60 years since the
Dewey Commission
By Shannon Jones
19 May 1997
April 10 marked the sixtieth anniversary of the convening of
the Dewey Commission. This extraordinary body, whose official
name was the Commission of Inquiry into the Charges Made against
Leon Trotsky in the Moscow Trials, was established in 1937 by
supporters of the exiled revolutionary to establish the truth
about Joseph Stalin's purge trials. The commission was headed
by the noted American philosopher and educator John Dewey.
The Moscow Trials were monstrous frame-ups. The stage-managed
proceedings and the ensuing purges, which resulted in the extermination
of large sections of the socialist working class and intelligentsia
in the USSR, had many parallels with Hitler's Holocaust. Both
episodes of mass murder dealt savage blows to the working class.
But, while the Nazi killings were carried out openly in the name
of reaction, the Moscow Trials were conducted by a regime that
claimed to be socialist.
The trials have long since been discredited and the Stalinist
regime in the Soviet Union that organized them has collapsed.
This, however, does not lessen the historic significance of the
events of 60 years ago, nor diminish the need for their political
comprehension. Bound up with the Moscow Trials and their aftermath
are decisive historical questions of the twentieth century which
to this day remain unresolved.
Basing themselves on the lie that the Moscow frame-ups and
the Stalinist dictatorship from which they emerged were the logical
and inevitable product of the October Revolution, anti-Marxists
have attempted to write off socialism as a viable alternative
to capitalism. However, an objective examination of the Moscow
Trials, of which the investigation by the Dewey Commission forms
the most comprehensive exposure, demonstrates that the frame-ups
were not the product of Marxism or Bolshevism, but rather their
counterrevolutionary opposite-Stalinism.
To understand the significance of the Moscow Trials and the
work of the Dewey Commission, one must consider the historical
context in which these events took place. Twenty years after the
October 1917 Revolution that brought the working class to power
in Russia under the leadership of the Bolshevik Party, the Soviet
state created by the revolution was in deep crisis due to its
prolonged isolation and the growth of fascist reaction in the
west.
Lenin and the other Bolshevik leaders had counted on the Russian
Revolution to spread to Western Europe and break the isolation
of the young Soviet regime. They saw the construction of socialism
in impoverished and war-ravaged Russia as contingent on timely
aid from successful workers revolutions in Germany and other more
highly industrialized countries.
Internally, the Soviet regime confronted the legacy of poverty
and cultural backwardness inherited from czarism. Externally,
it faced the hostility of the entire capitalist world. One of
the most serious manifestations of these difficulties was the
growing bureaucratization of the Soviet regime and the stifling
of internal democracy within the Communist Party, a danger warned
about by Lenin before he was incapacited by a stroke in early
1923. He pointed to the methods of Stalin, then general secretary
of the Communist Party, as the sharpest expression of this danger.
One of Lenin's last political acts was to write a testament in
which he called for Stalin's removal from the post of general
secretary.
Trotsky, enormously respected due to his role as organizer
of the October 1917 insurrection and his service to the revolution
as commander of the Red Army in the civil war, continued the struggle
against bureaucratization initiated by Lenin. In late 1923 he
and other leading party members founded the Left Opposition and
demanded a serious and open discussion on the party crisis.
Opposition defeated
On the international front, the situation turned for the worse.
The hoped for revolutions in Europe failed to materialize. The
biggest setback came in 1923, when the German Communist Party,
taking its cue from Stalin's faction in the Soviet leadership,
failed to take advantage of a revolutionary crisis. Under conditions
where the government in Berlin was burning state papers, convinced
a Communist-led proletarian revolution was imminent, the German
party called off the planned insurrection. Then an ill-prepared
uprising in Hamburg was crushed, and the resulting defeat of the
working class gave the bourgeois Weimar Republic a new lease on
life. There followed serious defeats in Britain and China. The
disillusionment produced by these developments contributed to
moods of political apathy in the Soviet Union that worked in favor
of the rising bureaucracy.
The latter part of the 1920s saw the political defeat of Bolshevism
and its perspective of world revolution, represented by Trotsky
and the Left Opposition, and the victory of the nationalist and
conservative bureaucracy headed by Stalin. Already in 1924 the
divergence from Marxism of the Stalinist faction, and the essentially
petty-bourgeois social forces for which it spoke, found expression
in the official adoption of the theory of "socialism in one
country." Stalin declared that socialism could be built in
the Soviet Union independently of the fate of the world revolution.
In 1927 Trotsky and his supporters were expelled from the Communist
Party. In 1929 Stalin sent Trotsky into exile in Turkey, hoping
thereby to isolate and silence him-a serious political miscalculation,
as Stalin was soon to realize.
Already Trotsky was warning that the Stalin regime would resort
to violence against its left-wing opponents. In March 1929 he
wrote, "The naked declaration that the Opposition is a 'counterrevolutionary
party' is insufficient; no one will take it seriously.... There
is only one thing left for Stalin, to try to draw a line of blood
between the official party and the Opposition. He must at all
costs link the Opposition to attempted assassinations, to the
preparations for armed insurrection, etc." (Leon Sedov, The
Red Book [London: New Park 1980], page 10).
