1.
The Kornilov revolt is treated in
detail in my forthcoming volume, Kornilov to Brest-Litovsk.
The responsibility of Kerensky for the situation which
gave rise to Kornilovs attempt is now pretty clearly
established. Many apologists for Kerensky say
that he knew of Kornilovs plans, and by a trick drew
him out prematurely, and then crushed him. Even
Mr. A. J. Sack, in his book, The Birth of the Russian
Democracy, says:
Several things
are almost certain.
The first is that Kerensky knew about the movement
of several detachments from the Front toward Petrograd,
and it is possible that as Prime Minister and Minister
of War, realising the growing Bolshevist danger, he
called for them
.
The only flaw in that argument is
that there was no Bolshevist danger at that time,
the Bolsheviki still being a powerless minority in
the Soviets, and their leaders in jail or hiding.
2.
DEMOCRATIC
CONFERENCE
When the Democratic Conference was
first proposed to Kerensky, he suggested an assembly
of all the elements in the nationthe live forces,
as he called themincluding bankers, manufacturers,
land-owners, and representatives of the Cadet party.
The Soviet refused, and drew up the following table
of representation, which Kerensky agreed to:
+---------------+----------------------------------------------------+
| 100 delegates | All-Russian Soviets Workers’ and Soldiers’ |
| | Deputies |
+---------------+----------------------------------------------------+
| 100 delegates | All-Russian Soviets Peasants’ Deputies |
+---------------+----------------------------------------------------+
| 50 delegates | Provincial Soviets Workers’ and Soldiers’ Deputies |
+---------------+----------------------------------------------------+
| 50 delegates | Peasants’ District Land Committees |
+---------------+----------------------------------------------------+
| 100 delegates | Trade Unions |
+---------------+----------------------------------------------------+
| 84 delegates | Army Committees at the Front |
+---------------+----------------------------------------------------+
| 150 delegates | Workers’ and Peasants’ Cooperative Societies |
+---------------+----------------------------------------------------+
| 20 delegates | Railway Workers’ Union |
+---------------+----------------------------------------------------+
| 10 delegates | Post and Telegraph Workers’ Union |
+---------------+----------------------------------------------------+
| 20 delegates | Commercial Clerks |
+---------------+----------------------------------------------------+
| 15 delegates | Liberal Professions—Doctors, Lawyers, |
| | Journalists, <i>etc</i>. |
+---------------+----------------------------------------------------+
| 50 delegates | Provincial Zemstvos |
+---------------+----------------------------------------------------+
| 59 delegates | Nationalist Organisations—Poles, Ukraineans, <i>etc</i>. |
+---------------+----------------------------------------------------+
This proportion was altered twice or three times.  The final
disposition of delegates was: 
+---------------+----------------------------------------------------+
| 300 delegates | All-Russian Soviets Workers’, Soldiers’ & |
| | Peasants’ Deputies |
+---------------+----------------------------------------------------+
| 300 delegates | Cooperative Societies |
+---------------+----------------------------------------------------+
| 300 delegates | Municipalities |
+---------------+----------------------------------------------------+
| 150 delegates | Army Committees at the Front |
+---------------+----------------------------------------------------+
| 150 delegates | Provincial Zemstvos |
+---------------+----------------------------------------------------+
| 200 delegates | Trade Unions |
+---------------+----------------------------------------------------+
| 100 delegates | Nationalist Organisations |
+---------------+----------------------------------------------------+
| 200 delegates | Several small groups |
+---------------+----------------------------------------------------+
3.
THE FUNCTION OF THE
SOVIETS IS ENDED
On September 28th, 1917, Izviestia,
organ of the Tsay-ee-kah, published an article
which said, speaking of the last Provisional Ministry:
At last a truly democratic government,
born of the will of all classes of the Russian people,
the first rough form of the future liberal parliamentary
régime, has been formed. Ahead of us is the Constituent
Assembly, which will solve all questions of fundamental
law, and whose composition will be essentially democratic.
The function of the Soviets is at an end, and the
time is approaching when they must retire, with the
rest of the revolutionary machinery, from the stage
of a free and victorious people, whose weapons shall
hereafter be the peaceful ones of political action.
The leading article of Izviestia
for October 23d was called, The Crisis in the Soviet
Organisations. It began by saying that travellers
reported a lessening activity of local Soviets everywhere.
This is natural, said the writer. For the people
are becoming interested in the more permanent legislative
organsthe Municipal Dumas and the Zemstvs
.
In the important centres of Petrograd
and Moscow, where the Soviets were best organised,
they did not take in all the democratic elements
.
The majority of the intellectuals did not participate,
and many workers also; some of the workers because
they were politically backward, others because the
centre of gravity for them was in their Unns
.
We cannot deny that these organisations are firmly
united with the masses, whose everyday needs are better
served by them
.
That the local democratic administrations
are being energetically organised is highly important.
