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WSWS : History
: Leon
Trotsky
Leon Trotsky and the post-Soviet school of historical falsification
A review of two Trotsky biographies by Geoffrey Swain and
Ian Thatcher
Part 4: The relevance of Trotsky
By David North
12 May 2007
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Today we publish the first part of a four-part review of
two biographies of Trotsky written by Professors Geoffrey Swain
and Ian D. Thatcher. The first, second and third
parts can be accessed here. Click here
to download the entire review in PDF.
Trotsky, by Geoffrey Swain. 237 pages, Longman, 2006.
Trotsky, by Ian D. Thatcher. 240 pages, Routledge, 2003.
Thatcher on the impossibility of revolution
There are two persistent and interrelated arguments Thatcher
makes repeatedly in his biography: 1) There is no reason to believe
that either Russian or European history would have developed any
differently had Trotsky defeated Stalin; and 2) Trotskys
criticisms of Stalin were, on the whole, unfair. Dealing with
economic policy, Thatcher states, Of course, even if by
some miracle Trotsky had been able to grasp the reins of power,
there are many reasons to doubt whether he would have enjoyed
the sorts of policy successes his program promised. One can question,
for example, whether a Soviet economy managed by Trotsky could
have provided industrial expansion and improved living standards.[83]
Yes, one can question anything. But the issue is
not whether one can determine, to the point of certainty, the
success of the program of the Left Opposition. Certainty is not
attainable, nor is that the issue. The real question is: did the
Left Opposition demonstrate significantly greater understanding
of the problems of the Soviet economy than the Stalinist leadership,
and did the Left Opposition exhibit far greater foresight than
the bureaucracy in anticipating problems and proposing ameliorative
action before disaster struck? To these two critical questions,
we can reply unambiguously in the affirmative. On this basis,
we can then ask whether based on a more timely response
to looming dangers and the avoidance of their worst consequences
it is reasonable to believe that the Soviet economy would
have achieved greater successes and with far fewer human sacrifices.
Here, too, the answer is clearly yes. Thatcher never explores
the issues in this way. He makes no reference to the detailed
program produced by the Left Opposition in 1927. Instead, we are
left with a peculiar form of fatalism that translates into a historical
apology for Stalin and Stalinism. Thatcher takes this same approach
to every important issue of international revolutionary policy.
Turning to the disastrous defeat of the Chinese Revolution
in 1927, in which Stalins subordination of the Chinese Communist
Party to the bourgeois Kuomintang of Chiang Kai-shek played a
major role, Thatcher asserts that even had the CCP abandoned
the Kuomintang in 1926, there is no evidence to suggest that it
could have enjoyed any greater success in 1927.[84] What evidence has Thatcher assessed?
Where did he conduct research into the events of 1925-27? There
is a rich body of political and historical literature, a significant
amount of which was produced by Chinese revolutionaries, analyzing
the catastrophic consequences of Stalins policies in the
period of 1925-27.
There is no evidence that Thatcher is in the least familiar
with this literature. It is a historical fact that Chiang Kai-sheks
massacre of Shanghai workers in April 1927 was facilitated by
the failure of the Communist Party to take defensive measures
that might have either forestalled the attack, or at least allowed
the cadre to beat it back. The passivity of the CCP was dictated
by Stalins insistence that the Chinese Communists avoid
antagonizing Chiang and the bourgeois Kuomintang. For nearly a
year, Trotsky and the Left Opposition warned of the suicidal dangers
arising from such a policy. To claim that even if their warnings
had been acted upon in a timely manner they would have made no
difference is to elevate hopelessness to the status of an immutable
historical condition, at least as far as socialist revolution
is concerned.