In 1933, following the capitulation of the German Communist
Party to Hitler, Trotsky concluded that the Soviet Communist Party
and its satellite parties in the Third International could not
be reformed through a struggle against their Stalinist leaderships
and returned to the program of revolutionary Marxism. He called
for the founding of a new international party, the Fourth International,
to carry forward the struggle for world socialist revolution.
Within the Soviet Union he called for a political revolution by
the working class to overthrow the bureaucracy and reestablish
Soviet democracy.
The Moscow Trials arose out of Stalin's acute awareness of
the disaffection of the Soviet working class and his fear of the
criticisms of his political blunders and despotism by Trotsky
and the opposition which Trotsky led. As a former revolutionary,
Stalin understood that a small movement armed with correct ideas
could, given a favorable change in the objective situation, win
mass support and sweep away the bureaucratic Kremlin regime.
Growing discontent
From the work of Russian historian Vadim Rogovin, we know that
opposition to Stalin was widespread in the Soviet Union, reaching
to the highest circles. In the wake of the disaster of forced
collectivization, there existed immense discontent, which expressed
itself in various political forms. Attempts were made to form
a united bloc of the different opposition tendencies, including
the circulation in 1932 of the Riutin Platform. M.N. Riutin, a
Old Bolshevik who worked in the Central Committee Secretariat,
denounced Stalin as a "provocateur" and called for his
removal from office and for the readmission of all those expelled
from the party, including Trotsky. In response, Stalin had Riutin
and all of those known to have read his platform arrested.
Allegations of participation in the "Riutin plot"
became a recurrent theme in the subsequent purges. It was declared
that Riutin's criticisms represented the preparations for the
forceful overthrow of the Soviet state.
In December 1934 Leonid Nikolayev, a young Communist Party
member, shot S.M. Kirov, a member of the Politburo and chief of
the Leningrad party organization. The circumstances of the killing
indicated the complicity of those in authority. Elements within
the GPU, the Soviet secret police, gave the unstable Nikolayev
the opportunity to get close to Kirov.
Given what we now know, it appears likely that Stalin himself
ordered the murder. Kirov had emerged at the 17th Party Congress
in January-February 1934 as a potential rival to Stalin. In a
secret ballot for the Central Committee, Kirov had received the
fewest negative votes, 3, of any candidate, while Stalin had received
267, the most.
Six months after the 17th Party Congress, in late June and
early July 1934, Hitler carried out a bloody purge of his rivals
within the German Nazi leadership. The Fuehrer's ruthlessness
in liquidating his internal opponents reportedly made a strong
impression on Stalin.
Whatever Stalin's precise role in the Kirov assassination,
he took advantage of the murder to eliminate his political opponents
and decimate the most thoughtful and talented elements among the
intelligentsia. The Kirov assassination served as the basis for
seven separate trials and the arrest and execution of hundreds,
if not thousands, of communists. Each trial contradicted the others
in fundamental details. Different people allegedly organized the
murder of Kirov by different means and for different political
motives.
In 1935, in the wake of the first Kirov trials, Trotsky wrote,
"The strategy developed around Kirov's corpse won Stalin
no great laurels. But just for this reason he can neither stop
nor retreat. Stalin will have to cover up the misbegotten amalgam
by new, more extensive and ... more successful amalgams. We must
meet them well armed" (The Case of Leon Trotsky [New
York: Merit Publishers, 1968], page 498).
The popular front
The year 1936 marked a crucial turning point in European politics.
In June mass strikes brought France to the brink of revolution.
In July, fascist military officers attempted a coup in Spain,
sparking a workers uprising and precipitating civil war.
In these events the Soviet bureaucracy and its allied Communist
parties throughout the world acted as the foremost defenders of
the capitalist order. Invoking the policy of the popular front,
Stalin insisted that the Communist parties subordinate the working
class to an alliance with the so-called democratic capitalists.
For two months after the outbreak of civil war in Spain, in
order to placate the British, French and American imperialists,
with whom he was seeking an alliance, Stalin maintained an embargo
on arms shipments to the Republican government of Spain. Only
when it became clear that the regime in Madrid was incapable,
on its own, of crushing the uprising of the Spanish workers and
peasants, did Stalin begin selling it arms. This enabled the Comintern
to play the decisive role in defending bourgeois property and
power in Spain by liquidating the Spanish revolution, and the
defeat of the revolution insured the victory of Franco's fascist
forces.
These reactionary policies flowed from the Stalinist bureaucracy's
abandonment of the program of world revolution and the substitution
in its place of the policy of socialism in one country. It reflected
the outlook of a privileged bureaucratic caste. The Stalinist
rulers feared that any revolutionary successes by the international
working class would, by rekindling the egalitarian traditions
of the Russian Revolution within the Soviet working class, undermine
the bureaucracy's privileged position.
Counterrevolutionary intervention abroad went hand in hand
with intensified repression at home. The frame-ups, mass arrests
and state murders directed against Trotsky and the Old Bolsheviks,
besides crushing internal dissent, had the further aim of ingratiating
Stalin's regime with capitalist regimes in the West, by demonstrating
that the Soviet government had renounced the internationalist
and revolutionary program of the October Revolution and was committed
to defending order and stability. Stalin made this explicit in
an interview he gave the American journalist and publisher Roy
Howard in March 1936. When Howard asked about the intentions of
the Soviet government in regard to world revolution, the following
exchange took place.
Stalin: "We never had such plans and intentions.... This
is all the result of a misunderstanding."
