Government, Propaganda and Foreign Relations Flashcards

1
Q

What was key to Stalin’s style of government?

A

Bureaucratic centralism

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2
Q

What was bureaucratic centralism?

A

Government controlled from the centre; this includes the central appointment of district officers and other party officials

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3
Q

How was Stalin’s government presented?

A

As a continuation of Lenin’s legacy

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4
Q

What was the driving force in Stalin’s system of government?

A

Fear: his henchmen were scared, not only of Stalin, but of each other

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5
Q

How did the secret police change?

A

Renamed the OGPU (Joint State Political Directorate) in 1926, the role of the secret police became even more pervasive under Dzerzhinsky’s successor, Menzhinsky

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6
Q

How could Stalin justify his use of terror?

A

Lenin had done so, so Stalin could claim he was just continuing Lenin’s legacy

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7
Q

How was propaganda used to ‘sell’ the first Five Year Plan in 1928?

A

It was portrayed as the work of the all-knowing ‘Great Leader’, Stalin, who was frequently depicted alongside Lenin and Marx

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8
Q

Example of a slogan used by Stalin?

A

‘Stalin is the Lenin of today’

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9
Q

What imagery did some propaganda use to appeal to the peasantry?

A

Used imagery and icons connected to tsarist Russia as these were familiar to traditional peasant society

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10
Q

How and why did Stalin perpetuate the cult of Lenin?

A

Wanted to portray Lenin as a god-like figure in order to portray himself as his disciple and heir

e.g. Stalin insisted on having Lenin’s body embalmed and his tomb turned into a shrine (against the wishes of Lenin’s wife)

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11
Q

Who were Stalin’s chief representatives in foreign affairs?

A

Chicherin and his deputy, Litvinov

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12
Q

Who did Stalin support in China?

A

The Guomindang - revolutionary-nationalist movement (as opposed to the CCP)

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13
Q

Example of the GMD being bad

A

1926 - massacred striking workers in Canton

1927 - viciously suppressed communist-led workers’ revolts

1927 - massacred around 30,000 striking workers in Wuhan

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14
Q

Why did Trotsky criticise Stalin’s attitude towards China?

A

Said Stalin had betrayed the CCP (however, Trotsky’s influence was waning and Stalin’s policy of ‘socialism in one country’ was supported enough that this wasn’t an issue)

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15
Q

When was the Treaty of Berlin signed?

A

1926

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16
Q

What was the Treaty of Berlin?

A

A promise between Russia and Germany to maintain positive diplomatic relations

Litvinov called it ‘an amplification of the Treaty of Rapallo’

17
Q

How did Stalin support the GMD?

A

Gave them financial backing and military help

18
Q

Economic clauses of the Treaty of Berlin?

A

Article 3 - promise not to join any economic boycott against the other

19
Q

Political clauses of the Treaty of Berlin?

A

Article 2 - if either country was attacked by a third party, the other would remain neutral in the conflict

20
Q

How long was the Treaty of Berlin to be in effect for?

A

5 years

21
Q

Economic benefit for the USSR of good relations with Germany?

A

In June 1926, the USSR received large financial credits from German banks

22
Q

How had Stalin viewed the Comintern between 1924-29?

A

Low priority as he had been far more concerned with internal affairs

23
Q

When did Stalin announce his changing attitude to foreign affairs?

A

At the Sixth Comintern Congress in July 1928, Stalin announced that the time was right for an all-out attack on anti-communist social democratic parties in Europe (what Stalin called ‘social fascists’)

24
Q

What did Stalin instruct the Comintern to do?

A

Purge ‘weak elements’ (and Trotskysists) to prepare to fight to spread revolution around the world

25
Q

Why might Stalin have changed his attitude towards the Comintern?

A

Return to genuine revolutionary fervour he had held in 1917-19?

Picking a political fight with Bukharin?

26
Q

How did Stalin change how the Comintern operated?

A

Put loyalists in charge

Soviet agents were sent abroad to infiltrate foreign communist parties in countries like France, Germany and Italy