On the question of Germany, Thatcher argues along the same
lines. There is a certain attraction to Trotskys account
of KPD blunders and the possibility that had the German communists
adopted a different course Hitlers triumph could have been
avoided, Thatcher writes. The support such a case
has received in subsequent studies is hardly surprising. After
all, who does not wish that the National Socialist German Workers
Party (NSDAP) had never taken power? One can still question, however,
whether history would have been so different had Trotsky had a
greater influence on events. ... Trotsky overestimated the power
of the workers and underestimated the strength of fascism. It
is possible that Hitler would have risen to power even over a
coalition of communists and social democrats. ... A change in
KPD policies as demanded by Trotsky might have been insufficient
to keep the NSDAP from government.[85]
The critical role played by the catastrophic policies of the
two main working class parties the SPD and KPD in
facilitating Hitlers victory is not a matter of serious
historical controversy. There are, of course, many questions as
to why these parties pursued such disastrous and self-destructive
policies. But it is as close to a historical certainty as anything
can be that the working class parties, despite their millions
of members, pursued policies that ultimately reduced themselves
to a state of complete political impotence. To state that the
action or inaction of two mass parties would, in any event, have
had no effect on the outcome of the political struggle in Germany,
that Hitler would have conquered no matter what, is to
render the whole subject of the working class movement and socialist
politics politically and historically irrelevant. This is the
conclusion that flows inevitably from Thatchers argument.[86]
While Thatcher repeatedly insists that the adoption of Trotskys
policies would have made no difference whatsoever, he argues time
and again against Trotskys criticisms of Stalin. He is so
unshakeable in his hostility toward Trotsky and sympathy for Stalin
that one cannot help but think that his work is driven by an unstated
political agenda. Long ago, in his justly famous What Is History?,
E.H. Carr advised us to listen carefully for the buzzing of bees
in a historians bonnet. The bees in a good historians
bonnet emit a pleasing and sophisticated sound that harmonizes
beautifully with the factual material that it accompanies. But
the bees in Mr. Thatchers bonnet emit a very loud, discordant
and tendentious sound, rather like Stalinist hornets. My concern
here is not Thatchers politics to which he is personally
entitled but his treatment of historical facts. The bees
(or even hornets) only become a serious problem when their buzzing
is so loud that one cannot hear the history.
Thatcher defends Stalin
Defending Stalin against Trotskys criticism, Thatcher
declares that the latters thesis of a Stalinist betrayal
of world revolution is as one-sided as it is unconvincing. It
ignores, for example, the positive aspects of the Popular-Front
tactic, evident in the expansion of the communist parties
support and influence.[87]
At this point, as Professor Thatcher approaches the conclusion
of his biography, the distinction between history writing and
tendency polemics has been obliterated. The pretense of writing
a biography is virtually dropped, and the reader is being fed
what used to be called the Stalinist party-line. Thatcher, extolling
the Stalinist successes of the Popular Front era,
ignores Trotskys analysis of the Seventh Congress of the
Comintern in 1935, which implemented in the aftermath of
the catastrophes of Stalinist Third Period ultra-leftism
the shift toward alliances with bourgeois parties. Thatcher
makes no mention of Trotskys assessment that the Seventh
Congress and the adoption of Popular Frontism signified the repudiation
of any link between the Comintern and the perspective of socialist
revolution a development rooted in the foreign policy interests
of the Stalinist regime in the USSR. This assessment, it should
be pointed out, was endorsed by E.H. Carr, in The Twilight
of the Comintern.[88]
Thatcher continues, There is also no evidence to confirm
Trotskys contention, however, that Comintern tactics were
dependent on the demands of Soviet diplomacy.[89] Here, Thatcher is not only arguing against
Trotsky, but the overwhelming weight of historical evidence. An
author who makes such a claim surrenders any right to be taken
seriously as a historian. How would Thatcher explain the overnight
change in the policies of Communist parties all over the world,
after the negotiation of the Stalin-Hitler Pact of August 1939?
There is also the matter of the physical liquidation of large
numbers of leading members of national Communist parties during
the Stalinist Terror of 1937-39. Virtually the entire leadership
of the Polish Communist Party was wiped out, because Stalin deemed
it susceptible to Trotskyist influences. Large sections of the
old leadership of the German Communist Party, which had escaped
Hitler by fleeing to the USSR, were executed in Moscow during
the Terror. The KPD General Secretary, Ernst Thaelmann, who had
been captured by the Nazis, was abandoned by Stalin, who declined
an opportunity to have him released to Soviet custody after the
signing of the Pact with Hitler. Thaelmann perished in a concentration
camp. The leadership that emerged from Soviet exile in 1945 to
assume control of what was to become the East German state consisted
of individuals who had been left alive by Stalin often
at the price of denouncing their KPD comrades. Does not all this
constitute a form of subordination of Communist parties to the
dictates of the Soviet regime?
An understanding of the pervasive Soviet influence in the policies
of the Comintern requires an examination of the activities of
the GPU (which became the NKVD), the secret police of the Stalinist
regime. Trotsky examined this issue in detail in one of his last
articles, The Comintern and the GPU, which he completed
less than two weeks before his own assassination by a Stalinist
agent.[90] Citing the testimony
of Walter Krivitsky, who defected from the GPU, and Benjamin Gitlow,
an ex-member of the leadership of the American Communist Party,
Trotsky documented the control exerted by GPU agents over the
Stalinist organizations. He included an analysis of financial
transactions, demonstrating how the flow of cash was used to direct
and control the policies of local Stalinist parties. He also demonstrated
the financial dependence of these parties on cash from Moscow.
