Below is the article which Lenin referred to in his
“Left-Wing” Childishness
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The Left Communists' Theses on the Current Situation (Russia, 1918)
Published by the academic journal Critique, Glasgow, in 1977, this text has long been unavailable in print and apparently never before freely available online.
"The publication by a small group of “Left Communists” of their journal, Kommunist (No. 1, April 20, 1918), and of their “theses”, strikingly confirms my views expressed in the pamphlet The Immediate Tasks of the Soviet Government. There could not be better confirmation, in political literature, of the utter naivete of the defense of petty-bourgeois sloppiness that is sometimes concealed by “Left” slogans. It is useful and necessary to deal with the arguments of “Left Communists” because they are characteristic of the period we are passing through. They show up with exceptional clarity the negative side of the “core” of this period. They are instructive, because the people we are dealing with are the best of those who have failed to understand the present period, people who by their knowledge and loyalty stand far, far above the ordinary representatives of the same mistaken views, namely, the Left Socialist-Revolutionaries."
As a political magnitude, or as a group claiming to play a political role, the “Left Communist” group has presented its “Theses on the Present Situation”. It is a good Marxist custom to give a coherent and complete exposition of the principles underlying one’s views and tactics. And this good Marxist custom has helped to reveal the mistake committed by our “Lefts”, because the mere attempt to argue and not to declaim exposes the unsoundness of their argument. "
The Left Communists' Theses on the Current Situation (Russia, 1918)
Published by the academic journal Critique, Glasgow, in 1977, this text has long been unavailable in print and apparently never before freely available online.
Translated by Lain Fraser.
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From the editors of Kommunist.
Every comrade who closely follows party life will know that there arose at the beginning of this year serious differences in the party's ranks on the question of concluding peace with Germany.
Every comrade who closely follows party life will know that there arose at the beginning of this year serious differences in the party's ranks on the question of concluding peace with Germany.
These differences were discussed twice by the Central
Committee along with the responsible party workers: the
first time on the 20th (7th) of January and the second,
on the 3rd
of February (21st of January) of 1918. At these sessions
there appeared two
basic tendencies, one of which, the 'right',
advocated the speedy conclusion of peace on the terms
then being offered, without taking the matter as far as
breaking off negotiations; and the
other, the 'left', called for rejection of these terms and
the waging of a revolutionary war. An intermediate
tendency was against the signing
of an annexationist peace, and also against the
continuance of the war.
As is generally known, it was at first this intermediate
position which prevailed. After the beginning of the German
attack – the reply to the tactic of stopping the war without
signing the peace treaty – the question was again placed on
the agenda in the
Central Committee and a decision was eventually taken that
peace must be concluded. As a result the minority, which
insisted on the
acceptance of war against German imperialism, left the CC, and
subsequently comrades adhering to this tendency gave up
responsible posts in the organs of Soviet power.
A final solution to these differences in their original form
was given by the party congress held at the beginning of
March and the congress of Soviets which took place in
the middle of March. The party congress, by a majority
of 28 to 12 with 4 abstentions, approved the tactics of
the Central Committee majority and recognised the
confirmation of the peace as inevitable. The congress of
Soviets ratified the peace by a considerable majority.
The group of left Bolsheviks which published the paper
Kommunist in Petersburg, the
minority group at the party congress, however, felt it
wrong not to speak at all at the congress of Soviets. At
this congress a resolution was tabled in the name of 58
delegates and 10 members of the Ts.I.K., in which the left
communists declared that they were unable to vote for the
ratification of
the peace since they considered it extremely harmful to the
cause of the Russian revolution and the international
proletariat. In deference to party discipline, however, they
would not vote against, but abstained from voting.
After the ratification of peace it seemed, on the one hand,
that the differences in the party lost their raison d'etre,
since the ratification of the peace, the one debatable
point, had become an accomplished and irrefutable fact. But
on the other hand the
conclusion of peace laid a basis for the appearance of new
differences. The conclusion
of peace could not be a simple legal act; it was an
event which fundamentally changed the whole political and
economic position. In the arguments around the conclusion of
peace, two
different viewpoints on the tasks of the Russian
proletariat, two evaluations of the current political
situation, have become manifest. The conclusion of peace
has itself set the Russian revolution at a crossroads. The
party majority has begun to follow one political path, while
the party minority – the left, proletarian-communist wing –
is following another.
