Revisionism: the Soviet Union in the Second World War / FRFI 212 Dec 2009 / Jan 2010
FRFI 212 December 2009 / January 2010
The capitalist crisis is now manifest: a financial crisis, economic decline, attacks on public services, rising unemployment, the spread of racism, increased militarism and readiness to wage war. As the economic and social bases of privilege within the working classes are undermined, so the bourgeoisie intensifies its ideological assault on socialism. On the twentieth anniversary of the fall of the
It is necessary to counter the falsification of socialist history and learn lessons that one day the working class in
The defeat of fascism
The bourgeoisie say that the
2009’s Remembrance ceremonies in
The Second World War was a continuation of the First World War; expressing monopoly capital’s constant drive to divide and re-divide the world, with competing imperialisms fighting for markets, resources and spheres of control. All the major capitalist powers underestimated the
Marx and Engels understood the revolutionary significance of the Russian working class and peasantry. In 1870 Russian émigrés in
Following the 1917 Bolshevik Revolution, more than a dozen foreign armies invaded Russia including 40,000 British troops, over 13,000 US troops, 70,000 Japanese, 12,000 French, 12,000 Poles – over 155,000 foreign soldiers on Russian soil to, in the words of Winston Churchill, then British Minister for War and Air, ‘strangle it [Bolshevism] at birth’. Churchill primarily directed the invasion armies. They were defeated by the Red Army led by the Bolsheviks.
Hitler told General Rumstedt before the 1941 German invasion of the
The Nazis and other imperialists believed the Germans would win a quick victory with its Blitzkreig (lightening war) – the Shock and Awe of its time. Six months before his execution in the 1937-38 Red Army purges, Marshal Tukhachesky addressed the
Three months before Germany launched its June 1941 assault on the Soviet Union, Hitler told his generals, ‘The war against Russia will be such that it cannot be conducted in a knightly fashion: the struggle is one of ideologies and racial differences and will have to be conducted with unprecedented, unmerciful and unrelenting harshness. All officers will have to rid themselves of obsolete ideologies. I know that the necessity for such means of making war is beyond the comprehension of you generals but... I insist absolutely that my orders be executed without contradiction. The commissars are the bearers of ideologies directly opposed to National Socialism. Therefore the commissars will be liquidated. German soldiers guilty of breaking international law... will be excused.
By the summer of 1942, 80% of the German army was in Soviet territory. The Soviet government asked the
The Battle of Stalingrad was fought between July 1942 and February 1943. It halted and reversed the fascist advance. In this single battle the
The Siege of Leningrad claimed 630,000 Soviet lives. Between 22 June 1941 and 1 February 1942, 2.8 million Soviet prisoners of war died, conforming to Hitler’s directive. At the Battle of Normandy the western allies lost 35,000 killed; one fourteenth of the Soviet casualties at
The imperialists’ attempt to strangle Bolshevism at birth, the threats and German-led invasion, the imperialist encirclement and sabotage of the Soviet economy profoundly affected the character of the Soviet state. In particular, the failure of the European working class movement to spread the socialist revolution after 1917 and then to sufficiently defend it against attack, compounded the difficulties faced by the Soviet people. A single party system was necessary, as was a powerful army and repressive apparatus if the state was to survive and stand against imperialism – and the Soviet working class knew that.
Yet the question has to be answered: ‘How was a working class that could defeat the fascist invaders so demoralised and demobilised that it could allow the Soviet and other socialist states to be destroyed?’ We will explore what happened and why in future issues of FRFI.
Estimated number of armed forces personnel and civilians killed in the Second World War and as a % of 1939 national populations.
|
Country |
Numbers killed |
% of population |
|
|
386,000 |
0.8% |
|
|
405,000 |
0.3% |
|
|
25-27 million |
14.2% |
|
|
15 million |
3.5% |
|
|
7 million |
8.8% |
|
|
1.8 million |
1.8% |
|
|
6 million |
17.2% |
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