Thatcher does not examine, analyze and reply to this document
the last major statement written by Trotsky before his
death on August 21, 1940. He simply ignores it.
Thatcher also mounts an impassioned defense of Stalin on another
front. He writes, Finally, Trotsky clearly underestimated
the capacity of the USSR to withstand a German declaration of
war, which eventually occurred in June 1941. Stalin proved himself
a capable war leader, standing firm at the helm in the initial
confusion surrounding the first moments of the German attack.[91] Two issues are raised
here: first, Trotskys assessment of the resilience of the
Soviet Union in the event of war; second, Stalins role as
a war leader. In response to the first, Thatcher again falsifies
Trotskys position. He does not cite from Trotskys
most comprehensive statement on the Soviet Unions powers
of resistance in the event of war. The Red Army, written
by Trotsky in March 1934, came to a conclusion that is the exact
opposite to the one attributed to him by Thatcher. He who
is able to read the books of history, wrote Trotsky, will
understand beforehand that should the Russian Revolution, which
has continued ebbing and flowing for almost 30 years since
1905 be forced to direct its stream into the channel of
war, it will unleash a terrific and overwhelming force.[92] This statement hardly
qualifies as an underestimation of the USSR.
As for Thatchers special tribute to Stalin as a war leader,
it is curious that he chooses to cite specifically his activities
during the first moments of the German attack. He
certainly knows that there are many questions surrounding Stalins
response to the German invasion of June 22, 1941. In numerous
books, including the memoirs of leading Soviet officials, it has
been claimed that Stalin was emotionally devastated by the news
of the invasion, which exposed the utter bankruptcy of his diplomatic
game with Hitler and now confronted the USSR with the possibility
of total ruin. Thatcher is not unaware of this, and includes a
footnote, which states: Several textbooks claim that when
Germany invaded the USSR Stalin was thrown into a panic and it
would have been possible to overthrow him ... These claims are
convincingly refuted by S.J. Main, Stalin in 1941.[93]
To claim that the controversy surrounding Stalins activities
in the aftermath of the German invasion has been convincingly
refuted by Professor Mains brief two-page article,
which is merely a comment on a much longer article by another
historian, is a travesty of scholarly judgment and an exercise
in political apologetics.[94]
Moreover, the issue of what Stalin did or did not do in the last
week of June 1941, after the Nazis invaded, is of secondary significance
in assessing his responsibility for the catastrophe that overwhelmed
the Soviet Union. The horrifying human losses suffered by the
Soviet people were the direct consequence of the policies and
actions of Stalin: the murder of the leading Soviet marshals and
generals (such as Tukhachevsky, Yakir, Gamarnik, Blucher, Yegorov,
and Primakov); the extermination of 75 percent of the Red Army
officer corps in 1937-38; the killing of the finest representatives
of the socialist intelligentsia and working class; the systematic
disorganization and dismantling of Soviet military defenses so
as not to provoke Hitler; the refusal to act on intelligence that
a German invasion was imminent; etc. All this has been amply documented
in innumerable books and scholarly articles. But Thatcher ignores
it and proclaims that a two page comment in one journal settles
the question of Stalins role in World War II.[95]
Thatchers references to the Bronsteins
Beneath the accumulating weight of the falsification of Trotskys
life and crude apologies for Stalin, the intentions of the author
himself appear increasingly dubious, not only in an intellectual
sense but in a moral one as well. In this regard, it is necessary
to take note of Thatchers repeated references to Trotsky
and his wife, Natalia Sedova, as the Bronsteins. I
noted no less than nine occasions when Thatcher refers to the
couple in this way, usually when describing their private living
arrangements or their movement from one place of exile to another.
Thatcher tells us that The Bronsteins were living largely
off credit in Vienna (p. 52); Finally, the Bronsteins
were allowed to go to Barcelona (p. 77); the Bronsteins
were taken over the border (p. 164); Prinkipo provided
a home for the majority of the Bronsteins (p. 165); in
France, for example, the Bronsteins had no less than a dozen addresses
of varying leases (p. 188); The move to North America,
where the Bronsteins arrived in mid-January 1937... (p.