The City Dumas are elected by universal suffrage,
and in purely local matters have more authority than
the Soviets. Not a single democrat will see anything
wrong in this
.
Elections to the Municipalities
are being conduct in a better and more democratic
way than the elections to the Soviets
All classes
are represented in the Municipalities
. And as
soon as the local Self-Governments begin to organise
life in the Municipalities, the rôle of the local
Soviets naturally ends
.
There are two factors in the falling
off of interest in the Soviets. The first we
may attribute to the lowering of political interest
in the masses; the second, to the growing effort of
provincial and local governing bodies to organise the
building of new Russia
. The more the tendency
lies in this latter direction, the sooner disappears
the significance of the Soviets
.
We ourselves are being called the
undertakers of our own organisation. In reality,
we ourselves are the hardest workers in constructing
the new Russia
.
When autocracy and the whole bureaucratic
règimeell, we set up the Soviets as a barracks in
which all the democracy cod find temporary shelter.
Now, instead of barracks, we are building the permanent
edifice of a new system, and naturally the people will
gradually leave the barracks for more comfortable
quarters.
4.
TROTZKYS SPEECH AT THE COUNCIL
OF THE RUSSIN REPUBLIC
The purpose of the Democratic Conference,
which was called by the Tsay-ee-kah, was to
do away with the irresponsible personal government
which produced Kornilov, and to establish a responsible
government which would be capable of finishing the
war, and ensure the calling of the Constituent Assembly
at the given time. In the meanwhile behind the
back of the Democratic Conference, by trickery, by
deals between Citizen Kerensky, the Cadets, and the
leaders of the Menshevik and Socialist Revolutionary
parties, we received the opposite result from the
officially announced purpose. A power was created
around which and in which we have open and secret Kornilovs
playing leading parts. The irresponsibility of
the Government is offically proclaimed, when it is
announced that the Council of the Russian Republic
is to be a consultative and not legislative
body. In the eighth month of the Revolution, the
irresponsible Government creates a cover for itself
in this new edition of Bieligens Duma.
The propertied classes have entered
this Provision Council in a proportion which clearly
shows, from elections all over the country, that many
of them have no right here whatever. In spite
of that the Cadet party, which until yesterday wanted
the Provisional Government to be responsible to the
State Dumathis same Cadet party secured the independence
Assembly the propertied classes will no doubt have
as favourable position than they have in this Council,
and they will not be able to be irresponsible to the
Constituent Assembly.
If the propertied classes were really
getting ready for the Constituent Assembly six weeks
from now, there could be no reason for establishing
the irresponsibility of the Government at this time.
The whole truth is that the bourgeoisie, which directs
the policies of the Provisional Government, has for
its aim to break the Constituent Assembly. At
present this is the main purpose of the propertied
classes, which control our entire national policyexternal
and internal. In the industrial, agrarian and
supply departments the politics of the propertied
classes, acting with the Government, increases the
natural disorganisation caused by the war. The
propertied classes, which are provoking a peasants
revolt! The propertied classes, which are provoking
civil war, and openly hold their course on the bony
hand of hunger, with which they intend to overthrow
the Revolution and finish with the Constituent Assembly!
No less criminal also is the international
policy of the bourgeoisie and its Government.
After forty months of war, the capital is threatened
with mortal danger. In reply to this arises a
plan to move the Government to Moscow. The idea
of abandoning the capital does not stir the indignation
of the bourgeoisie. Just the opposite. It
is accepted as a natural part of the general policy
designed to promote counter-revolutionary conspiracy.
Instead of recognising that the salvation of the
country lies in concluding peace, instead of throwing
openly the idea of immediate peace to all the worn-out
peoples, over the heads of diplomats and imperialists,
and making the continuation of the war impossible,the
Provisional Government, by order of the Cadets, the
Counter-Revolutionists and the Allied Imperialists,
without sense, without purpose and without a plan,
continues to drag on the murderous war, sentencing
to useless death new hundreds of thousands of soldiers
and sailors, and preparing to give up Petrograd, and
to wreck the Revolution. At a time when Bolshevik
soldiers and sailors are dying with other soldiers
and sailors as a result of the mistakes and crimes
of others, the so-called Supreme Commander (Kerensky)
continues to suppress the Bolshevik press. The
leading parties of the Council are acting as a voluntary
cover for these policies.
We, the faction of Social Democrats
Bolsheviki, announce that with this Government of
Treason to the People we have nothing in common.
We have nothing in common with the work of these Murderers
of the People which goes on behind official curtains.
We refuse either directly or indirectly to cover up
one day of this work. While Wilhelms troops
are threatening Petrograd, the Government of Kerensky
and Kornilov is preparing to run away from Petrograd
and turn Moscow into a base of counter-revolution!
We warn the Moscow workers and soldiers
to be on their guard. Leaving this Council, we
appeal to the manhood and wisdom of the workers, peasants
and soldiers of all Russia. Petrograd is in danger!