It is still difficult to say how the two paths will further
diverge. It is possible that the differences will be
worked out in the course of comradely discussion. It is also
possible that they will become still deeper. In any case, the
left-wing does not consider it necessary or useful to
conceal them. With this in mind, the Moscov district
office of the RCP, which sides with the left-wing of the
party, has opened the pages of its journal which is now
being issued to discussion of these differences. The theses
printed below represent the
views of the editorial board on the current political
situation and the tasks of the Russian working class. (These
theses were read and discussed at the joint session of the
group of left communists and leading comrades from the party
centre, on 4th April, 1918.)
1. The conclusion of an annexationist peace with Germany
closed the preceding period of the Russian revolution and
opens a new stage in it. In consequence of the contradiction
between German imperialism and the Russian workers' and
peasants' revolution, revolutionary
international dernands were counterposed to the
annexationist designs of the imperialists. This
counterposition by itself produced a sharpening of the class
struggle in Austria and Germany, temporarily blunted when
German imperialism took decisive action against the Soviet
Republic. The German attack, the German ultimatum and the
annexationist peace were all forms and weapons of this
onslaught.
2. At the beginning of March the proletarian and peasant
revolution was faced with the choice: accept or decline
battle. A decisive majority of worker, soldier and peasant
organisations took the latter course. Representatives of
various elements made up this majority. There were first the
weary and declasse soldier masses. Second, there were some
workers of Russia's Northern industrial region, where
separation from southern sources of raw materials such as
coal and iron had combined with general agricultural
disruption to produce starvation, an increased decline in
industry, unemployment and disruption of the normal course
of productive work. This had led to the undermining of the
proletariat's class character (the weakening of its class
consciousness and unity) or at any rate to a reduction in
its militancy as a class. Finally, there were represented
peasants of the northern and central industrial region,
exhausted by the war, the bad harvest, supply difficulties
and the disruption of urban industry. The workers and
peasants of the economically more active and better fed
regions of the south, the south-west and the Urals, however,
were in the majority of cases in favour of accepting battle,
but they did not prevail. To preserve the industrial north
which had been hitherto in the centre of the revolution,
peace was concluded at the expense of separating the
industrial north from the grain-producing and industrial
south.
3. It would be ridiculous to preach, like the left SRs, a
'non-acceptance in principle' of this peace. The conclusion
of this peace, as the victory of the backward and exhausted
sections of the workers and peasants, is an objective fact
which creates a new objective situation, a new set of
circumstances for economic activity, a new combination of
class forces. The separation of 'Great Russia' from the
Western Ukraine, the threatened isolation from the
Yekaterinoslav and Donets regions, the evacuation of
Petersburg – these are objective facts of economic life. The
concessions of an economic character which the foreign
imperialists will demand on the basis of the peace treaty
concluded at Brest Litovsk may also have a strong effect on
the economic circumstances. Finally, the consolidation among
the masses of a passive 'peace psychology' is an objective
fact of the political situation.
But though taking account of the situation produced by the
Brest peace, the proletarian communists cannot base
themselves solely on those facts, cannot adopt the level of
consciousness of a backward, passive, inactive portion of
one of the sections of the Russian proletariat or peasantry.
They determine their tasks on the basis of the interests of
the workers of Russia as a whole, linking up these tasks
with the growing international revolutionary movement. The
basic direction of their political line is not the
preservation at all costs of the conquests made by the
workers and peasants on the present disjointed territory of
the Soviet republic, for this situation in practice means
sacrificing these conquests on the backward territory of
Russia and the petty-bourgeois transformation of the present
Soviet state. Their line is the development and
strengthening of the whole of Russia as a fighting unit of
the international workers' revolution against international
imperialism.
4. The conclusion by the Soviet republic of an annexationist
peace with Germany has without doubt temporarily weakened
the forces of international revolution and strengthened
international imperialism. But the basic forces of
international revolution still grow and will beat themselves
a path through the obstacles facing them, making use of some
results of the conclusion of peace as factors for
strengthening the revolutionary movement.
