1.
MILITARY REVOLUTIONARY
COMMITTEE. BULLETIN NO. 2
November 12th, in the evening, Kerensky
sent a proposition to the revolutionary troopsto
lay down their arms. Kerenskys men opened artillery
fire. Our artillery answered and compelled the
enemy to be silent. The Cossacks assumed the
offensive. The deadly fire of the sailors, the
Red Guards and the soldiers forced the Cossacks to
retreat. Our armoured cars rushed in among the
ranks of the enemy. The enemy is fleeing.
Our troops are in pursuit. The order has been
given to arrest Kerensky. Tsarskoye Selo has been
taken by the revolutionary troops.
The Lettish Riflemen: The Military
Revolutionary Committee has received precise information
that the valiant Lettish Riflemen have arrived from
the Front and taken up a position in the rear of Kerenskys
bands.
From the Staff of the Military Revolutionary Committee
The seizure of Gatchina and Tsarskoye
Selo by Kerenskys detachments is to be explained
by the complete absence of artillery and machine-guns
in these places, whereas Kerenskys cavalry was provided
with artillery from the beginning. The last two
days were days of enforced work for our Staff, to
provide the necessary quantity of guns, machine-guns,
field telephones, etc., for the revolutionary
troops. When this workwith the energetic assistance
of the District Soviets and the factories (the Putilov
Works, Obukhov and others)was accomplished, the issue
of the expected encounter left no place for doubt:
on the side of the revolutionary troops there was not
only a surplus in quantity and such a powerful material
base as Petrograd, but also an enormous moral advantage.
All the Petrograd regiments moved out to the positions
with tremendous enthusiasm. The Garrison Conference
elected a Control Commission of five soldiers, thus
securing a complete unity between the commander in
chief and the garrison. At the Garrison Conference
it was unanimously decided to begin decisive action.
The artillery fire on the 12th of
November developed with extraordinary force by 3 P.M.
The Cossacks were completely demoralised. A parliamentarian
came from them to the staff of the detachment at Krasnoye
Selo, and proposed to stop the firing, threatening
otherwise to take decisive measures. He was
answered that the firing would cease when Kerensky
laid down his arms.
In the developing encounter all sections
of the troopsthe sailors, soldiers and the Red Guardsshowed
unlimited courage. The sailors continued to advance
until they had fired all their cartridges. The
number of casualties has not been established yet,
but it is larger on the part of the counter-revolutionary
troops, who experienced great losses through one of
our armoured cars.
Kerenskys staff, fearing that they
would be surrounded, gave the order to retreat, which
retreat speedily assumed a disorderly character.
By 11-12 P.M., Tsarkoye Selo, including the wireless
station, was entirely occupied by the troops of the
Soviets. The Cossacks retreated towards Gatchina
and Colpinno.
The morale of the troops is beyond
all praise. The order has been given to pursue
the retreating Cossacks. From the Tsarskoye Selo
station a radio-telegram was sent immediately to the
Front and to all local Soviets throughout Russia.
Further details will be communicated
.
2.
EVENTS OF THE 13TH
IN PETROGRAD
Three regiments of the Petrograd garrison
to take any part in the battle against Kerensky.
On the morning of the 13th they summoned to a joint
conference sixty delegates from the Front, in order
to find some way to stop the civil war. This
conference appointed a committee to go and persuade
Kerenskys troops to lay down their arms. They
proposed to ask the Government soldiers the following
questions: (1) Will the soldiers and Cossacks
of Kerensky recognise the Tsay-ee-kah as the
repository of Governmental power, responsible to the
Congress of Soviets? (2) Will the soldiers and Cossacks
accept the decrees of the second Congress of Soviets?
(3) Will they accept the Land and Peace decrees? (4)
Will they agree to cease hostilities and return to
their units? (5) Will they consent to the arrest of
Kerensky, Krasnov and Savinkov?
At the meeting of the Petrograd Soviet,
Zinoviev said, It would be foolish to think that
this committee could finish affair. The enemy
can only be broken by force. However, it would
be a crime for us not to try every peaceful means
to bring the Cossacks over to us
. What we need
is a military victory
. The news of an armistice
is premature. Our Staff will be ready to conclude
an armistice when the enemy can no longer do any harm
.
At present, the influence of our
victory is creating new political conditions
.
To-day the Socialist Revolutionaries are inclined are
inclined to admit the Bolsheviki into the new Government
.
A decisive victory is indispensable, so that those
who hesitate will have no further hesitation
.
At the City Duma all attention was
concentrated on the formation of the new Government.