The Revolution is in danger! The Government has
increased the dangerthe ruling classes intensify
it. Only the people themselves can save themselves
and the country.
We appeal to the people. Long
live immediate, honest, democratic peace! All
power to the Soviets! All land to the people!
Long live the Constituent Assembly!
5.
THE NAKAZ
TO SKOBELIEV
Resumé
(Passed by the Tsay-ee-kah
and given to Skobeliev as an instruction for the representative
of the Russian Revolutionary democracy at the Paris
Conference.)
The peace treaty must be based on
the principle, No annexations, no indemnities, the
right of self-determination of peoples.
Territorial Problems
(1) Evacuation of German troops from
invaded Russia. Full right of self-determination
to Poland, Lithuania and Livonia.
(2) For Turkish Armenia autonomy,
and later complete self-determination, as soon as
local Governments are established.
(3) The question of Alsace-Lorraine
to be solved by a plebiscite, after the withdrawal
of all foreign troops.
(4) Belgium to be restored. Compensation
for damages from an international fund.
(5) Serbia and Montenegro to be restored,
and aided by an international relief fund. Serbia
to have an outlet on the Adriatic. Bosnia and
Herzegovina to be autonomous.
(6) The disputed provinces in the
Balkans to have provisional autonomy, followed by
a plebiscite.
(7) Rumania to be restored, but forced
to give complete self-determination to the Dobrudja
.
Rumania must be forced to execute the clauses of the
Berlin Treaty concerning the Jews, and recognise them
as Rumanian citizens.
(8) In Italia Irridenta a provisional
autonomy, followed by a plebiscite to determine state
dependence.
(9) The German colonies to be returned.
(10) Greece and Persia to be restored.
Freedom of the Seas
All straits opening into inland seas,
as well as the Suez and Panama Canals, are to be neutralised.
Commercial shipping to be free. The right of
privateering to be abolished. The torpedoing of
commercial ships to be forbidden.
Indemnities
All combatants to renounce demands
for any indemnities, either direct or indirectas,
for instance, charges for the maintenance of prisoners.
Indemnities and contributions collected during the
war must be refunded.
Economic Terms
Commercial treaties are not to be
a part of the peace terms. Every country must
be independent in its commercial relations, and must
not be obliged to, or prevented from, concluding an
economic treaty, by the Treaty of Peace. Nevertheless,
all nations should bind themselves, by the Peace Treaty,
not to practise an economic blockade after the war,
nor to form separate tariff agreements. The right
of most favoured nation must be given to all countries
without distinction.
Guarantees of Peace
Peace is to be concluded at the Peace
Conference by delegates elected by the national representative
institutions of each country. The peace terms
are to be confirmed by these parliaments.
Secret diplomacy is to be abolished;
all parties are to bind themselves not to conclude
any secret treaties. Such treaties are declared
in contradiction to international law, and void.
All treaties, until confirmed by the parliaments of
the different nations, are to be considered void.
Gradual disarmament both on land and
sea, and the establishment of a militia system.
The League of Nations advanced by President Wilson
may become a valuable aid to international law, provided
that (a), all nations are to be obliged to participate
in it with equal rights, and (b), international politics
are to be democratised.
Ways to Peace
The Allies are to announce immediately
that they are willing to open peace negotiations as
soon as the enemy powers declare their consent to
the renunciation of all forcible annexations.
The Allies must bind themselves not
to begin any peace negotiations, nor to conclude peace,
except in a general Peace Conference with the participation
of delegates from all the neutral countries.
All obstacles to the Stockholm Socialist
Conference are to be removed, and passports are to
be given immediately to all delegates of parties and
organisations who wish to participate.
(The Executive Committee of the Peasants
Soviets also issued a nakaz, which differs
little from the above.)
6.
PEACE AT RUSSIAS
EXPENSE
The Ribot revelations of Austrias
peace-offer to France; the so-called Peace Conference
at Berne, Switzerland, during the summer of 1917,
in which delegates participated from all belligerent
countries, representing large financial interests in
all these countries; and the attempted negotiations
of an English agent with a Bulgarian church dignitary;
all pointed to the fact that there were strong currents,
on both sides, favourable to patching up a peace at
the expense of Russia. In my next book, Kornilov
to Brest-Litovsk, I intend to treat this matter at
some length, publishing several secret documents discovered
in the Ministry of Foreign Affairs at Petrograd.
7.
RUSSIAN SOLDIERS
IN FRANCE
Official Report of the Provisional Government.
From the time the news of the Russian
Revolution reached Paris, Russian newspapers of extreme
tendencies immediately began to appear; and these
newspapers, as well as individuals, freely circulated
among the soldier masses and began a Bolshevik propaganda,
often spreading false news which appeared in the French
journals. In the absence of all official news,
and of precise details, this campaign provoked discontent
among the soldiers. The result was a desire to
return to Russia, and a hatred toward the officers.