Howard: "A tragic misunderstanding?"
Stalin: "No, a comic, or perhaps a tragi-comic one."
( Leon Trotsky, Writings of 1935-36 [New York: Pathfinder
Press, 1977], page 275).
The first Moscow Trial
In mid-August 1936 world public opinion was startled with the
news that leading Old Bolsheviks had been charged with plotting
the terrorist assassination of Stalin and top Soviet leaders in
alliance with Hitler's Gestapo. By denouncing as criminal conspirators
revolutionaries who had played important roles before, during
and after the October Revolution, Stalin aimed a savage blow at
the veteran cadre of the party.
The defendants included Gregory Zinoviev and Lev Kamenev, two
of the most prominent Old Bolsheviks. Zinoviev had been Lenin's
closest collaborator in exile before the revolution. A talented
orator, he later served as chairman of the Third International
and leader of the Petrograd Soviet. Kamenev spent many years in
prison and exile before the revolution and afterwards held leading
party posts, including chairman of the Politburo. Both men briefly
joined with Trotsky's Left Opposition to form the Joint Opposition
in 1926-27, but recanted their views in exchange for readmission
to the party.
Other prominent figures who were indicted included V. A. Ter-Vaganyan,
leader of the Armenian Communist Party, considered an outstanding
Marxist; Sergei Mrachkovsky, who led troops defending Siberia
and the Far East during the 1918-1921 civil war; and I. N. Smirnov,
a worker Bolshevik who played a leading part in the civil war
and later served as people's commissar for communications and
director of auto plants.
For no stated reason, a number of defendants named in the indictment
did not appear at the trial. Apparently they had refused to "confess"
and were summarily shot.
Though not named in the indictment, the principal defendant
at the trial was Trotsky. All of the Moscow accused named Trotsky
and his son Leon Sedov as the alleged instigators of the plot
to kill Stalin and vied with one another in vilifying them.
While the indictment charged the defendants with innumerable
plots and conspiracies against Soviet leaders, the only specific
crime cited was the 1934 murder of Kirov. One of the more outlandish
aspects of the charges was the naming of Smirnov as a ringleader
of the alleged conspiracy. He had been in jail since January 1933,
and could not have participated in the killing.
The trial lasted just five days. All of the defendants confessed
to bizarre and impossible crimes, then pleaded for the death penalty.
In the midst of the trial another well- known Old Bolshevik, Mikhail
Tomsky, committed suicide after being implicated by Zinoviev and
Kamenev.
In a particularly foul manifestation of the nationalist orientation
of the Stalinist bureaucracy, the authorities sought to fan anti-Semitic
prejudice against the defendants. The Soviet press, in a none-too-subtle
appeal to such sentiments, stressed the Jewish backgrounds of
Trotsky, Zinoviev and Kamenev.
Significantly, the Soviet prosecutor, Andrei Vyshinsky, was
a former right-wing Menshevik who had fought against the Bolsheviks
during the civil war. He had changed sides at the end in order
to save his own skin.
Stalin chose this ex-counterrevolutionary to play the leading
role in the butchery of the leaders of the Russian Revolution.
Vyshinsky did his job with enthusiasm, denouncing the defendants
as "mad dogs of capitalism" and "liars and clowns,
insignificant pygmies snarling at an elephant." Within 24
hours of the conclusion of the trial, all 16 defendants were shot.
The trial of Radek and Piatakov
In January 1937 the Soviet press announced the opening of a
second trial in Moscow of veteran party leaders. The accused,
17 in all, included Karl Radek, a prominent Soviet journalist,
active in revolutionary politics since the age of 14, who played
a prominent role in the international Communist movement and served
as secretary of the Third International; Yuri Piatakov, vice chairman
in charge of Soviet heavy industry, who had been a leader in the
civil war and whom Lenin described in his testament as "one
of the ablest young men in the party;" Grigori Sokolnikov,
who held important posts in finance and industry; Nikolai Muralov,
hero of the civil war; and Mikhail Boguslavsky, an old worker
Bolshevik.
In the second trial the prosecution expanded the list of accusations.
Whereas in the trial of Zinoviev and Kamenev, the leaders of the
alleged "Trotskyite conspiracy" were said to have been
motivated solely by a personal lust for power, in the trial of
Radek and Piatakov the accused were charged with plotting in alliance
with Germany and Japan to dismember the Soviet Union and restore
capitalism.
In addition to plotting assassinations, the defendants were
charged with sabotage. All of the failures of Soviet industry,
which were in reality the product of the bureaucracy's incompetence
and mismanagement, were blamed on Trotsky. Defendants confessed
to having devised and implemented the faulty economic plans that
resulted in a huge waste of resources and severe distortions of
the economy.
Again the defendants were sentenced to death. All but four
were shot immediately. Radek and Sokolnikov were among those spared,
receiving 10-year prison sentences. Even so, they were soon murdered
at Stalin's orders.
The testimony in the second trial was no less incredible than
in the trial of Zinoviev and Kamenev. The Stalinist organizers
of the frame-up committed a major blunder when they had Piatakov
testify about an alleged airplane trip he made to Oslo, Norway
in December 1935 to receive terrorist instructions from Trotsky.
In the midst of the trial the Norwegian newspaper Arbeiderbladet
reported that due to weather conditions, no foreign airplane had
landed in Oslo from September 1935 to May 1936.