The conclusion of peace has for the present weakened the
imperialists' drive towards an international, re-division of
territory. From their point of view, Russia has been thrown
back as a centre for world revolution. Fear of its influence
no longer so strongly pushes the warring imperialists into
each other's arms. It (Russia) is also defeated as a
military unit. Hence the possibility has opened up for the
German imperialists to throw all their forces towards the
West and to fight for complete victory over the imperialists
of the Entente powers. The latter in turn must, in view of
the impending partition of Russia and the danger of defeat
which threatens them, exert all their efforts to resist and
to guarantee themselves counter-annexations in the Far East
and inTurkey. To strengthen these conquests, they must
strive to prevail in a decisive theatre of the war.
Accordingly, the conclusion of peace has already led to a
sharpening of the rivalry between the imperialist powers.
5. The conclusion of an annexationist peace at the present
moment has undoubtedly sharply restrained the development of
the psychological pre-conditions for international
revolution which were ripening towards the spring of 1918.
But it has not been able to hold back, and has partly
promoted, the development of the material contradictions
which constitute the principal basis of a revolutionary
outbreak. The revolution's delay in coming out into the open
will no doubt cause it to take on stronger and more violent
forms.
The increase in the struggle between alliances of
imperialists is draining to the dregs the disrupted economic
resources of the warring powers; it is leading both to a new
destruction of 'human material' and to precipitous general
economic decline. The sharpening of the material
contradictions on the basis of the food and agricultural
crisis in the Central Powers (especially in Austria) cannot
be greatly restrained by the seizure of the Ukraine, since
during the most critical phase – spring 1918 – German
capital will be unable to extract from there the necessary
resources of food and goods. The Ukraine is being seized at
the moment when the grain requisitions are being finished
(these were in any case unsuccessful), at the height of the
Civil War, and at the lime when the factories and mines are
deprived of the necessary labour force, coke, timber, fuel,
etc., and the railways of coal and rolling stock. At the
same time, the German annexationist policy on the eastern
front is giving rise to a number of national conflicts both
in the German 'immediate rear' (Poland, the Ukraine, Latvia,
Estonia), in the heart of the Austrian national bloc
(Galicia, Bohemia), and also within the alliance of the
Central Powers itself.
On the other hand, it must be noted that the conclusion of
peace has a negative effect on the spiritual and
psychological development of the international revolution.
The influence of the Russian revolution on the international
workers' movement is weakened by its capitulation to
international imperialism (the ending of revolutionary
propaganda at the front, the rejection of the policy of
unmasking international imperialism, the possibly 'moderate'
course of internal policy in Russia). Nor can the Soviet
state's attempts at diplomatic maneuvering inspire the
international proletariat, since they demonstrate not the
strength but the weakness of the revolution. The very fact
of concluding an annexationist peace strengthens the
defencist tendencies in the backward sections of the
international proletariat. In Germany the imperialists are
able to point to this peace, and promise the workers peace
and bread as a result of imperialist victories. They
intimidate them with the example of the Russian defeat and
'collapse'. In France and Britain they urge on their workers
against the German proletariat which has 'betrayed' the
Russian revolution. In America defencist agitation is
developing and it flagrantly makes use of the slogan of
defence of the Russian revolution from the German seizure.
But at the same time, the spreading of the world-wide
carnage is destroying the hopes for peace which seized the
working masses in autumn 1917. The extremely clear exposure
of the annexationist policy of the ruling classes and their
social agents at the time the peace was concluded discloses
the underlying tendencies of defencism and civil peace. It
is preparing the collapse of the last inhibitions that
restrain the working masses from action.
The most critical moment in the development of the
contradictions brought about by the whole imperialist system
and the imperialist war is at hand. During this spring and
summer the collapse of the imperialist system must begin, a
victory for German imperialism in the current phase of the
war can only postpone that collapse and increase its
intensity when it occurs.
6. The calculations of the German imperialists in concluding
peace with the Soviet republic amount to the following.