Finally it all turned into rebellion.
In one of their meetings, the soldiers issued an appeal
to refuse to drill, since they had decided to fight
no more. It was decided to isolate the rebels,
and General Zankievitch ordered all soldiers loyal
to the Provisional Government to leave the camp of
Courtine, and to carry with them all ammunition.
On June 25th the order was executed; there remained
at the camp only the soldiers who said they would
submit conditionally to the Provisional Government.
The soldiers at the camp of Courtine received several
times the visit of the Commander-in-Chief of the Russian
Armies abroad, of Rapp, the Commissar of the Ministry
of War, and of several distinguished former exiles
who wished to influence them, but these attempts were
unsuccessful, and finally Commissar Rapp insisted
that the rebels lay down their arms, and, in sign of
submission, march in good order to a place called
Clairvaux. The order was only partially obeyed;
first 500 men went out, of whom 22 were arrested;
24 hours later about 6,000 followed
. About 2,000
remained
.
It was decided to increase the pressure;
their rations were diminished, their pay was cut off,
and the roads toward the village of Courtine were
guarded by French soldiers. General Zankievitch,
having discovered that a Russian artillery brigade
was passing through France, decided to form a mixed
detachment of infantry and artillery to reduce the
rebels. A deputation was sent to the rebels;
the deputation returned several hours later, convinced
of the futility of the negotiations. On September
1st General Zankievitch sent an ultimatum to the rebels
demanding that they lay down their arms, and menacing
in case of refusal to open fire with artillery if
the order was not obeyed by September 3d at 10 oclock.
The order not being executed, a light
fire of artillery was opened on the place at the hour
agreed upon. Eighteen shells were fired, and
the rebels were warned that the bombardment would become
more intense. In the night of September 3d 160
men surrendered. September 4th the artillery
bombardment recommenced, and at 11 oclock, after
36 shells had been fired, the rebels raised two white
flags and began to leave the camp without arms.
By evening 8,300 men had surrendered. 150 soldiers
who remained in the camp opened fire with machine-guns
that night. The 5th of September, to make an end
of the affair, a heavy barrage was laid on the camp,
and our soldiers occupied it little by little.
The rebels kept up a heavy fire with their machine-guns.
September 6th, at 9 oclock, the camp was entirely
occupied
. After the disarmament of the rebels,
81 arrests were made
.
Thus the report. From secret
documents discovered in the Ministry of Foreign Affairs,
however, we know that the account is not strictly
accurate. The first trouble arose when the soldiers
tried to form Committees, as their comrades in Russia
were doing. They demanded to be sent back to
Russia, which was refused; and then, being considered
a dangerous influence in France, they were ordered
to Salonika. They refused to go, and the battle
followed
. It was discovered that they had been
left in camp without officers for about two months,
and badly treated, before they became rebellious.
All attempts to find out the name of the Russian
artillery brigade which had fired on them were futile;
the telegrams discovered in the Ministry left it to
be inferred that French artillery was used
.
After their surrender, more than two
hundred of the mutineers were shot in cold blood.
8.
TERESTCHENKOS
SPEECH_ (Resumé_)
The questions of foreign policy
are closely related to those of national defence
.
And so, if in questions of national defence you think
it is necessary to hold session in secret, also in
our foreign policy we are sometimes forced to observe
the same secrecy
.
German diplomacy attempts to influence
public opinion
. Therefore the declarations of
directors of great democratic organisations who talk
loudly of a revolutionary Congress, and the impossibility
of another winter campaign, are dangerous
. All
these declarations cost human lives
.
I wish to speak merely of governmental
logic, without touching the questions of the honour
and dignity of the State. From the point of view
of logic, the foreign policy of Russia ought to be
based on a real comprehension of the interests
of Russia
. These interests mean that it is impossible
that our country remain alone, and that the present
alignment of forces with us, (the Allies), is satisfactory
.
All humanity longs for peace, but in Russia no one
will permit a humiliating peace which would violate
the State interests of our fatherland!
The orator pointed out that such a
peace would for long years, if not for centuries,
retard the triumph of democratic principles in the
world, and would inevitably cause new wars.
All remember the days of May, when
the fraternisation on our Front threatened to end
the war by a simple cessation of military operations,
and lead the country to a shameful separate peace
and what efforts it was necessary to use to make the
soldier masses at the front understand that it was
not by this method that the Russian State must end
the war and guarantee its interest
.
He spoke of the miraculous effect
of the July offensive, what strength it gave to the
words of Russian ambassadors abroad, and the despair
in Germany caused by the Russian victories. And
also, the disillusionment in Allied countries which
followed the Russian defeat
.
As to the Russian Government, it
adhered strictly to the formula of May, No annexations
and no punitive indemnities. We consider it essential
not only to proclaim the self-determination of peoples,
but also to renounce imperialist aims
.