The GPU corrected this error by bringing the trial to an abrupt
conclusion and having Piatakov shot. One year later Stalin had
G. Yagoda, head of the GPU and chief organizer of the frame-ups,
tried and executed.
The chief defendants in the third Moscow Trial (March 2-13,
1938) were Nikolai Bukharin, former editor of Pravda and
head of the Communist International; Alexei Rykov, official head
of the Soviet government for five years after the death of Lenin;
Christian Rakovsky, former head of the Ukrainian government; and
N. N. Krestinsky, former secretary of the Central Committee and
Politburo member.
From the accounts of GPU defector Alexander Orlov and others
we now know the precise methods used to extract the confessions-repeated
beatings, torture, making prisoners stand or go without sleep
for days on end, and threats to arrest and execute the prisoners'
families. Stalin even had Kamenev's teenage son arrested and charged
with terrorism. After months of such interrogation, the defendants
were driven to despair and exhaustion.
The chief defendants of the first trial, Zinoviev and Kamenev,
demanded as a condition for confessing a direct guarantee from
the Politburo that their lives and that of their families and
comrades would be spared. Instead they had to settle for a meeting
with only Stalin and two of his closest cronies, Kliment Voroshilov
and Nikolai Yezhov of the GPU. After the trial Stalin not only
broke his promise to spare the defendants, he had all their relatives
arrested and shot.
But threats and abuse alone do not explain why the defendants
confessed. The GPU could not produce even one "confession"
from an active oppositionist. The most important factor in the
ability of the bureaucracy to break individuals such as Zinoviev
and Kamenev was their political disorientation and loss of perspective.
In the years since the October Revolution, the political atmosphere
had become fouled by the growth of the bureaucracy. These men
proved unable to summon sufficient moral courage to resist this
tide.
As Trotsky wrote, "At each new stage in the capitulation,
the victims kept finding themselves faced with the same alternatives:
either reject all the preceding denunciations and engage in a
hopeless struggle with the bureaucracy-without a banner, without
an organization, without any personal authority-or sink one step
lower again, by accusing themselves and others of new infamies"(Leon
Trotsky, Writings of 1936-37 [New York: Pathfinder, 1978],
page 59).
What was involved in Stalin's purges was nothing less than
the attempt to destroy Marxism as a political force within the
Soviet Union. The Moscow Trials were the culmination of a deep-going
process of social reaction. Isolated and alienated from the masses
of workers, the bureaucratic apparatus sought to repudiate all
connections to the real traditions of the October Revolution.
In order to crush both actual and potential opposition to its
policies, it had first to exterminate those Marxists who had created
the Soviet state.
The Moscow Trials inaugurated the Great Terror that swept the
Soviet Union from 1936 to 1939. Hundreds of thousands of dedicated
communists, writers, intellectuals, scientists, engineers, artists,
builders of the Red Army and founders of the Soviet state were
arrested on charges of "Trotskyism" and either shot
without trial or sentenced to waste away in concentration camps.
Stalin's terror did not stop at the borders of the USSR. The
GPU hunted down and murdered supporters of the Fourth International
all over the world. Trotsky's son Leon Sedov died in a Paris hospital
February 16, 1938, the victim of an apparent medical murder. In
August 1940, Stalinist assassin Ramon Mercader murdered Trotsky
in Coyoacan, Mexico.
Trotsky struggles to expose frame-ups
When the first trial opened Trotsky had just completed his
epic work Revolution Betrayed, in which he subjected the
contradictions of Soviet society to a Marxist analysis. The growth
of the privileged bureaucracy headed by Stalin, he said, threatened
to devour the workers state. Unless the bureaucracy was driven
out by the working class, all the gains of the October Revolution
were in danger.
The summer of 1936 found Trotsky in Norway, which had granted
him a visa in June 1935, following the election of the Norwegian
Labor Party. On hearing the first reports of the proceedings against
Zinoviev and Kamenev, and the accusations against himself in
absentia, Trotsky immediately denounced the trial and demanded
a complete and open inquiry into the charges.
The Stalinist bureaucracy set in motion its considerable resources
to prevent Trotsky from refuting its allegations. Under pressure
from the Soviet Union, the Social Democratic government of Norway
placed Trotsky under virtual house arrest, making it impossible
for him to speak or correspond with his supporters. In November
of 1936 GPU agents stole a portion of Trotsky's archives from
their storage place in Paris, hoping to obtain material for the
construction of new frame-ups.
World reaction to the trials
The trial of Zinoviev and Kamenev evoked wide distrust in the
workers movement and among sections of the intelligentsia. Despite
the confessions, many found it inconceivable that leading Old
Bolsheviks, founders of the Soviet state, had been transformed
into terrorists and allies of Hitler.
The skepticism toward the trial was reinforced by the exposure
of obvious lies and impossible contradictions in the testimony
of many of the accused. Perhaps most notorious was the claim by
one of the lesser known defendants, Edouard Holtzman, to have
met with Leon Sedov in the foyer of Copenhagen's Hotel Bristol
in November of 1932. Press reports soon exposed this as a fabrication.
Not only did Sedov prove he had never been in Copenhagen, having
been denied a Danish visa, but the meeting was physically impossible.
The Hotel Bristol had been torn down in 1917 and was not rebuilt
until 1936!