Firstly, it seemed advantageous to postpone the annexation
of northern Russia, the direct overthrow of Soviet power and
the immediate takeover of the economy of northern Russia:
this was largely due to the difficulty of organising the
economy and supplies in the north and to the absence of
powerful bourgeois agents who could support the occupying
power (e.g. the Ukrainian Central Rada). Secondly, it was
important to subjugate and exploit for the needs of the
German capitalist economy the grain-producing and industrial
south. Thirdly, by cutting off the north from the South and
thereby creating a natural economic decline in the north, by
exploiting control over the sources of raw materials and
grain which feed the north, and by exerting military
pressure at the captured strategic points in the north and
in the new partial annexations, German imperialism was in
fact calculating on subjecting the north to the tentacles of
German finance capital, destroying the social conquests of
the workers' revolution and thus internally, from the
centre, undermining Soviet power. The degree of severity,
the concealed or open character of the attack by German
imperialism on the Soviet republic will depend on various
circumstances: on the position in the theater of war, on the
internal situation within the Central Powers, on the
decisiveness of the resistance put up both by the Soviet
state and by the revolutionary classes in both the south and
the occupied north-west of Russia.
7. In addition to the attack from German imperialism, the
Soviet republic is threatened with attack from the Entente
coalition. The plans of German imperialism in the immediate
future will be directed at subjecting the economy of
northern Russia to the internal influence of German finance
capital by extortions from the Soviet republic, by attempts
to emasculate its revolutionary content, but not by its
direct overthrow. The plans of Anglo-French and Japanese
imperialism will be directed at semi-occupation,
semi-restoration of a bourgeois-conciliationist order in
separate areas of the Far East, at the subjection of these
areas to the control of Entente capital through their
Russian petty bourgeois agents (the defencists and Kadets).
The latest note from the 'Allies' on the question of the
cancelled debts shows, by the way, that Anglo-French capital
too is inclined to try to subject the Soviet republic (like
Germany) to its internal control. Finally, American
capital's efforts amount to subjecting the Soviet republic
to the influence of American capital through the Soviet
power, and not like Germany by playing for its exhaustion.
American capital is reckoning in this case on ensuring for
itself a healthy peasant market cleansed from serfdom, at
the setting up in Russia of heavy industry united in trusts
and at counterposing the industrial and farming bourgeois
democracy it envisages in Russia to the rivals of the United
States – Germany and Japan. Overall, the situation of the
Soviet republic is now such that, being under threat of
direct attack from imperialism on all sides, it cannot as
yet carry on a policy of general open attack, but can and
must be prepared for it at any moment, carrying out for the
time being a policy of systematic resistance and active
opposition to the importunities of the imperialists of all
countries and shades.
8. The economic situation and the class groupings in Russia
after the conclusion of peace have changed. The situation
created will give a basis for two opposite tendencies (the
weakening and the growth of revolutionary forces), the first
of which is directly strengthened by the conclusion of the
peace and may prevail for the immediate future.
The partial liquidation of the Petersburg region completes
its rapid decline, which was apparent as early as spring
1917 and was a consequence of the economic 'artificiality'
of Petersburg industry in a period of war and interrupted
sea communications. The peace was intended to save the 'red'
capital, but it saved only the territory of Petersburg, and
killed it as a revolutionary force. The disruption of
production, unemployment, the declassing of the proletariat
and the reduction of its class militancy increased.
Petersburg lost its significance as the main economic and
revolutionary centre.
The conclusion of the annexationist
peace undermines, though to a lesser extent, the other
progressive industrial region – the Moscow area, where the
working class will likewise be weakened by the interruption
in supplies of metal, coal, grain and the consequent
unemployment and declassing.
The conclusion of an annexationist peace also has a negative
effect on the economic situation and the political activity
(militancy) of the tired and hungry poor peasantry of the
northern and central industrial provinces. The disruption of
urban industry, the cessation of supplies of grain from the
south, and the ending of migration for work to southern
Russia will create impoverishment and declassing. On the
other hand, the
proletarianisation of the peasantry will partly arouse
revolutionary impulses and hatred of the German occupiers.
The poor and 'labourer' peasantry of the agricultural
provinces, occupied with the division of the land and not
having had opportunities in the period of decay of the
bourgeois structure, and decline in the productive forces of
all countries, to organise a strong private agricultural
economy will continue to support Soviet power.
The Urals mining and factory region, linked with the
Priural'e, Western Siberia and their industrial centres,
forms a comparatively sound economic region, strongly
permeated, it is true, by petty bourgeois strata and also
subject to the effects of the general economic disruption.