Germany is continually trying to make
peace. The only talk in Germany is of peace;
she knows she cannot win.
I reject the reproaches aimed at
the Government which allege that Russian foreign policy
does not speak clearly enough about the aims of the
war
.
If the question arises as to what
ends the Allies are pursuing, it is indispensable
first to demand what aims the Central Powers have
agreed upon
.
The desire is often heard that we
publish the details of the treaties which bind the
Allies; but people forget that, up to now, we do not
know the treaties which bind the Central Powers
.
Germany, he said, evidently wants
to separate Russia from the West by a series of weak
buffer-states.
This tendency to strike at the vital
interests of Russia must be checked
.
And will the Russian democracy, which
has inscribed on its banner the rights of nations
to dispose of themselves, allow calmly the continuation
of oppression upon the most civilised peoples (in
Austria-Hungary)?
Those who fear that the Allies will
try to profit by our difficult situation, to make
us support more than our share of the burden of war,
and to solve the questions of peace at our expense,
are entirely mistaken
. Our enemy looks upon
Russia as a market for its products. The end
of the war will leave us in a feeble condition, and
with our frontier open the flood of German products
can easily hold back for years our industrial development.
Measures must be taken to guard against this
.
I say openly and frankly: the
combination of forces which unites us to the Allies
is favourable to the interests of Russia
. It
is therefore important that our views on the questions
of war and peace shall be in accord with the views
of the Allies as clearly and precisely as possible
.
To avoid all misunderstanding, I must say frankly
that Russia must present at the Paris Conference one
point of view
.
He did not want to comment on the
nakaz to Skobeliev, but he referred to the
Manifesto of the Dutch-Scandinavian Committee, just
published in Stockholm. This Manifesto declared
for the autonomy of Lithuania and Livonia; but that
is clearly impossible, said Terestchenko, for Russia
must have free ports on the Baltic all the year round
.
In this question the problems of
foreign policy are also closely related to interior
politics, for if there existed a strong sentiment
of unity of all great Russia, one would not witness
the repeated manifestations, everywhere, of a desire
of peoples to separate from the Central Government
.
Such separations are contrary to the interests of
Russia, and the Russian delegates cannot raise the
issue
.
9.
THE BRITISH
FLEET (etc.)
At the time of the naval battle of
the Gulf of Riga, not only the Bolsheviki, but also
the Ministers of the Provisional Government, considered
that the British Fleet had deliberately abandoned
the Baltic, as one indication of the attitude so often
expressed publicly by the British press, and semi-publicly
by British representatives in Russia, Russias finished!
No use bothering about Russia!
See interview with Kerensky (Appendix 13).
GENERAL GURKO was a former Chief of
Staff of the Russian armies under the Tsar. He
was a prominent figure in the corrupt Imperial Court.
After the Revolution, he was one of the very few persons
exiled for his political and personal record.
The Russian naval defeat in the Gulf of Riga coincided
with the public reception, by King George in London,
of General Gurko, a man whom the Russian Provisional
Government considered dangerously pro-German as well
as reactionary!
10.
APPEALS AGAINST
INSURRECTION
To Workers
and Soldiers
Comrades! The Dark Forces are
increasingly trying to call forth in Petrograd and
other towns DISORDERS AND Pogroms. Disorder
is necessary to the Dark Forces, for disorder will
give them an opportunity for crushing the revolutionary
movement in blood. Under the pretext of establishing
order, and of protecting the inhabitants, they hope
to establish the domination of Kornilov, which the
revolutionary people succeeded in suppressing not long
ago. Woe to the people if these hopes are realised!
The triumphant counter-revolution will destroy the
Soviets and the Army Committees, will disperse the
Constituent Assembly, will stop the transfer of the
land to the Land Committees, will put an end to all
the hopes of the people for a speedy peace, and will
fill all the prisons with revolutionary soldiers and
workers.
In their calculations, the counter-revolutionists
and Black Hundred leaders are counting on the serious
discontent of the unenlightened part of the people
with the disorganisation of the food-supply, the continuation
of the war, and the general difficulties of life.
They hope to transform every demonstration of soldiers
and workers into a pogrom, which will frighten
the peaceful population and throw it into the arms
of the Restorers of Law and Order.
Under such conditions every attempt
to organise a demonstration in these days, although
for the most laudable object, would be a crime.
All conscious workers and soldiers who are displeased
with the policy of the Government will only bring
injury to themselves and to the Revolution if they
indulge in demonstrations.
THEREFORE THE Tsay-ee-kah
ASKS ALL WORKERS NOT TO OBEY ANY CALLS TO DEMONSTRATE.