While Trotsky remained interned by the "socialist"
government of Norway, his supporters internationally began organizing
a counteroffensive to expose Stalin's frame-up. From France, Leon
Sedov wrote a devastating exposure of the confessions of the defendants
entitled Le Livre Rouge (The Red Book).
Sedov demonstrated that the alleged meetings between the defendants,
himself and Trotsky, where the latter supposedly gave instructions
for the murder of Stalin, were pure inventions of the GPU. He
laid bare the absurd character of the confessions and analyzed
their political and psychological basis. He observed, "The
conduct of the accused during the trial was only the tragic conclusion,
the last stage of their political prostration and fall during
the previous years.... Before killing them physically, Stalin
had broken and destroyed them morally" (Leon Sedov, The
Red Book [London: New Park, 1980], page 37).
The American Trotskyist movement produced Behind the Moscow
Trial, a thorough examination of the frame-up written by Max
Shachtman. The book demonstrated the political impossibility of
Trotsky, a lifelong opponent of individual terrorism, resorting
to the method of assassination. Shachtman tore apart the testimony
of the defendants, exposing, for example, Nathan Lurye's claim
to have met a co-conspirator in Russia in 1932 "who was sent
to the Soviet Union under direct orders of Heinrich Himmler, head
of the German Gestapo." The Gestapo, Shachtman pointed out,
did not exist in 1932, Hitler having only established it after
he took power in 1933.
Mexico grants asylum
Stalin's hopes of silencing Trotsky received a severe setback
in December 1936, when the bourgeois nationalist government of
Lazaro Cardenas in Mexico granted Trotsky political asylum. The
foremost political opponent of the Stalinist regime arrived in
Mexico January 9, 1937 aboard the oil tanker Ruth and immediately
reiterated the call for the convening of an International Commission
of Inquiry to expose the Moscow frame-up.
Trotsky publicly challenged the Soviet authorities to ask for
his extradition. Stalin declined, and for good reason. To appeal
for Trotsky's extradition his government would have been forced
to present material proofs in court. But no such proofs existed.
In a speech prepared for a mass public meeting in New York
on February 9, 1937, Trotsky made the case for the convening of
an inquiry into Stalin's charges. He had planned to address the
meeting via a telephone hook-up, but at the last minute the Stalinists
cut the connection. Instead the text of the speech, which had
been sent in advance, was read out to the audience.
Trotsky declared:
"Why does Moscow so fear the voice of a single man? Only
because I know the truth, the whole truth. Only because I have
nothing to hide. Only because I am ready to appear before a public
and impartial commission of inquiry with documents, facts, and
testimonies in my hands, and to disclose the truth to the very
end. I DECLARE: IF THIS COMMISSION DECIDES THAT I AM GUILTY IN
THE SLIGHTEST DEGREE OF THE CRIMES WHICH STALIN IMPUTES TO ME,
I PLEDGE IN ADVANCE TO PLACE MYSELF VOLUNTARILY IN THE HANDS OF
THE EXECUTIONERS OF THE GPU. That, I hope, is clear. Have you
all heard? I make this declaration before the entire world. I
ask the press to publish my words in the farthest corners of our
planet. But if the commission establishes-do you hear me?-that
the Moscow trials are a conscious and premeditated frame-up, constructed
with the bones and nerves of human beings, I will not ask my accusers
to place themselves voluntarily before a firing-squad. No, eternal
disgrace in the memory of human generations will be sufficient
for them. Do the accusers of the Kremlin hear me? I throw my defiance
in their faces. And I await their reply" (Leon Trotsky,
I Stake My Life [Oak Park: Michigan, Labor Publications,
1977], page 7).
Speaking of the humiliating character of the confessions, Trotsky
continued:
"The Moscow trials do not dishonor the revolution, because
they are the progeny of reaction. The Moscow trials do not dishonor
the old generation of Bolsheviks; they only demonstrate that even
Bolsheviks are made of flesh and blood, and that they do not resist
endlessly when over their heads swings the pendulum of death.
The Moscow trials dishonor the political regime which has conceived
them: the regime of Bonapartism, without honor, and without conscience!
All of the executed died with curses on their lips for this regime.
"Let him who wishes weep bitter tears because history
moves ahead so perplexingly: two steps forward, one step back.
But tears are of no avail. It is necessary, according to Spinoza's
advice, not to laugh, not to weep, but to understand!" (Ibid.,
pages 22-23).
Trotsky concluded his speech with these stirring words:
"The question is: to aid the demoralized bureaucracy against
the people, or the progressive forces of the people against the
bureaucracy. The Moscow trials are the signal. Woe to them who
do not heed! The Reichstag trial surely had a great importance.
But it concerned only vile fascism, that embodiment of all the
vices of darkness and barbarism. The Moscow trials are perpetrated
under the banner of socialism. We will not concede this banner
to the masters of falsehood! If our generation happens to be too
weak to establish socialism over the earth, we will hand the spotless
banner down to our children. The struggle which is in the offing
transcends by far the importance of individuals, factions and
parties. It is the struggle for the future of all mankind. It
will be severe, it will be lengthy. Whoever seeks physical
comfort and spiritual calm let him step aside. In time of reaction
it is easier to lean on the bureaucracy than on the truth. But
all those for whom the word socialism is not a hollow sound
but the content of their moral life - forward! Neither threats
nor persecutions nor violations can stop us! Be it even over our
bleaching bones the truth will triumph! We will blaze a trail
for it. It will conquer!" (Ibid., page 26).
