspective for
the USSR
At every stage of his analysis, Trotsky based his thinking
on an international appraisal of the epoch and the position occupied
by Russia in the world economic system. He formulated this understanding
in his introduction to the German edition of The Permanent
Revolution in 1930 as follows:
Marxism takes its point of departure from world economy,
not as a sum of national parts but as a mighty and independent
reality which has been created by the international division of
labour and the world market, and which in our epoch imperiously
dominates the national markets. The productive forces of capitalist
society have long ago outgrown the national boundaries. The imperialist
war (of 1914-1918) was one of the expressions of this fact. In
respect of the technique of production socialist society must
represent a stage higher than capitalism. To aim at building a
nationally isolated socialist society means, in spite of
all passing successes, to pull the productive forces backward
even as compared with capitalism. To attempt, regardless of the
geographical, cultural and historical conditions of the country
development, which constitutes a part of the world unity, to realize
a shut-off proportionality of all branches of economy within a
national framework, means to pursue a reactionary utopia
( The Permanent Revolution, New Park Publications, 1975,
p. 22).
As previously mentioned, it is impossible to deny the economic
and cultural advances achieved by the USSR. Nevertheless, it must
be maintained that this accomplishment was not the result of a
national upturn as such, but as an accompanying consequence of
the October Revolution and its fundamentally international character.
Even when the revolution degenerated along nationalist lines,
it continued to achieve wonders. But these pale in significance
compared to the progress that could have been made if the revolution
had been able to develop its full potential internationally.
In the course of its entire history, the law concerning the
dependence of the national economy on the world economy was to
have a determining influence on the Soviet Uniondespite
its state monopoly of foreign trade. The more the Soviet economy
developed, the more it became dependent on the world economy.
In the long run, the impossibility of walling itself off from
the world economy became one of the most important causes of the
collapse of the Soviet Union.
With the introduction of Mikhail Gorbachev's perestroika, Trotsky's
predictions made decades earlier were fulfilled with astounding
accuracy. Some of the passages from his works read as though they
were detailed descriptions of developments taking place today.
In his extraordinary book The Revolution Betrayed, for
example, he considers the degeneration of the USSR in the following
way:
A collapse of the Soviet regime would lead inevitably
to the collapse of the planned economy, and thus to the abolition
of state property. The bond of compulsion between the trusts and
the factories within them would fall away. The more successful
enterprises would succeed in coming out on the road of independence.
They might convert themselves into stock companies, or they might
find some other transitional forms of propertyone, for example,
in which the workers should participate in the profits. The collective
farms would disintegrate at the same time, and far more easily.
The fall of the present bureaucratic dictatorship, if it were
not replaced by a new socialist power, would thus mean a return
to capitalist relations with a catastrophic decline of the economy
and culture ( The Revolution Betrayed, Labor Publications,
1991, pp. 212-13).
In another passage he explains that the new bourgeois regime
would find no small number of willing ready servants among
the present bureaucrats, administrators, technicians, directors,
party secretaries and privileged upper circles in general....
The chief task of the new power would be to restore private property
in the means of production. First of all, it would be necessary
to create conditions for the development of strong farmers from
the weak collective farms, and for converting the strong collectives
into producers' cooperatives of the bourgeois type, into agricultural
stock companies. In the sphere of industry, denationalisation
would begin with the light industries and those producing food.
The planning principle would be converted for the transitional
period into a series of compromises between state power and individual
corporations'potential proprietors, that is, among
the Soviet captains of industry, the émigré former
proprietors and foreign capitalists (ibid., pp. 214-15).
A prognosis for the future
This is now at a much more advanced stage. Trotsky could not
have known precisely how the process of capitalist restoration
would continue. Yet the characteristic of all genuinely scientific
knowledge is that it allows new events to be analysed on the basis
of fundamental conceptions that have been tested against history
and that represent the subjective abstraction of objective human
experience.
The central question Trotsky investigated concerning the fate
of the Soviet Union was the changing relation between the national
and the world economies. Every stage of his analysis was directed
by consideration of future developments: It would prove impossible
to establish socialism in one country. But it is equally impossible
that capitalismincapable of solving the problems of the
economic development of Russia already at the beginning of the
twentieth centurywould be in a position to accomplish this
task in the present period, when the profit system is in a condition
of even greater decline.
Throughout the years of perestroika the Soviet Union found
itself in a dilemma, where neither the continuation of the old
line of autarkic development nor the integration of the Soviet
economy into the structures of the capitalist world market offered
any escape route from the crisis. The only progressive resolution
of the dilemma would have entailed jettisoning the policy of autarkynot
in accordance with the demands of capitalism but through a fundamental
remodelling of the whole Soviet economy on the basis of planned
and democratic management in the interests of all members of society.
The program of the October Revolution constituted precisely this
course, and Trotsky fought for it as a revolutionary and a Marxist
throughout his life.
The attemptsfirst by Gorbachev, then by Yeltsin and now
by Putinto bring Russia back into the fold of bourgeois
civilisation were doomed to failure from the outset because they
did not represent any viable alternative. An objectively logical
basis for events underlies the terrible decline experienced by
the republics of the former Soviet Union in the past 10 years.
The logic behind the catastrophe can be understood when one recognises
the truth and significance of Trotsky's analysis.
The cause of Russia's current problems is the same as it was
during the existence of the Soviet Union: its relationship to
the world economy. Capitalism long ago lost its ability to bring
development to backward regions of the world. For a while, it
seemed as though the Asian tigers contradicted this
thesis. Since the financial crisis of 1997, however, only a few
commentators have dared to repeat the previously popular, though
superficial, argument about an Asian economic miracle.
The tendency of globalisation today leads to an increasing
concentration of capital in the coffers of the great transnational
corporations. In literally every corner of the planet these corporations
are involved in feverish competitive struggles between themselves
for raw materials, labour power and markets. The predominance
of the world economy over the various national economies has reached
such a degree that it no longer allows even the most developed
capitalist states to maintain the methods of national economic
regulation and the social welfare systems of the post-war period.
The dismantling of these systems world-wide is being accompanied
by growing poverty and social inequality. Under these conditions,
countries like Russia, whose antiquated economies are lumbered
with enormous structural disadvantages, are in no position to
hope for a blossoming of the economy.
The deepening crisis throughout the world makes a revival of
the ideas and perspectives developed by Leon Trotsky both necessary
and decisive. Such a revival requires Trotsky's political and
intellectual rehabilitation in the eyes of millions of ordinary
people everywhere in the worldhis rehabilitation not only
as an outstanding revolutionary and representative of Marxism,
but also as one of the most relevant thinkers of our times.
See Also:
Speeches
commemorating the sixtieth anniversary of Trotsky's assassination
The contemporary significance of Leon Trotsky's life and work
[26 October 2000]
Sixty
years after the assassination of Trotsky
The contemporary significance of Leon Trotsky's life and work
Public meeting in Sydney, Australia
[21 October 2000]
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