Unit 1: HOW DID STALIN EXERCISE POWER OVER THE COMMUNIST PARTY AND THE SOVIET STATE? Flashcards

1
Q

When did Lenin die?

A

January 1924

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2
Q

How did Stalin start to gain power?

A

He became General Secretary of the Party in 1922 - the party structure grew in power and size and the general secretary was the head of the party which gave Stalin influence.

He gained access to over 26,000 personal files on Party members - a useful source of information that could be used against rivals.

He controlled the agenda of Party meetings therefore, could restrict the issues that could be debated. - he took advantage of the party structure Lenin created.

He launched Lenin Enrolment, 1923-25 - to increase the number of industrial workers in the party, this led to the party consisting of uneducated and politically naive worker who could be easily manipulated by Stalin.

Stalin could appoint people to the party so he appointed his supporters.

Exploited divisions in the party - left wanted a permanent revolution, right want to keep Lenin’s NEP

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3
Q

Who was Leon Trotsky?

A
  • A Marxist revolutionary, who developed the Trotskyism ideology.
  • During the revolution he headed the Red Army which played a vital role in the Bolsheviks victory in the Russian civil war.
  • After Lenin’s death in January 1924, Trotsky gradually lost his government positions and in February 1929 he was officially expelled from the Soviet Union by the politburo.
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4
Q

What examples could be given to show that Stalin’s rise of power was because of Trotsky’s mistake?

A

He refused to make private alliances with other communists.

Trotsky missed meetings and refused Lenin’s offer of becoming a deputy. He wanted to go his own way, and not follow the party.

He missed Lenin’s funeral.

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5
Q

What examples could be given to show that Stalin’s rise in power was because of the poor party organisation / leadership?

A

The new poorly educated party members were easy for Stalin to control. Most of them were workers, not politicians.

Lenin had criticised both Stalin and Trotsky. therefore, there was no clear successor to lead the Communist Party.

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6
Q

Who were Stalin’s opponents in the Politburo?

A

Leon Trotsky - left

Gregory Zinoviev - left

Lev Kamenev - left

Nikolai Bukharin - right

Mikhail Tomsky - right

Alexei Rykov - right

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7
Q

How did Stalin remove political rivals from positions of power?

A

Left - 1926, their views were criticised at the 15thPC, accused of forming factions, expelled from Politburo and party

Right - WInter 1926-27, divisions over the issue of industrialisation, the right wanted to keep the NEP as its removal could cause a decline in food production, Stalin saw them as standing in the way of Socialism in one country and therefore weaken the economic base. – Bukharin accused of Trotskyism because he criticised the growth of the bureaucracy like Trotsky, Bukharin’s support undermined by Stalin highlighting the NEP failure to prevent food shortages, supporters of the right removed.

Socialism in one country - Stalin’s policy of modernisation

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8
Q

What were the instruments of terror?

A

The party secretariat, which collected information on party members that could be used to condemn them as enemies of the people.

The secret police, who carried out surveillance, arrests and executions. They also ran the gulag, where many victims of purges were imprisoned.

Purges of party members had happened periodically under Lenin to root out undesirable elements. Stalin also made use of it.

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9
Q

What was the Chistka 1932-1935?

A

The Chistka was designed to remove the officials, who refused to implement policies as it caused difficulties in launching the first five year plan and collectivisation in agriculture.

By 1935, 22% of the party had been removed from their posts - shows that opposition to Stalin’s principles was growing.

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10
Q

Was the opposition real or imagined?

A

In 1932, Ryutin, a former party secretary, issued a document to members of the central committee that accused Stalin of building a personal dictatorship.

The brutality that was used to enforce the policy of collectivisation in agriculture caused peasant resistance.

Party officials were critical of the unrealistic targets set under the five-year plans.

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11
Q

When was Kirov murdered?

A

By Nikolayev on 1st Dec 1934 as he felt the party did not appreciate his talents.

However, it may have been on Stalin’s orders.

therefore, seen as a catalyst for the purging of the communist party.

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12
Q

What were the show trials?

A

Where former leading figures in the party were accused of anti-Soviet activities.

In response to members of the left opposition that were still at large during 1935 and 1936.