189); and so on. Why does Thatcher so persistently identify Trotsky
and Sedova as the Bronsteins? First of all, there
is no factual basis for doing so. The two people he is referring
to did not make use of that surname. Trotskys wife, Natalia,
was known by her own legal family name, Sedova. The two children
of Lev Davidovitch and Natalya Lev and Sergei used
Sedov as their surname. Trotsky, aside from the fact that he never
referred to himself as Bronstein after 1902, used Sedov as his
own legal name.
This is not, as might first seem to those unfamiliar with Trotskys
life, a small matter. Like every other aspect of his life, even
the name by which he and his family were identified assumed political
significance. In January 1937, Trotsky commented on the fact that
the Soviet press, upon reporting the arrest of his youngest son
on charges of sabotage, referred to him as Sergei Bronstein.
Trotsky wrote, Since 1902 I have invariably borne the
name of Trotsky. In view of my illegality, my children under czarism
were recorded under their mothers family name Sedov.
So as not to force them to change the name to which they had become
accustomed, under Soviet power I took for civic purposes
the name Sedov (according to Soviet law, a husband can, as is
well known, take the name of the wife). The Soviet passport under
which I, my wife, and elder son were sent into exile was made
out in the name of the Sedov family. My sons, thus, have never
used the name Bronstein. Just why is it now necessary to drag
out this name? The answer is obvious: because of its Jewish sound.
To this it is necessary to add that my son is accused of nothing
more or less than an attempt to slaughter workers. Is this really
so different from accusing the Jews of ritually using the blood
of Christians?[96]
It is impossible to believe that Thatcher is not familiar with
this and other occasions where Trotsky denounced and identified
the use of his original family name as an anti-Semitic ploy. Knowing
that it is factually incorrect to do so, why then does Thatcher
refer to the Bronsteins, rather than the Trotskys or the Sedovs?
The moral burden falls upon him to dispel the legitimate suspicion
that certain base calculations are in play. I am not stating that
Thatcher is an anti-Semite. But it is beyond doubt that he is,
for whatever reasons, repeatedly calling to the readers
attention the Jewish origins of Trotsky.[97] He should explain his reasons for doing so.
Thatchers falsification of the Dewey
Commission
Thatcher devotes about two pages to the Moscow Trials and Trotskys
struggle to refute their charges. He discusses the formation of
the Dewey Commission, and the hearings that were held in April
1937 in Mexico where the Bronsteins were lodging.[98] After a brief review of
the proceedings and the testimony of Leon Trotsky, Thatcher arrives
at the Commissions findings. He writes, The Moscow
trials were declared an unreliable guide to the truth, the accusations
against Trotsky unproven [emphasis DN].[99]
This is a falsification of the findings of the Dewey Commission.
On September 21, 1937, the Commission announced its findings,
of which there were 23. The first 21 consisted of refutations
of specific allegations against Trotsky that were crucial to the
claims of the Soviet prosecutors. The decisive summary conclusions
were presented in Findings 22 and 23. They stated, 22. We
therefore find the Moscow trials to be frame-ups. 23. We therefore
find Trotsky and [his son] Sedov not guilty.[100]
Note the difference between the words used by the Dewey Commission
and those selected by Thatcher. There is a profound difference
between defining a proceeding as a frame-up (the word
used by the Dewey Commission) and an unreliable guide to
the truth (the words used by Thatcher). A frame-up is a
pseudo-legal proceeding in which evidence is contrived and concocted
to produce a predetermined verdict of guilty. It is not merely
an unreliable guide to truth. Its aim is the suppression
of truth and it makes use of lies to facilitate, under a pseudo-legal
cover, the imprisonment or execution of a wrongfully-accused individual.
Thatcher could have simply quoted finding 22 of the Dewey Commission.
Instead he used five words unreliable guide to the truth
to say something very different from the one word frame-up
used by the Commission.[101]
There is also a fundamental legal difference between
a finding of not guilty (handed down by the Dewey Commission)
and a verdict of unproven (the term used by Thatcher).
A verdict of not guilty leaves the presumption of the defendants
innocence undisturbed. A verdict of unproven is quite
a different matter. It carries the implication that while there
existed insufficient evidence to return a verdict of guilty, the
jury was not convinced of the innocence of the accused. Thatcher,
who lived and taught in Glasgow for many years, knows very well
the distinction between not guilty and unproven.