Stalinist slanders
There were considerable obstacles to mounting a countertrial
to answer Stalin's frame-ups. Backed by the resources of the Soviet
state, the Stalinized Communist parties of the world used bribery,
intimidation and slander to undermine support for Trotsky.
A typical headline of the Daily Worker, the newspaper
of the American Communist Party, read, "Hitler's chief assassin,
Himmler, directed fiendish Trotskyite assassination plot against
leaders of the Soviet Union." Stalinist press reports from
Moscow declared, "Trotsky demanded killing of Stalin in plot
for power," and that "Trotskyism, spurned by masses,
uses Nazi aid against USSR."
The Stalinists pressed into service unprincipled lawyers and
journalists to praise Moscow justice. One such individual was
the British lawyer D.N. Pritt, a former Tory, who wrote a book
defending the trial of Zinoviev and Kamenev.
Pritt wrote, "Once again the more faint-hearted
socialists are beset with doubts and anxieties" but "once
again we can feel confident that when the smoke has rolled away
from the battlefield of controversy it will be realized that the
charge was true, the confessions correct and the prosecution fairly
conducted" [quoted from Workers Press, May 25, 1972].
In the United States New York Times correspondent Walter
Duranty pronounced the trials fair, as did Joseph Davies, Franklin
Roosevelt's ambassador to the Soviet Union. Davies wrote the book
Mission to Moscow, which subsequently became the basis
for a film that whitewashed the Stalinist frame-ups.
With only a few exceptions leading American liberals rallied
to the side of the Stalinists. The magazines The Nation
and the New Republic defended the purge trials. Malcolm
Cowley, well-known literary critic and editor of the New Republic
wrote a smug and complacent essay defending the Moscow Trials.
Praising the official report issued by the Soviet bureaucracy,
he wrote:
"Judged as literature, The Case of the Anti-Soviet
Trotskyite Center is an extraordinary combination of true
detective story and high Elizabethan tragedy with comic touches.
I could accept it as a fabricated performance only on the assumption
that Marlowe and Webster had a hand in staging it. Judged as information,
it answers most of the questions raised in my own mind by the
brief newspaper accounts of the trial" (New Republic,
April 7, 1937).
Heeding the advice of Trotsky, the Workers Party, under the
leadership of James P. Cannon, had taken advantage of the crisis
within the ranks of American social democracy by entering Norman
Thomas's Socialist Party. This principled tactical maneuver opened
up a broader field of political action and gave the Trotskyists
closer access to a layer of radical intellectuals who helped form
the American Committee for the Defense of Leon Trotsky.
Trotsky, however, made certain criticisms of the work of the
defense committee, particularly the tendency of George Novack
and others in New York to adapt to the Socialist Party leadership.
In a sharp note addressed to Novack, Trotsky opposed the conciliatory
attitude taken to elements like Fenner Brockway of the centrist
London Bureau, who were seeking to divert the inquiry. "The
policy of adaptation to the 'allies' of the right," Trotsky
wrote, "only ensures defeat at the outset"(Leon Trotsky,
Writings of 1936-37 [New York: Pathfinder Press 1978],
page 229).
Despite the intense pressure of the Stalinists, who threatened
and hounded members of the defense committee, supporters of Trotsky
assembled a commission of inquiry. Among those agreeing to participate
were James T. Farrell, author of the Studs Lonigan trilogy;
Suzanne La Follette, author and journalist; John R. Chamberlain,
former literary critic for the New York Times; Wendelin
Thomas, leader of the Wilhelmshaven sailor's revolt of November
7, 1918; Carlo Tresca, American anarchosyndicalist leader; Otto
Ruehle, former Social Democratic member of the German Reichstag
and biographer of Karl Marx; Alfred Rosmer, a former leader of
the French Communist Party; Francisco Zamora, Mexican journalist;
Benjamin Stolberg, American author and journalist; and Edward
Alsworth Ross, American educator and author.
Dewey comes forward
The biggest breakthrough came when John Dewey, then age 78,
agreed to chair the committee. Unlike the majority of US liberal
intellectuals, who, as Trotsky observed, found it easier to rest
on the bureaucracy than on the truth, Dewey insisted on Trotsky's
right to defend himself against the allegations presented at the
Moscow Trials.
In explaining why he took on this difficult assignment, Dewey
attacked those liberals who opposed Trotsky's right to answer
Stalin's charges:
"Either Leon Trotsky is guilty of plotting wholesale assassination,
systematic wreckage with destruction of life and property; of
treason of the basest sort in conspiring with political and economic
enemies of the USSR in order to destroy Socialism; or he is innocent.
If he is guilty, no condemnation can be too severe. If he is innocent,
there is no way in which the existing regime in Soviet Russia
can be acquitted of deliberate, systematic persecution and falsification.
These are the unpleasant alternatives for those to face who are
sympathetic with the efforts to build a Socialist State in Russia.
The easier and lazier course is to avoid facing the alternatives.