WORKERS AND SOLDIERS! DO NOT
YIELD TO PROVOCATION! REMEMBER YOUR DUTY TO YOUR
COUNTRY AND TO THE REVOLUTION! DO NOT BREAK THE
UNITY OF THE REVOLUTIONARY FRONT BY DEMONSTRATIONS
WHICH ARE BOUND TO BE UNSUCCESSFUL!
The Central Executive Committee
of the Soviets of Workers and Soldiers Deputies
(Tsay-ee-kah)
Russian Social Democratic Labour Party
THE DANGER IS NEAR!
To All Workers and Soldiers
(Read and Hand to Others)
Comrades Workers and Soldiers!
Our country is in danger. On
account of this danger our freedom and our Revolution
are passing through difficult days. The enemy
is at the gates of Petrograd. The disorganisation
is growing with every hours. It becomes more
and more difficult to obtain bread for Petrograd.
All, of from the smallest to the greatest, must redouble
their efforts, must endeavour to arrange things properly
.
We must save our country, say freedom
. More
arms and provisions for the Army! Breadfor the
great cities. Order and organisation in the country
.
And in these terrible critical days
rumours creep about that SOMEWHERE a demonstration
is being prepared, that SOME ONE is calling on the
soldiers and workers to destroy revolutionary peace
and order
. Rabotchi Put, the newspaper of
the Bolsheviki, is pouring oil on the flames:
it flattering, trying to please the unenlightened
people, tempting the worker and soldiers, urging them
on against the Government, promising them mountains
of good things
. The confiding, ignorant men
believe, they do not reason
. And from the other
side come also rumoursrumours that the Dark Forces,
the friends of the Tsar, the German spies, are rubbing
their hands with glee. They are ready to join
the Bolsheviki, and with them fan the disorders into
civil war.
The Bolsheviki and the ignorant soldiers
and workers seduced by them cry senselessly:
Down with the Government! All power to the Soviets!
And the Dark servants of the Tsar and the spies of
Wilhelm will egg the on; Beat the Jews, beat the
shopkeepers, rob the markets, devastate the shops,
pillage the wine stores! Slay, burn, rob!
And then will begin a terrible confusion,
a war between one part of the people and the other.
All will become still more disorganised, and perhaps
once more blood will be shed on the streets of the
capital. And then what then?
Then, the road to Petrograd will
be open to Wilhelm. Then, no bread will come
to Petrograd, the children will die of hunger.
Then, the Army as the front will remain without support,
our brothers in the trenches will be delivered to
the fire of the enemy. Then, Russia will lose
all prestige in other countries, our money will lose
its value; everything will be so dear as to make life
impossible. Then, the long awaited Constituent
Assembly will be postponedit will be impossible to
convene it in time. And thenDeath to the Revolution,
Death to our Liberty
.
Is it this that you want, workers
and soldiers? No! If you do not then go,
go to the ignorant people seduced by the betrayers,
and tell them the whole truth, which we have told
you!
Let all know that EVERY MAN WHO IN
THESE TERRIBLE DAYS CALLS ON YOU TO COME OUT IN THE
STREETS AGAINST THE GOVERNMENT, IS EITHER A SECRET
SERVANT OF THE TSAR, A PROVOCATOR, OR AN UNWISE ASSISTANT
OF THE ENEMIES OF THE PEOPLE, OR A PAID SPY OF WILHELM!
Every conscious worker revolutionist,
every conscious peasant, every revolutionary soldier,
all who understand what harm a demonstration or a
revolt against the Government might cause to the people,
must join together and not allow the enemies of the
people to destroy our freedom.
The Petrograd Electoral Committee
of the Mensheviki-oborontzi.
11.
LENINs LETTER
TO THE COMRADES
This series of articles appeared in
Rabotchi Put several days running, at the end
of October and beginning of November, 1917. I
give here only extracts from two instalments:
1. Kameniev and Riazanov say
that we have not a majority among the people, and
that without a majority insurrection is hopeless.
Answer: People capable of speaking
such things are falsifiers, pedants, or simply dont
want to look the real situation in the face.
In the last elections we received in all the country
more than fifty per cent of all thevotes
.
The most important thing in Russia
to-day is the peasants revolution. In Tambov
Government there has been a real agrarian uprising
with wonderful political results
. Even Dielo
Naroda has been scared into yelling that the land
must be turned over to the peasants, and not only
the Socialist Revolutionaries in the Council of the
Republic, but also the Government itself, has been
similarly affected. Another valuable result was
the bringing of bread which had been hoarded by the
pomieshtchiki to the railroad stations in that
province. The Russkaya Volia had to admit
that the stations were filled with bread after the
peasants rising
.
2. We are not sufficiently strong
to take over the Government, and the bourgeoisie is
not sufficiently strong to prevent the Constituent
Assembly.
Answer: This is nothing but
timidity, expressed by pessimism as regards workers
and soldiers, and optimism as regards the failure of
the bourgeoisie. If yunkers and Cossacks
say they will fight, you believe them; if workmen
and soldiers say so, you doubt it. What is the
distinction between such doubts and siding politically
with the bourgeoisie?