One of the peculiarities of Scot law is that it allows juries
to return a verdict of not proven. This has been a
subject of substantial legal controversy for several centuries
precisely because of the lingering moral shadow that the so-called
third verdict leaves behind on the accused.[102] It requires a high degree of naiveté
to believe that Thatchers substitution of unproven
for the words not guilty is an innocent error. He
is unquestionably guilty of deliberately falsifying the findings
of the Dewey Commission.
What, the reader may ask, is the purpose of such a falsification?
And why should one treat it as such a grave matter? The reader
should bear in mind the methods employed by Thatcher and Swain,
which we have already examined. As they quote each other and their
own works are cited by others, the virus of falsification spreads
insidiously via a complacent academic community into the broader
public. In this particular example, the immense original force
of the Dewey Commission verdict is diluted and falsified. As the
denunciation of the Moscow trials as a frame-up and the unambiguous
acquittal of Trotsky and Sedov fall from historical memory, Thatchers
formulations eventually to be recycled by other careless
historians contribute to the erosion of previously-established
facts and objective truth.
Thatchers final comments on Trotskys
historical role
After more than 200 pages of distortions, half-truths and outright
falsifications, we arrive at Thatchers final appraisal of
Trotsky. Trotsky, he informs his readers, was
not a great political leader or prophet. He spent the majority
of his political life in opposition, the exponent of views commanding
minority support.[103]
To this remark his readers should respond, Well, Professor
Thatcher, that is simply your opinion. And, indeed, it is
an opinion unsupported by credible scholarly work, and therefore
the reader has no reason to take it particularly seriously. One
is reminded of Hegels admonition, What is more useless
than a string of bald opinions, and what is more unimportant?[104] As for the basis of
this opinion that Trotsky spent most of his life in opposition
this tells us more about Thatchers views and character
than it does about the revolutionary leader upon whom he is passing
judgment.
Thatcher continues, Is there anything of lasting merit
in Trotskys works, or were he and his writings of relevance
only to his time and experience? An answer to this question will
depend, at least in part, on how one rates Marxism and Trotskys
standing as a Marxist.
To begin with the latter question, it is doubtful whether
Trotsky made any lasting contribution to Marxist thought. He may
even have been unaware of some of Marxs basic writings.
In The Revolution Betrayed, for example, Trotsky insisted
several times that Marx had nothing to say about Russia, that
the master expected a socialist revolution to begin in the countries
of advanced capitalism. This ignores Marxs interest in the
question of whether backward Russia could bypass capitalism
and undertake a direct transition to socialism on the basis of
the peasant commune.
Marxs response, of evident relevance to Trotskys
theory of permanent revolution, was given in several of his writings,
including the Preface to the (1881) Russian edition of the Communist
Manifesto. Here Marx answered in the affirmative. A Russian
Revolution could aim at a direct transition to socialism, but
only if it sparked socialist revolutions in the advanced West.
If Trotsky had been aware of this and other texts in which Marx
addressed the problem of building socialism in Russia, he would
surely have claimed a stronger link between the theory of permanent
revolution and Marx, as well as less originality for his conception
of the revolutionary process in Russia. If we assume that Trotsky
did not know of Marxs concern with Russia, then this points
to the conclusion that Trotskys Marxism was a product of
the Russian environment [emphasis DN].[105]
In this passage the author combines, in equal measure, ignorance
and insolence. This is the sort of writing that could have appeared
in scores of Stalinist journals prior to the collapse of the USSR.
The specific claim that Trotsky insisted that Marx had nothing
to say about Russia, is a crass misrepresentation of what
Trotsky wrote. He explained precisely why it was impossible to
derive from a mechanical application of Marxs historical
conceptions an analysis of Soviet society.[106] In this, Trotsky demonstrated not his ignorance
of Marxs work, but his creative approach to Marxism. Moreover,
he based key arguments in Revolution Betrayed on observations
of Marx. Trotsky, to cite just one example, employed the concept
of generalized want, suggested by Marx in The German
Ideology, to explain the origins and social function of the
bureaucracy in the USSR as the gendarme the
police enforcer of social inequality.