Among the workers and poor peasants of these parts the
workers' and peasants' revolution and Soviet power will also
find support.
The proletariat of the south, which has borne the whole
brunt of the defeat of the bourgeois uprising in the south
and which is now showing most decisive resistance to German
occupation, must, despite destruction and exhaustion, thanks
precisely to their class education in the fire of the civil
war, preserve considerable class combativeness. Together
with the Ukrainian poor peasantry, which is threatened with
the return of the landlords and with German and Haidamak
banditry, it constitutes a constant support for an uprising
against the imperialist occupiers and their Ukrainian
bourgeois henchmen.
The poor peasantry of the non-black-earth north-west of
Russia, as a result of the still more destructive effect of
the German requisitions on its economy, will also provide,
and is already doing so, forces for struggle with the
occupiers and the landowners who are being re-installed.A
positive factor is the complete demobilisation of the old
army, which has returned millions of people to productive
work, which serves to strengthen the economy in the
countryside, further the revolutionary process in the
countryside and put an end to the putrefying environment of
inactive military units. We are only now beginning to feel
the favourable effect of the de facto termination of the
imperialist war (since October 1917) and of the
demobilisation of industry which commenced simultaneously.
9. In these circumstances, despite the temporary weakening
of the forces of revolution and despite the grave
international situation of the Soviet republic, within the
boundaries of the present Soviet state there
is no serious support for an uprising either by the
monarchists or the conciliationist parties.
The landowner economy and the political power of the
landowning class have been broken; the bourgeoisie has been
defeated, there is no strong peasantry (a new stratum of
agrarian petty-bourgeoisie has not yet had time to form, and
the old stratum is leaving the structure under pressure from
the village poor). The support for the monarchy has been
eliminated from the structure. On the other hand, the urban
petty bourgeoisie and the bourgeois intelligentsia have also
been rendered powerless. There is no basis for a revival of
the power of the conciliationist parties, the Mensheviks and
SRs, which in any case could be only a transitional stage
prior to the restoration of the dictatorship of the
proletariat and poor peasantry, and not to the restoration
of bourgeois order. Nor is there any basis for the permanent
restoration of the capitalist and landowner economy in the
regions occupied by the Germans.
On the contrary, there is a basis for the strengthening and
growth of the dictatorship of the proletariat and poor
peasants and for the socialist transformation of society
begun by them. In addition to the factors mentioned earlier,
which strengthen this positive tendency in the development
of the revolution, the following circumstances are still
crucial. Above all, the initial process of smashing the
bourgeois conciliationist state order, the old relations of
production and the material class power of the bourgeoisie
and its allies is almost completed. Further, the class
education of the proletariat in the course of the civil war
gives it a great measure of class cohesion, energy and
consciousness. Likewise, the real conquests made have
strengthened the proletariat's revolutionary forces and
energy in resisting the enemy's threat to these conquests.
The energetic organisation of production on socialist
principles, on the one hand, must strengthen the economic
base of the proletariat as a revolutionary force, and, on
the other hand, be for it a new school of organisation and
activity. Finally, the preservation of the link with the
international and all-Russian proletarian movement also
increases the class activity of the proletariat and
preserves it from demoralisation and exhaustion. But as a
result of the immediate, direct consequences of the peace,
the reduction in class activity and the increased declassing
of the proletariat in the main revolutionary centres, as a
result of the increased class rapprochement between the
proletariat and the poor peasants (who after the signing of
peace under pressure of their demands and influence must
become a bulwark of Soviet power), there arises the strong
possibility of a tendency towards deviation on the part of
the majority of the communist party and the Soviet power led
by it into the channel of petty bourgeois politics of a new
type.
In the event that such a tendency should materialise, the
working class will cease to be the leader and guide of the
socialist revolution inspiring the poor peasantry to destroy
the rule of finance capital and the landowners. It will
become a force which is dissipated in the ranks of the
semi-proletarian petty bourgeois masses, which see as their
task not proletarian struggle in alliance with the Western
European proletariat for the overthrow of the imperialist
system, but the defence of the petty proprietor fatherland
from the pressure of imperialism. This aim is also
attainable through compromise with the latter. In the event
of a rejection of active proletarian politics, the conquests
of the workers' and peasants' revolution will start to
coagulate into a system of state capitalism and petty
bourgeois economic relations. 'The defence of the socialist
fatherland' will then prove in actual fact to be defence of
a petty bourgeois motherland subject to the influence of
international capital.