Kornilov proved that the Soviets
were really a power. To believe Kerensky and
the Council of the Republic, if the bourgeoisie is
not strong enough to break the Soviets, it is not
strong enough to break the Constituent. But that
is wrong. The bourgeoisie will break the Constituent
by sabotage, by lock-outs, by giving up Petrograd,
by opening the front to the Germans. This has
already been done in the case of Riga
.
3. The Soviets must remain a
revolver at the head of the Government to force the
calling of the Constituent Assembly, and to suppress
any further Kornilov attempts.
Answer: Refusal of insurrection
is refusal of All Power to the Soviets. Since September
the Bolshevik party has been discussing the question
of insurrection. Refusing to rise means to trust
our hopes in the faith of the good bourgeoisie, who
have promised to call the Constituent Assembly.
When the Soviets have all the power, the calling of
the Constituent is guaranteed, and its success assured.
Refusal of insurrection means surrender
to the Lieber-Dans. Either we must drop All Power
to the Soviets or make an insurrection; there is
no middle course.
4. The bourgeoisie cannot give
up Petrograd, although the Rodziankos want it, because
it is not the bourgeoisie who are fighting, but our
heroic soldiers and sailors.
Answer: This did not prevent
two admirals from running away at the Moonsund battle.
The Staff has not changed; it is composed of Kornilovtsi.
If the Staff, with Kerensky at its head, wants to give
up Petrograd, it can do it doubly or trebly. It
can make arrangements with the Germans or the British;
open the fronts. It can sabotage the Armys food
supply. At all these doors has it knocked.
We have no right to wait until the
bourgeoisie chokes the Revolution. Rodzianko
is a man of action, who has faithfully and truthfully
served the bourgeoisie for years
. Half the Lieber-Dans
are cowardly compromisers; half of them simple fatalists
.
5. Were getting stronger every
day. We shall be able to enter the Constituent
Assembly as a strong opposition. Then why should
we play everything on one card?
Answer: This is the argument
of a sophomore with no practical experience, who reads
that the Constituent Assembly is being called and
trustfully accepts the legal and constitutional way.
Even the voting of the Constituent Assembly will not
do away with hunger, or beat Wilhelm
. The issue
of hunger and of surrendering Petrograd cannot be
decided by waiting for the Constituent Assembly.
Hunger is not waiting. The peasants Revolution
is not waiting. The Admirals who ran away did
not wait.
Blind people are surprised that hungry
people, betrayed by admirals and generals, do not
take an interest in voting.
6. If the Kornilovtsi make an
attempt, we would show them our strength. But
why should we risk everything by making an attempt
ourselves?
Answer: History doesnt repeat.
Perhaps Kornilov will some day make an attempt!
What a serious base for proletarian action! But
suppose Kornilov waits for starvation, for the opening
of the fronts, what then? This attitude means
to build the tactics of a revolutionary party on one
of the bourgeoisies former mistakes.
Let us forget everything except that
there is no way out but by the dictatorship of the
proletariateither that or the dictatorship of Kornilov.
Let us wait, comrades, fora miracle!
12.
MILIUKOVs SPEECH
(Resumé)
Every one admits, it seems, that
the defence of the country is our principal task,
and that, to assure it, we must have discipline in
the Army and order in the rear. To achieve this,
there must be a power capable of daring, not only
by persuasion, but also by force
. The germ of
all our evils comes from the point of view, original,
truly Russian, concerning foreign policy, which passes
for the Internationalist point of view.
The noble Lenin only imitates the
noble Keroyevsky when he holds that from Russia will
come the New World which shall resuscitate the aged
West, and which will replace the old banner of doctrinary
Socialism by the new direct action of starving massesand
that will push humanity forward and force it to break
in the doors of the social paradise
.
These men sincerely believed that
the decomposition of Russia would bring about the
decomposition of the whole capitalist régime.
Starting from that point of view, they were able to
commit the unconscious treason, in wartime, of calmly
telling the soldiers to abandon the trenches, and
instead of fighting the external enemy, creating internal
civil war and attacking the proprietors and capitalists
.
Here Miliukov was interrupted by furious
cries from the Left, demanding what Socialist had
ever advised such action
.
Martov says that only the revolutionary
pressure of the proletariat can condemn and conquer
the evil will of imperialist cliques and break down
the dictatorship of these cliques
. Not by an
accord between Governments for a limitation of armaments,
but by the disarming of these Governments and the
radical democratisation of the military system
.
He attacked Martov viciously, and
then turned on the Mensheviki and Socialist Revolutionaries,
whom he accused of entering the Government as Ministers
with the avowed purpose of carrying on the class struggle!
The Socialists of Germany and of
the Allied countries contemplated these gentlemen
with ill-concealed contempt, but they decided that
it was for Russia, and sent us some apostles of the
Universal Conflagration
.