But unwillingness to face the unpleasant is the standing weakness
of liberals. They are only too likely to be brave when affairs
are going smoothly and then to shirk when unpleasant conditions
demand decision and action. I cannot believe that a single genuine
liberal would, if he once faced the alternatives, hold that persecution
and falsification are a sound basis upon which to build an enduring
Socialist society" (Quoted from David North, Socialism,
Historical Truth and the Crisis of Political thought in the United
States, Oak Park, Michigan, Labor Publications, page 18.)
Over the opposition of his family, who were concerned about
his safety, Dewey agreed to go to Mexico and head a subcommission
to take testimony from Trotsky. Those on the panel included La
Follette, Ruehle and Stolberg. John F. Finerty, the lawyer for
Sacco and Vanzetti, served as counsel for the subcommission. Carlton
Beals, an American journalist, later shown to be a GPU plant,
joined the panel, replacing some better known figures who could
not attend due to last minute conflicts.
After the Mexican Stalinists threatened to stage demonstrations
opposing the hearing, the subcommission decided, for security
reasons, to hold its public sessions at the home of Diego Rivera,
the famous Mexican muralist and friend of Trotsky. The subcommission
challenged the Stalinists to attend the hearings and question
Trotsky. It sent invitations to the American Communist Party,
the Mexican Communist Party, the Soviet ambassador to the United
States and to Vicente Lombardo Toledano, the leading Stalinist
trade union official in Mexico. All declined.
The hearings opened on April 10 and lasted seven days. Trotsky
set himself the task of not simply raising reasonable doubt as
to the truth of Stalin's charges, but proving his complete innocence.
In the midst of the hearings Trotsky had to deal with a provocation
staged by Beals. Out of the blue Beals asked Trotsky about his
relations with a M. Borodin, who, he alleged, had gone to Mexico
in 1919 on Trotsky's instructions to "foment revolution."
With this line of questioning Beals intended to poison Trotsky's
relations with the Mexican government and jeopardize his asylum.
Trotsky declared that Beals's informant was a liar and demanded
he name his source. The next day Beals resigned from the subcommission,
saying its proceedings were "not a truly serious investigation
of the charges." Dewey and the other commissioners rejected
Beals's assertion and the hearings continued without further incident.
Later Beals published a lying account of the proceedings in the
Mexican magazine Futuro.
During the 13 sessions Trotsky summoned every intellectual
resource to produce a damning exposé of the Moscow frame-up.
His feat was doubly extraordinary given that he chose to speak
in English, rather than his native Russian.
The printed record of Trotsky's testimony came to some 600
pages. He gave detailed and precise answers to an enormous variety
of questions covering every subject from his personal biography
to the origins of the Soviet bureaucracy and questions of revolutionary
policy. He traced in detail his movements while in exile, demonstrating
through documents and letters the impossibility of his having
met with Holtzman, Piatakov or any of the alleged terrorists,
as claimed in the "confessions." Trotsky took apart
the testimony of the defendants, showing that their artificial
and contradictory character revealed the hand of the GPU.
Trotsky's testimony demonstrated the absurdity of the Kremlin's
charge that he ordered assassinations and sabotage. He proved
that throughout his life he had opposed individual terrorism.
In particular he refuted the charge that he sought the death of
Stalin. Trotsky cited documents which explicitly rejected such
a policy. In July 1936 the world Trotskyist movement adopted a
statement which in part declared, "True to the traditions
of Marxism, the Fourth International decisively rejects individual
terror, as it does all other means of political adventurism. The
bureaucracy can only be smashed by means of the goal-conscious
movement of the masses against the usurpers, parasites and oppressors"
(The Case of Leon Trotsky [New York: Merit Publishers,
1968], page 272).
Answers lies
Trotsky's closing speech to the subcommission lasted four hours.
In it he dissected all the lies and slanders of the Stalinists
and their supporters. He answered as well the arguments of those
who, while disbelieving the Stalinist charges, were hesitant about
drawing their implications. The noted historian Charles Beard,
for example, declined to participate on the Dewey Commission on
the grounds that it was impossible to prove a negative. Trotsky
replied, that what was involved was not simply proving a negative,
but establishing a positive fact, "namely that Stalin did
organize the greatest frame-up in human history" (Ibid.,
p.466).
As Trotsky observed, the artificial character of the confessions
bore all the marks of the totalitarian regime that extracted them.
The accused, according to their words, had engaged in a wide ranging
conspiracy to assassinate Soviet leaders and sabotage industry,
involving hundreds if not thousands of people over a period of
five years or more. Why were the authorities not able to introduce
a single piece of physical evidence, not one document, corroborating
the testimony?
Trotsky noted that it was unprecedented in the history of the
revolutionary and counterrevolutionary movements alike for veteran
conspirators to confess en masse to terrifying crimes, without
their existing a shred of evidence. "How do criminals who
yesterday assassinated leaders, shattered industry, prepared war
and the dismemberment of the country, today so docilely sing the
Prosecutor's tune?
"These two fundamental aspects of the Moscow trials-the
absence of evidence and the epidemic character of the confessions-can
but arouse suspicion in every thinking man" (Ibid., page
481).
The charge of sabotage
Trotsky noted that the Moscow Trial charges contained a glaring
contradiction not recognized by the prosecution. While the Stalinists
insisted that Trotsky had no political support inside the Soviet
Union, the terrorist conspiracies he organized, if they existed,
must have involved thousands.
Take the allegations of sabotage. One of the defendants, J.