10. The party of the proletariat is faced with a choice
between two paths. One is the path of preserving and
strengthening the part of the Soviet state which has been
left whole, which is at present from the economic viewpoint
considering the partial nature of the revolutionary process
only a transitional organisation to socialism (in view of
incomplete nationalisation of the banks, a capitalist form
of financing enterprises, the rule in the countryside of
small scale economy and petty property, and the efforts of
the peasants to solve the land question by dividing up the
land). But from the political viewpoint this path may, under
cover of the dictatorship of the proletariat supported by
the poor peasants, transform itself into an instrument of
the political rule of the semi-proletarian petty-bourgeois
masses and prove to be only a transitional stage to the
complete rule of finance capital.
This path – in words – may be justified by the effort to
save at all costs the revolutionary forces of Soviet power, even
if only in 'Great Russia', for international revolution. In
this case all efforts will be directed towards strengthening
the development of productive forces towards 'organic
construction', while rejecting the continued smashing of
capitalist relations of production and even furthering their
partial restoration.
11. The possible economic and political programme which
suggests itself in the event of the consistent following of
this course, some parts of which may be put forward by the
right wing of the party, and partly also by the party
majority, is as follows.
In foreign policy the aggressive
tactics of unmasking imperialism will be replaced by
diplomatic manoeuvring on the part of the Russian state
among the imperialist powers. The Soviet republic will not
only conclude trade agreements with them, but may also forge
organic links both economic and political, making use of
their military and political support (agreements on aid by
military instructors, possibly the contracting of debts with
admission of internal control in the country, agreements on
making joint political initiatives, etc.).
An economic policy to correspond with such a course must be
developed in the direction of agreements with the capitalist
wheeler-dealers, both 'native' and the international ones
which stand behind their backs, and with the representatives
of the 'big' strata in the countryside ('co-operators').
Denationalisation of the banks, even in a concealed form, is
logically connected with such agreements. It may be carried
out through the formation of special (semi-private,
semi-state) banks for individual branches of industry (the
statutes of the flour-milling bank have already been
approved), through preservation of extraterritoriality of
the so-called 'co-operative' banks, and through a transition
to a system of central public accounting and the
strengthening of capitalist credit in state and semi-state
form.
In place of a transition from partial nationalisations to
general socialisation of big industry, agreements with
'captains of industry' must lead to the formation of large
trusts led by them and embracing the basic branches of
industry, which may with external help take the form of
state enterprises. Such a system of organisation of
production gives a social base for evolution in the
direction of state capitalism and is a transitional stage in
it.
A policy of directing enterprises on the principle of wide
participation of capitalists and semi-bureaucratic
centralisation naturally goes with a labour policy directed
at the establishment among the workers of discipline
disguised as 'self-discipline', the introduction of labour
responsibility for the workers (a project of this nature has
been put forward by the right Bolsheviks), piece-work,
lengthening of the working day, etc.
The form of state control of enterprises must develop in the
direction of bureaucratic centralisation, of rule by various
commissars, of deprivation of independence from local
Soviets and of rejection in practice of the type of 'Commune
state' ruled from below. Numerous facts show that a definite
tendency in this direction is already taking shape (decree
on the control of the railways, Latsis's articles, etc.).
In the field of military policy there must appear, and can
in fact be noted already, a deviation towards the
re-establishment of nationwide (including the bourgeoisie)
military service (Trotsky's and Podvoisky's appeal). With
the setting up of army cadres for whose training and
leadership officers are necessary, the task of creating a
proletarian officer corps through broad and planned
organisation of appropriate schools and courses is being
lost from sight. In this way in practice the old officer
corps and command structure of the tsarist generals is being
reconstituted.
Under cover of agitation 'for the defence of the socialist
fatherland', these conditions mean the introduction of propaganda
for a petty bourgeois motherland and for national war
against German imperialists.