The formula of our democracy is very
simple; no foreign policy, no art of diplomacy, an
immediate democratic peace, a declaration to the Allies,
We want nothing, we havent anything to fight with!
And then our adversaries will make the same declaration,
and the brotherhood of peoples will be accomplished!
Miliukov took a fling at the Zimmerwald
Manifesto, and declared that even Kerensky has not
been able to escape the influence of that unhappy
document which will forever be your indictment. He
then attacked Skobeliev, whose position in foreign
assemblies, where he would appear as a Russian delegate,
yet opposed to the foreign policy of his Government,
would be so strange that people would say, Whats
that gentleman carrying, and what shall we talk to
him about? As for the nakaz, Miliukov said
that he himself was a pacifist; that he believed in
the creation of an International Arbitration Board,
and the necessity for a limitation of armaments, and
parliamentary control over secret diplomacy, which
did not mean the abolition of secret diplomacy.
As for the Socialist ideas in the
nakaz, which he called Stockholm ideaspeace
without victory, the right of self-determination of
peoples, and renunciation of the economic war
The German successes are directly
proportionate to the successes of those who call themselves
the revolutionary democracy. I do not wish to
say, to the successes of the Revolution, because
I believe that the defeats of the revolutionary democracy
are victories for the Revolution
.
The influence of the Soviet leaders
abroad is not unimportant. One had only to listen
to the speech of the Minister of Foreign Affairs to
be convinced that, in this hall, the influence of the
revolutionary democracy on foreign policy is so strong,
that the Minister does not dare to speak face to face
with it about the honour and dignity of Russia!
We can see, in the nakaz of
the Soviets, that the ideas of the Stockholm Manifesto
have been elaborated in two directionthat of Utopianism,
and that of German interests
.
Interrupted by the angry cries of
the Left, and rebuked by the President, Miliukov insisted
that the proposition of peace concluded by popular
assemblies, not by diplomats, and the proposal to
undertake peace negotiations as soon as the enemy had
renounced annexations, were pro-German. Recently
Kuhlman said that a personal declaration bound only
him who made it
. Anyway, we will imitate the Germans
before we will imitate the Soviet of Workers and Soldiers
Deputies
.
The sections treating of the independence
of Lithuania and Livonia were symptoms of nationalist
agitation in different parts of Russia, supported,
said Miliukov, by German money
. Amid bedlam from
the Left, he contrasted the clauses of the nakaz
concerning Alsace-Lorraine, Rumania, and Serbia, with
those treating of the nationalities in Germany and
Austria. The nakaz embraced the German
and Austrian point of view, said Miliukov.
Passing to Terestchenkos speech,
he contemptuously accused him of being afraid to speak
the thought in his mind, and even afraid to think
in terms of the greatness of Russia. The Dardanelles
must belong to Russia
.
You are continually saying that the
soldier does not know why he is fighting, and that
when he does know, hell fight
. It is true that
the soldier doesnt know why he is fighting, but now
you have told him that there is no reason for him
to fight, that we have no national interests, and
that we are fighting for alien ends
.
Paying tribute to the Allies, who,
he said, with the assistance of America, will yet
save the cause of humanity, he ended:
Long live the light of humanity,
the advanced democracies of the West, who for a long
time have been travelling the way we now only begin
to enter, with ill-assured and hesitating steps!
Long live our brave Allies!
13.
INTERVIEW WITH
KERENSKY
The Associated Press man tried his
hand. Mr. Kerensky, he began, in England and France
people are disappointed with the Revolution
Yes, I know, interrupted Kerensky,
quizzically. Abroad the Revolution is no longer fashionable!
What is your explanation of why the
Russians have stopped fighting?
That is a foolish question to ask.
Kerensky was annoyed. Russia entered the war first
of all the Allies, and for a long time she bore the
whole brunt of it. Her losses have been inconceivably
greater than those of all the other nations put together.
Russia has now the right to demand of the Allies that
they bring greater force of arms to bear. He stopped
for a moment and stared at his interlocutor. You
are asking why the Russians have stopped fighting,
and the Russians are asking where is the British fleetwith
German battle-ships in the Gulf of Riga? Again he
ceased suddenly, and as suddenly burst out. The Russian
Revolution hasnt failed and the revolutionary Army
hasnt failed. It is not the Revolution which
caused disorganisation in the armythat disorganisation
was accomplished years ago, by the old regime.
Why arent the Russians fighting? I will tell
you. Because the masses of the people are economically
exhausted,and because they are disillusioned with
the Allies!
The interview of which this is an
excerpt was cabled to the United States, and in a
few days sent back by the American State Department,
with a demand that it be altered. This Kerensky refused
to do; but it was done by his secretary, Dr. David
Soskiceand, thus purged of all offensive references
to the Allies, was given to the press of the world
.