Thatchers claim that Trotsky was not aware of Marxs
writings in 1881 on the prospects for socialism in Russia, and,
moreover, that the former did not recognize the link between his
own theory of permanent revolution and Marxs work is easily
contradicted. Thatcher apparently has not read the essay, Marxism
and the Relation between Proletarian and Peasant Revolution,
written in December 1928. Trotsky specifically reviewed the 1881
correspondence between Marx and the old Russian revolutionist
Vera Zasulich, in which Marx worked through the theoretical issues
that were concisely summed up in the January 1882 (not 1881 as
Thatcher writes) preface to the Russian edition of the Communist
Manifesto. As for his own intellectual debt to Marx, Trotsky
wrote in this essay that the idea of permanent revolution
was one of the most important ideas of Marx and Engels.[107] So here we have Thatcher
arguing in his conclusion that Trotsky was unfamiliar with key
writings of Marx on the subject of Russia, and it turns out that
this fantastic hypothesis is merely the product of Thatchers
failure to do his basic intellectual homework![108]
Having sarcastically posed the question of Trotskys relevance,
Thatcher should tell us why he has written a 240-page book to
proclaim his irrelevance. Why did he establish, with his former
colleague from the University of Glasgow, James D. White, the
short-lived Journal of Trotsky Studies, whose publication
represented Thatchers first major anti-Trotsky project?
Why has Swain written his 236-page biography?
It is worth noting that Thatcher has no doubts about the relevance
of Stalin. In a review of several studies of Stalin that appeared
around the time of the fiftieth anniversary of the dictators
death, Thatcher, revealing the bees in his bonnet, confessed a
certain nostalgia for a benign version of Stalinism,
adding, Stalin continues to fascinate and to cause moments
of moral uncertainty.[109]
What sort of moral uncertainty, one is compelled to wonder, can
be caused by the actions of a blood-drenched tyrant who slaughtered
an entire generation of socialists, betrayed the principles of
the October Revolution, and set into motion the process that led
to the destruction of the Soviet Union?
Conclusion
It has been an unpleasant experience to work through the volumes
of Mr. Swain and Mr. Thatcher. Despite the length of this essay,
I have by no means answered all the distortions and falsifications
that appear in their work. Such a comprehensive account would
require nothing less than a volume of its own. But I believe that
this review has established that neither biography has the slightest
scholarly merit. Still, the questions remain: Why have these books
been written? What is their purpose? The answer, I believe, is
to be found in politics. While Thatcher speculates cynically at
the conclusion of his book on the relevance of its subject, he
hardly believes that Trotsky is so marginal a historical figure.
Indeed, Thatchers obsessive interest in Trotsky suggests
he holds privately a very different view. And well he should,
for the significance of Trotsky as a historical figure is inextricably
linked to the vicissitudes of the international class struggle.
To determine the relevance of Trotsky, one must ask several other
questions: What is the relevance of socialism? What is the relevance
of Marxism? What is the relevance of the class struggle in modern
society? Has capitalism attained a new and permanent level of
stability? Has the very concept of a crisis of capitalism
become historically outmoded? These are the questions that must
be asked when considering the place of Trotsky in history and
the significance of his ideas in the contemporary world.
Leon Trotskys ideas do not seem all that remote in the
light of objective developments. First, the developments in technology
and their impact upon the processes of production and exchange
have produced a global economy that places tremendous strains
on the old national-state structures. Moreover, the precipitous
decline in the world economic position of the United States significantly
limits the likelihood of a new world order that will regulate
inter-state relations and maintain global stability. The world
capitalist system is heading toward a systemic breakdown on the
scale of the period of 1914-45.
The fragility of the existing global economic and geo-political
order has been intensified by domestic class-based social tensions.
During the past quarter century, we have witnessed a collapse
of the old mass parties and organizations of the working class.
It is hard to think of a political party anywhere in the world
that retains any significant degree of credibility among the masses.
The old Communist parties, Social Democratic parties, and Labour
parties have either collapsed as is the case with most
of the Stalinist organizations or stagger on as organizations
sustained only by a thoroughly corrupt apparatus. To describe
them as working class is to completely abuse the historical
meaning of the term. They are all right-wing bourgeois parties,
no less committed to the defense of capitalism and the imperialist
interests of the global transnationals than the old traditional
bourgeois parties.
But this collapse of every form of Stalinist and Social Democratic
reformist-based working class organization proceeds against the
backdrop of rising social inequality and intensifying class antagonisms.
The old organizations simply lack the political means and credibility
to harness the deepening social discontent and channel it into
paths that do not threaten the stability of the capitalist system.
At some point the intensification of class conflict will find
intellectual and political expression. There will be a search
for alternatives to the present set-up. This will create an intellectual
and social constituency for a revival of interest in the history
of the socialist movement, in the revolutionary struggles of the
past. It is inevitable that the development of such a climate
will lead to a renewed interest in the life and work of Leon Trotsky.