12. The path described above, taken as a whole, and equally
the tendencies to deviation along this path, are dangerous
in the extreme for the cause of the Russian and
international proletariat. This path strengthens the
separation,
begun by the Brest peace, of the 'great Russian' Soviet
republic from the all-Russian and international
revolutionary movement, linking it to the framework of a
nation state with a transitional economic and a petty
bourgeois political order.
In foreign policy – with the inevitable weakness both of
Soviet diplomacy and of Soviet influence in the arena of
international imperialist struggle – it subjects the Soviet
republic to imperialist links, separating it from links with
the revolutionary proletariat of all countries. It weakens
still more the international revolutionary significance of
Soviet power and the Russian revolution.
Inside the country it will strengthen the economic and
political influence of the Russian and international
bourgeoisie, and consequently also the forces of
counter-revolution and intelligentsia groups sabotaging
Soviet power. With the world decline of productive forces
concessions to the bourgeoisie cannot create a rapid growth
in the national economy in a capitalist mode. At the same
time they will remove the possibility of attaining the most
economic and planned use of the remaining means of
production, conceivable only with the most decisive
socialisation.
The introduction of labour discipline in connection with the
restoration of capitalist leadership in production cannot
essentially increase the productivity of labour, but it will
lower the class autonomy, activity and degree of
organisation of the proletariat. It threatens the
enslavement of the working class, and arouses the
dissatisfaction both of the backward sections and of the
vanguard of the proletariat. To carry this system through
with the sharp class hatred prevailing in the working class
against the 'capitalists and saboteurs', the communist party
would have to draw its support from the petty bourgeoisie
against the workers and thereby put an end to itself as the
party of the proletariat.
Bureaucratic centralisation of the Soviet republic and
backroom deals with bourgeois and petty bourgeois
wheeler-dealers can also only promote the decline in the
class activity and consciousness of the proletariat and the
estrangement of the workers from the party.
Attempts at restoring general military conscription, insofar
as they are not doomed to failure, would in essence lead to
the arming and organisation of petty bourgeois and bourgeois
counter-revolutionary forces, This is still clearer with
regard to the restoration of the old officer corps and the
returning of tsarist generals to command power, insofar as
their use is not accompanied by the most energetic efforts
at creating proletarian cadres of a revolutionary officer
corps and the establishment of vigilant control over the
tsarist command corps in the transitional period.
'Nationwide' (and not class) armed forces headed by the old
generals cannot be penetrated by a revolutionary class
spirit, and will inevitably degenerate into a declassed
soldiery and cannot constitute a support for armed
intervention of the Russian proletariat in the international
revolution.
The political line set forth above may strengthen in Russia
the influence of external and internal counter-revolutionary
forces, destroy the revolutionary capacity of the working
class and, by cutting the Russian revolution off from the
international one, have pernicious effects on the interests
of both.
13. Proletarian communists consider a different
political course essential. Not a course of conserving a
Soviet oasis in the north of Russia by means of concessions
which transform it into a petty bourgeois state. Not
a transition to `organic internal work' under the conviction
that the 'acute period' of the civil war is over.
The acute period of the civil war is over only in the sense
that the necessity is at present absent for the overwhelming
application of the sharpest physical methods of
revolutionary violence. Once the bourgeoisie is smashed and
no longer capable of open fighting, 'military' methods are
largely inappropriate. But the sharpness of the class
contradiction between the proletariat and the bourgeoisie
cannot diminish; as before, the proletariat's attitude
towards the bourgeoisie is total negation, its annihilation
as a class. The termination of the crucial period of the
civil war cannot mean the possibility of a deal with the
remaining forces of the bourgeoisie, and the 'organic
construction' of socialism, which is without doubt the
pressing task of the moment, can be accomplished only by the
efforts of the whole proletariat with the participation of
qualified technical experts and administrators, but not by
any kind of collaboration with the 'qualified elements' as
such.
The Russian workers' revolution cannot 'save itself' by
leaving the path of international revolution, constantly
avoiding battle and retreating before the onslaught of
international capital, by making concessions to 'native
capital'.
From this point of view three
things are necessary: decisive class internationalist
policy, combining international revolutionary propaganda by
word and deed, and strengthening of the organic links
with international socialism (and not with the international
bourgeoisie); decisive resistance to all interference by
imperialists in the internal affairs of the Soviet
republic; refusal
of political and military agreements which make the Soviet
republic a tool of imperialist camps.