In many factories and barracks already Revolutionary
Tribunals were operating, and the Bolsheviki were
threatening to set up more of these, and try Gotz and
Avksentiev before them. Dan proposed that an
ultimatum be sent demanding the abolition of these
Revolutionary Tribunals, or the other members of the
Conference would immediately break off all negotiations
with the Bolsheviki.
Shingariov, Cadet, declared that the
Municipality ought not to take part in any agreement
with the Bolsheviki
. Any agreement with the maniacs
is impossible until they lay down their arms and recognise
the authority of independent courts of law
.
Yartsev, for the Yedinstvo
group, declared that any agreement with the Bolsheviki
would be equivalent to a Bolshevik victory
.
Mayor Schreider, for the Socialist
Revolutionaries, stated that he was opposed to all
agreement with the Bolsheviki
. As for a Government,
that ought to spring from the popular will; and since
the popular will has been expressed in the municipal
elections, the popular will which can create a Government
is actually concentrated in the Duma
.
After other speakers, of which only
the representative of the Mensheviki Internationalists
was in favour of considering the admission of the
Bolsheviki into the new Government, the Duma voted
to continue its representatives in the Vikzhels
conference, but to insist upon the restoration of
the Provisional Government before everything, and
to exclude the Bolsheviki from the new power
.
3.
TRUCE. KRASNOVs ANSWER
TO THE COMMITTEE FOR SALVATION
In answer to your telegram proposing
an immediate armistice, the Supreme Commander, not
wishing further futile bloodshed, consents to enter
into negotiations and to establish relations between
the armies of the Government and the insurrectionists.
He proposes to the General Staff of the insurrectionists
to recall its regiments to Petrograd, to declare the
line Ligovo-Pulkovo-Colpinno neutral, and to allow
the advance-guards of the Government cavalry to enter
Tsarskoye Selo, for the purpose of establishing order.
The answer to this proposal must be placed in the
hands of our envoys before eight oclock to-morrow
morning.
KRASNOV.
4.
EVENTS AT TSARSKOYE
SELO
On the evening that Kerenskys troops
retreated from Tsarskoye Selo, some priests organised
a religious procession through the streets of the
town, making speeches to the citizens in which they
asked the people to support the rightful authority,
the Provisional Government. When the Cossacks
had retreated, and the first Red Guards entered the
town, witnesses reported that the priests had incited
the people against the Soviets, and had said prayers
at the grave of Rasputin, which lies behind the Imperial
Palace. One of the priests, Father Ivan Kutchurov,
was arrested and shot by the infuriated Red Guards
.
Just as the Red Guards entered the
town the electric lights were shut off, plunging the
streets in complete darkness. The director of
the electric light plant, Lubovitch, was arrested
by the Soviet troops and asked why he had shut off
the lights. He was found some time later in the
room where he had been imprisoned with a revolver in
his hand and a bullet hole in his temple.
The Petrograd anti-Bolshevik papers
came out next day with headlines, Plekhanovs temperature
39 degrees! Plekhanov lived at Tsarskoye Selo, where
he was lying ill in bed. Red Guards arrived at
the house and searched it for arms, questioning the
old man.
What class of society do you belong
to? they asked him.
I am a revolutionist, answered Plekhanov,
who for forty years has devoted his life to the struggle
for liberty!
Anyway, said a workman, you have
now sold yourself to the bourgeoisie!
The workers no longer knew Plekhanov,
pioneer of the Russian Social Democracy!
5.
APPEAL OF THE SOVIET
GOVERNMENT
The detachments at Gatchina, deceived
by Kerensky, have laid down their arms and decided
to arrest Kerensky. That chief of the counter-revolutionary
campaign has fled. The Army, by an enormous majority,
has pronounced in favour of the second All-Russian
Congress of Soviets, and of the Government which it
has created. Scores of delegates from the Front
have hastened to Petrograd to assure the Soviet Government
of the Armys fidelity. No twisting of the facts,
no calumny against the revolutionary workers, soldiers,
and peasants, has been able to defeat the People.
The Workers and Soldiers Revolution is victorious
.
The Tsay-ee-kah appeals to
the troops which march under the flag of the counter-revolution,
and invites them immediately to lay down their armsto
shed no longer the blood of their brothers in the
interests of a handful of land-owners and capitalists.
The Workers, Soldiers and Peasants Revolution curses
those who remain even for a moment under the flag
of the Peoples enemies
.
Cossacks! Come over to the rank
of the victorious People! Railwaymen, postmen,
telegraphersall, all support the new Government of
the People!