They were staged to ensure that party members were intimidated by the power of the state.

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13
Q

What was the trial of the 16?

August 1936

A

Where leaders of the left including Zinoviev and Kamenev were accused of working as agents of Trotsky to undermine the state.

Under severe pressure from the NKVD they confessed to the crimes that they could not possibly have carried out.

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14
Q

What was the trial of the 17?

1937

A

In 1937, there was a purge of party officials such as Karl Radek and George Pyatakov.

They were accused of working for Trotsky and foreign governments to undermine the Soviet economy when in reality they may have just criticised the five year plan.

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15
Q

Why were there purges in the Red Army?

A

The armed forces had been critical of the impact of collectivisation on the peasantry.

For Stalin, these criticisms were a concern due to the growth in the army’s importance and defence resources.

Between 1937 and 1938 35,000 officers were either shot or imprisoned.

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16
Q

Why was there a purge of the secret police?

A

To ensure that the secret police posed no threat to Stalin. Over 3000 personnel were purged.

17
Q

Why can it be argued that terror was used to maintain the power of Stalin?

A

The fact that the Great Terror was launched at a time when the party’s position appeared relatively secure indicates that Stalin was working to his own agenda, trying to secure his own personal position.

18
Q

Why can it be argued that terror was used to maintain the power of the party?

A

It prevented a conservative reaction and kept the revolutionary spirit alive.

It safeguarded the position of the Communist Party.

Being a minority party, employing terror was necessary to retain power when undertaking unpopular policies.

19
Q

What was the Soviet constitution of 1936?

A

The constitution seemed to be highly democratic whereas before 1936 the bourgeoisie classes were denied the vote.

Civil rights, including freedom of the press, religion and organisation, were given under the constitution.

However, the constitution was a fraud as it listed restrictions of citizens and democracy was limited by leadership.

20
Q

What were Stalin’s personal limits on power?

A

Stalin could not decide and control every issue, making it impossible to keep on top of all events in the country.

Therefore Stalin prioritised and focused on those issues he was most concerned about.

21
Q

What were Stalin’s limits from within the leadership on power?

A

The politburo refused to agree to Stalin’s decision to execute Ryutin, who denounced Stalin in 1932.

Stalin was forced to redraft the second five-year plan as the politburo thought that targets were too high.

Kiron, the leader of the party in Leningrad, secured more votes than Stalin in the elections to the central committee.

The little evidence available suggests that the limits imposed on Stalin by members of the politburo were minor, yet they showed that some dissatisfaction did exist.

22
Q

What were Stalin’s limits imposed from below?

A

The scale of Stalin’s policies at local level was determined by local pressures over which Stalin found it difficult to exercise control.

23
Q

How did Stalin deal with the German advance in WW2?

A

Stalin was so shocked that he retired to his dacha for several days, leaving communications with the front confused.

The country’s administration during the war was undertaken by the State Defence Committee (GKO).

Some generals such as Zhukov, and ex-party officials were released from labour camps so that their expertise could be used for the war effort.

24
Q

High Stalinism

How did Stalin maintain power after WW2?

A period of reconstruction to maintain Stalin’s power after WW2

A

Stalin’s 70th birthday in 1949, enabled his cult of personality to advertise the facade of enormous power.

Stalin’s health had been in decline since the war, so he relied on political scheming to divide potential rivals to minimise their threat to his position.

The use of terror.

25
Q

How did Stalin attempt to remove Beria’s allies within the party?

A

The Mingrelian affair 1951 was a purge to remove some of the Beria’s allies in the party in Georgia.

The politburo (renamed the presidium) was enlarged from 10 to 36 members so Stalin could bring in newcomers who had no links with Malenkov or Beria, but he was unable to sack those who supported them.

26
Q

High Stalinism

What was the Doctors’ plot?

A period of reconstruction to maintain Stalin’s power after WW2

A

A campaign of terror against Soviet Jews that Stalin may have been planning in order to eliminate Beria and possibly other figures in the leadership.

Stalin died before it could have taken place.

27
Q

What was gosplan?

A

An organisation run by the Communist Party

Planned the industrialisation of the USSR under the five-year plans.

It set targets for industries and allocated resources.