That is what happened during the last great wave of radicalization
of workers and students. The more politically-thoughtful sections
of the bourgeoisie recognize this danger and fear it. It is worth
noting the perceptive words of Robert J. Alexander, who remarked
in his encyclopedic volume on International Trotskyism,
published by Duke University in 1991:
Although International Trotskyism does not enjoy the
support of a well established regime, as did the heirs of Stalinism,
the persistence of the movement in a wide variety of countries
together with the instability of the political life of most of
the worlds nations means that the possibility that a Trotskyist
party might come to power in the foreseeable future cannot be
totally ruled out.[110]
This is, as we know, the era of preemptive war, and these works
represent a sort of preemptive strike against the reemergence
of Trotskyist influence. This is why distinguished publishing
houses like Routledge and Longman commission biographies such
as those produced by Swain and Thatcher.
The political crisis intersects with a profound intellectual
crisis. How is one to explain the benign reception of these two
miserable books? It is, I believe, bound up with the predominance,
for more than a quarter century, of truly reactionary modes of
thought, associated with post-modernism, which repudiate the very
concept of objective truth. In the course of this review essay,
I have referred several times to E. H. Carr, and I will do so
again. Nearly a half-century ago, he warned against the infiltration
into history of the Nietzschean principle, formulated in Beyond
Good and Evil: The falseness of an opinion is not for
us any objection to it...[111]
The contemporary repudiation of objective truth, supported by
the claim that the only issue is the internal coherence of a narrative,
which is to be judged on its own terms, is inimical to serious
scholarly work, or even to rational thought. It encourages a climate
where anything goes, where falsification flourishes,
where there is no protest when lies are told about history.
And what does this mean? I began this essay with a review of
the Moscow Trials and Stalins Terror. I explained that what
started with historical falsification ended with mass murder.
That process is repeating itself in our own time. Whoever wishes
to consider the implications and consequences of historical lies
has only to consider the lies that were employed to prepare public
opinion for the war in Iraq. Weapons of mass destruction
was a lie that has already led to the deaths of hundreds of thousands.
A new generation now confronts immense and life-threatening
problems. Everywhere it faces crisis and decay. The very future
of the planet is in question if answers are not found to the crisis
of the world capitalist system. The study of history must play
a central role in the discovery of those answers required by humanity
in the twenty-first century. But how can history be studied if
its record is falsified? The working people and youth of the world
need truth, and the struggle to discover and defend it is the
intellectual driving force of human progress.
Endnotes:
[83] Thatcher, p.
151. [return]
[84] Thatcher, p. 156. [return]
[85] Thatcher, pp. 179-81.
[return]
[86] The argument that Hitlers
victory was in any sense inevitable is not made by any serious
contemporary historian. Indeed, emphasis has generally been placed
on the extremely contingent character of Hitlers accession
to power. As Ian Kershaw, the author of a widely-respected two
volume biography of Hitler, has written, There was no inevitability
about Hitlers accession to power. Had Hindenburg been prepared
to grant to Schleicher the dissolution that he had readily allowed
Papen, and to prorogue the Reichstag for a period beyond the constitutional
sixty days, a Hitler Chancellorship might have been avoided. With
the corner turning of the economic Depression, and with the Nazi
movement facing potential break-up if power were not soon attained,
the future even if under an authoritarian government
would have been very different. Even as the cabinet argued outside
Hindenburgs door at eleven oclock on 30 January, keeping
the President waiting, there was a possibility that a Hitler Chancellorship
might not materialize. Hitlers rise from humble beginnings
to seize power by triumph of the will
was the stuff of Nazi legend. In fact, political miscalculation
by those with regular access to the corridors of power rather
than any actions on the part of the Nazi leader played a larger
role in placing him in the Chancellors seat (Hitler
1889-1936: Hubris, New York, 1998), p. 424. [return]
[87] Thatcher, p. 203. [return]
[88] Carr wrote that the
seventh congress had brought into the open the deep-seated trend,
long apparent to the discerning critic, to identify the aims of
Comintern with the policies of the USSR; and, after the paradoxical
success of the congress, the institution seemed to have lost its
reality. It was significant that no further congress, and no major
session of the IKKI [the executive body of the Comintern], was
ever again summoned. Comintern continued to discharge subordinate
functions, while the spotlight of publicity was directed elsewhere.