A. Kniazev, chief of the Southern Railways, "confessed"
having organized 3,500 train wrecks in the period 1935-36, an
average of five per day! Similar allegations were made in relation
to the mines and chemical industry. Trotsky remarked ironically
that his supporters must have infiltrated Soviet industry from
top to bottom to accomplish such havoc.
Trotsky scorned those writers and academics who had put their
talents at the disposal of the Stalinist bureaucracy. "An
indirect but very important result of the work of the Commission
will be, cleansing the radical ranks of the 'Left' sycophants,
political parasites, 'revolutionary' courtiers, or those gentlemen
who remain Friends of the Soviet Union insofar as they are friends
of the Soviet State Publishing House or ordinary pensioners of
the GPU," he said (Ibid., page 567-68).
In conclusion, he paid tribute to the committee and its chairman
John Dewey. "Esteemed commissioners! The experience
of my life, in which there has been no lack either of successes
or of failures, has not only not destroyed my faith in the clear,
bright future of mankind, but, on the contrary, has given it an
indestructible temper. This faith in reason, in truth, in human
solidarity, which at the age of eighteen I took with me into the
workers' quarters of the provincial Russian town of Nikolaiev-this
faith I have preserved fully and completely. It has become more
mature, but not less ardent. In the very fact of your Commission's
formation-in the fact that, at its head, is a man of unshakable
moral authority, a man who by virtue of his age should have the
right to remain outside of the skirmishes in the political arena-in
this fact I see a new and truly magnificent reinforcement of the
revolutionary optimism which constitutes the fundamental element
of my life"(Ibid., page 584-85).
The speech produced such an impression that at its conclusion
those in the hearing chamber burst into spontaneous applause.
At a reception following the hearing, Albert Glotzer, the reporter
for the commission, recalled the following incident. "During
the convivial interchanges between the people that crowded the
main rooms in the house, a great laughter broke out in one corner
of the large room where Dewey and Trotsky were conversing. They
were surrounded by several people listening to their conversations.
I asked Frankel what happened in the corner. He smiled, 'Dewey
said to Trotsky, 'if all Communists were like you I would be a
Communist.' And Trotsky replied 'if all liberals were like you,
I would be a liberal.' This banter expressed the respect that
the two principal people at the hearings had for each other"
(Albert Glotzer, Trotsky: Memoir and Critique [New
York: Prometheus Books, 1989], page 271).
The findings
The Dewey Commission took nine months to complete its work.
As its summation it published a 422-page book titled Not Guilty.
Its conclusions not only established the innocence of Trotsky
and all those condemned in the Moscow Trials, but the guilt of
Stalin as the organizer of a monstrous frame-up.
In its summary the commission wrote: "Independent of extrinsic
evidence, the Commission finds: (1) That the conduct of the Moscow
Trials was such as to convince any unprejudiced person that no
attempt was made to ascertain the truth.
"(2) While confessions are necessarily entitled to the
most serious consideration, the confessions themselves contain
such inherent improbabilities as to convince the Commission that
they do not represent the truth, irrespective of any means used
to obtain them." (Leon Trotsky, Stalin's Frame-up System
and the Moscow Trials [New York: Pioneer Publishers, 1950],
pages 129).
On the basis of the evidence it examined, the commission rejected
all the allegations that Trotsky ever met with or gave terrorist
instructions to any of the defendants. As for Trotsky's political
views, the commission found that:
"(19) We find that Trotsky never instructed any of the
accused or witnesses in the Moscow trials to enter into agreements
with foreign powers against the Soviet Union. On the contrary,
he has always uncompromisingly advocated the defense of the USSR.
He has also been a most forthright ideological opponent of the
fascism represented by the foreign powers with which he is accused
of having conspired.
"(20) On the basis of all the evidence we find that Trotsky
never recommended, plotted, or attempted the restoration of capitalism
in the USSR. On the contrary, he has always uncompromisingly opposed
the restoration of capitalism in the Soviet Union and its existence
anywhere else.
"(21) We find that the Prosecutor fantastically falsified
Trotsky's role before, during and after the October Revolution."
The commission concluded: "We therefore find the Moscow
Trials to be frame-ups. We therefore find Trotsky and Sedov not
guilty" (Ibid., page 131).
History has fully vindicated this verdict. Before it collapsed
the Stalinist regime in the Soviet Union was forced to rehabilitate
all those executed during the Moscow Trials. The name of Trotsky,
however, the one who correctly warned of the liquidation of the
USSR by the bureaucracy, remained officially proscribed until
the end.
The great importance of the Dewey Commission extends beyond
the fact that it cleared the name of Trotsky and the Old Bolsheviks,
because the trials represented not just an unjust indictment of
individuals, but a libel against socialism itself. For the past
60 years capitalism has attempted, with some success, to utilize
the Moscow Trials and the other crimes carried out by Stalin in
the name of socialism to discredit the legitimacy of revolutionary
change.
The establishment of the Dewey Commission represented an important
advance by the Trotskyist movement in exposing the lies of Stalinism
and its false identification with Marxism. For that reason a thorough
familiarity with the unmasking of the Moscow Trials is vital for
anyone seriously interested in the socialist perspective.
As Trotsky predicted the struggle to establish historical truth
has been long and arduous. However, if history demonstrates anything,
it is the power of correct ideas whose time has come.
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