In international economic policy only trade agreements,
loans and the supply of technical forces are permissible –
without the subjection of Russian capital to the leadership
and control of foreign finance capital.
It is necessary to complete the nationalisation of the
banks, both in the extensive sense (socialisation of the
remaining immune 'co-operative' banks) and in the intensive
sense (organisation of central social accounting and
destruction of the capitalist form of financing).
Nationalisation of the banks must be combined with
socialisation of industrial production and complete removal
of capitalist and feudal survivals in the relations of
production which hinder its planned, broad organisation.
Control of enterprises must be handed over to mixed bodies
of workers and technical personnel, under the control and
leadership of local economic councils. All economic life
must be subjected to the organised influence of these
councils, elected by the workers without the participation
of the 'qualified elements', but with the participation of
the unions of technical and service personnel in the
enterprises.
(The following points are necessary:)
Not capitulation to the bourgeoisie and its petty-bourgeois
intellectual stooges, but defeat of the bourgeoisie and the
final smashing of sabotage.
The final liquidation of the counter-revolutionary press and
the counter-revolutionary bourgeois organisations.
The introduction of labour conscription for qualified
specialists and intellectuals, the organisation of consumer
communes, the limitation of consumption by the prosperous
classes and the confiscation of their surplus property.
The organisation in the countryside of an attack by the poor
peasants on the rich, the development of large scale
socialised agriculture and support for forms of working the
land by the poor peasants which are transitional to
socialised agriculture.
The selection of certain strongpoints, certain healthy
centres of organisation of production in certain places
(e.g. the Urals, Western Siberia, etc.) and the direction to
them of technical, food and financial resources on a large
scale (for a rapid rise in productivity) – and not according
to hunger rations as has been done hitherto.
Not the introduction of piece-work and the lengthening of
the working day, which in circumstances of rising
unemployment are senseless, but the introduction by local
economic councils and trade unions of standards of
manufacture and shortening of the working day with increase
in the number of shifts and broad organisation of productive
social labour.
The granting of broad independence to local Soviets and not
the checking of their activities by commissars sent by the
central power. Soviet power and the party of the proletariat
must seek support in the class autonomy of the broad masses,
to the development of which all efforts must be directed.
In the matter of the organisation of the armed forces the
following things are necessary: the creation of a cadre of
instructors and commanders of rapidly mobilizable units from
among the workers of the evacuated regions, who remain
without productive occupation; the use of tsarist officers
to train these instructors, the
creation of a proletarian and revolutionary, and not
intellectual and bourgeois reserve officer corps; the
training in military matters of workers and poor peasants
only, the organisation of real control over the tsarist
generals and the preparation
of a higher command staff from among the party comrades who
already have military experience, but are as yet without
theoretical training.
14. In their practical attitude to the civil war the
proletarian communists are against the actual breaking of
the peace by organising partisan allies on those parts of
the front where peace is being observed. This would mean a
disorganised action by a minority of workers in the absence
of mass support. But they are for all forms of preparation
for and support of uprisings in the rear in the occupied
territories, for the most energetic struggle in the places
where military action is continuing, for the formation by
party organisations of partisan units to be sent to the
fighting lines.
15. The proletarian communists define their attitude to the
Bolshevik party as the position of the left-wing of the
party and vanguard of the Russian proletariat, maintaining
full unity with the party insofar
as the policy of the majority does not cause an unbridgeable
split in the ranks of the proletariat itself. They
define their attitude to the Soviet power as a position of
universal support for that power in the event of necessity –
by means of participation in it, insofar as the ratification
of the peace has removed from the agenda the question of
responsibility for that decision and has created a new
objective position. This participation is possible only on
the basis of a definite political programme, which would
prevent the deviation of the Soviet power and the party
majority onto the fateful path of petty bourgeois politics.
In the event of such a deviation the
left-wing of the party will have to take the position of an
active and responsible proletarian opposition.
Kommunist, No. 1, 20 April, 1918. Translated from Lenin,
Suchineniya, (3rd edition), vol XXII, pp. 561-571.
Source libcom