Trotskys verdict that the seventh congress would pass
into history as the liquidation congress of Comintern was
not altogether unfair. The seventh congress pointed the way to
the dénouement of 1943 [the formal dissolution of
the Communist International (Twilight of the Comintern,
1930-35, New York, 1982), p. 427. [return]
[89] Thatcher, p. 204 [return]
[90] The Comintern and
the GPU is published in the volume Stalins Gangsters,
by Leon Trotsky, published in London by New Park in 1977. The
late Harold Robins (1908-1987), who served as the captain of Trotskys
guard in Coyoacan in 1939-40, advised the publishers that Trotsky
had suggested this title for a collection of articles on the activities
of the GPU. [return]
[91] Thatcher, p. 206. [return]
[92] Writings of Leon Trotsky
1933-34 (New York, 1975), p. 259. [return]
[93] Thatcher, p. 234. [return]
[94] The article referred
to by Thatcher is Stalin in June 1941: A Comment on Cynthia
Roberts, by Steven J. Main, in Europe-Asia Studies
Vol. 48, No. 5 (July 1996), pp. 837-39. Professor Mains
comment was in reply to Cynthia Roberts Planning for
War: The Red Army and the Catastrophe of 1941, in Europe-Asia
Studies, Vol. 47, No. 8 (December 1995), pp. 1293-1326. [return]
[95] Declaring an intensely
controversial historical issue settled is one of Thatchers
favorite rhetorical tricks. He locates an article that supports
his opinion and then proclaims it to be convincing.
Of course, many experts remain unconvinced. For example, on the
matter of Stalins responsibility for the catastrophe of
1941, David E. Murphy writes: Stalins personal responsibility
for the monumental losses of the war years, particularly those
suffered in the first tragic months of the war, cannot be minimized
or denied (What Stalin Knew: The Enigma of Barbarossa,
New Haven and London: 2005), p. 247. [return]
[96] Anti-Semitic Devices,
January 30, 1937 (Writings of Leon Trotsky 1936-37, New
York, 1978), p. 177. [return]
[97] It would not be illegitimate
for a biographer to explore the cultural, psychological and political
implications of Trotskys Jewish origins. Some earlier biographers
have already attempted, though not with great success, to do so.
But Thatcher shows no particular interest in this theme, and this
makes his heavy-handed and factually-incorrect references to the
Bronsteins especially odd and suspect. [return]
[98] Thatcher, p. 197. [return]
[99] Thatcher, ibid. [return]
[100] John Dewey, Volume
11: 1935-37, ed. Jo Ann Boydston (Carbondale: Southern Illinois
University Press, 1991), p. 323. [return]
[101] In remarks made upon
the release of the Summary of Findings, John Dewey stated that
the members of the commission have been without exception
appalled by the utterly discreditable character of the whole Moscow
trial proceedings, at once flimsy and vicious. [Ibid, p.
324] [return]
[102] The novelist Sir Walter
Scott famously denounced it as the bastard verdict.
[return]
[103] Thatcher, p. 224. [return]
[104] Hegels Lectures
on the History of Philosophy, tr. E.S. Haldane and Francis
H. Simpson (London and New York, 1974), Volume One, p. 12. [return]
[105] Thatcher, p. 215 [return]
[106] What Trotsky actually
wrote, in a relevant passage, is the following: Moreover,
Marx expected that the Frenchman would begin the social revolution,
the German continue it, and the English finish it; and as to the
Russian, Marx left him far in the rear. But this conceptual order
was upset by the facts. Whoever tries now mechanically to apply
the universal historic conception of Marx to the particular case
of the Soviet Union at the given stage of its development will
be entangled at once in hopeless contradictions (The
Revolution Betrayed, Detroit, 1991), pp. 40-41. [return]
[107] The Challenge of
the Left Opposition 1928-29 (New York, 1981), p. 349. [return]
[108] Thatcher has also overlooked
the speech delivered by Trotsky on November 14, 1922 at the Fourth
Congress of the Communist International. Trotsky directly addressed
Marxs speculations about the possibility of a transition
to socialism based on the peasant communes. He said: In
1883 Marx, writing to Nicholas Danielson, one of the theoreticians
of Russian populism (Narodnikism), that should the proletariat
assume power in Europe before the Russian obschina (communal
village agriculture) had been completely abolished by history
then even this obschina could become one of the starting
points for Communist development in Russia. And Marx was absolutely
right. [The NEP and World Revolution, in The
First Five Years of the Communist International, Vol. Two
(London, 1974), p. 230] [return]
[109] Stalin and Stalinism:
A Review Article, in Europe-Asia Studies (Volume
56, No. 6, September 2004), p. 918. [return]
[110] Alexander, p. 32. [return]
[111] Cited in Carr, What
Is History?, p. 27. [return]
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