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Khrushchev’s secret speech and end of communism
Daily Times ^ | 3/5/06 | Roy A Medvedev

Posted on 03/05/2006 6:39:16 PM PST by voletti

n history, some events at first appear insignificant, or their significance is hidden, but they turn out to be earthshaking. Such a moment occurred 50 years ago, with Nikita Khrushchev’s so-called “secret speech” to the 20th Congress of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union. It ranks, I believe, just below the Bolshevik Revolution of 1917 and the start of Hitler’s War in 1939 as the most critical moment of the 20th century.

At that moment, the communist movement appeared to be riding the tide of history, and not only for those in the Soviet Union. In the mid-1950s, communism was on the offensive in Europe, as well as in the emerging Third World. Capitalism seemed to be dying. All of communism’s imperfections were deemed temporary, just bumps on the way to the just society that was then being born. A third of humanity saw the Soviet Union as leading the world toward global socialism.

The 20th Congress put an end to that. It was a moment of truth, a cleansing from within of the brutality of Stalinism. Khrushchev’s speech to the Congress inspired doubt and second thoughts throughout the worldwide Communist movement.

Khrushchev’s motives as he took the podium on the morning of February 25, 1956, were, in his mind, moral ones. After his ouster from power, in the seclusion of his dacha, he wrote: “My hands are covered with blood. I did everything that others did. But even today if I have to go to that podium to report on Stalin, I would do it again. One day all that had to be over.”

Khrushchev had, of course, been an intimate part of Stalin’s repressions, but he, too, didn’t know half of what was going on. The whole Stalinist system of government was built on absolute secrecy, in which only the general secretary himself knew the whole story. It wasn’t terror that was the basis of Stalin’s power, but his complete monopoly on information. Khrushchev, for example, was stunned when he discovered that some 70 percent of Party members were annihilated in the 1930s and 1940s.

Initially, Khrushchev didn’t plan to keep his denunciation of Stalin a secret. Five days after the Congress, his speech was sent to all the leaders of the socialist countries and read at local party meetings across the Soviet Union. But people didn’t know how to discuss it. And with good reason, for the problem with the de-Stalinisation process was that, although the truth was partly revealed, no answer regarding what to do next was offered.

After the Congress, it became clear that the communist gospel was false and murderously corrupt. But no other ideology was offered, and the crisis — the slow rot of the system that became clear during the era of stagnation under Leonid Brezhnev — that began with Khrushchev’s speech lasted another 30 years, until Mikhail Gorbachev took up his mantle of change.

The doubts inspired at the Congress may have been inchoate, but they nonetheless sowed genuine unrest. In the first protests that rocked the communist world in 1956, huge crowds in Georgia demanded that Khrushchev be fired and Stalin’s memory reinstated. An uprising in Poland and the far more tumultuous Hungarian Revolution argued for the opposite. The Poles demanded communism with a human face, and the Hungarians, after Imre Nagy sought to reform communism, ended up wanting no communism at all.

All of these protests were brutally crushed, which resulted in many West European Communists leaving the Party in utter disillusion. Khrushchev’s speech also ignited the feud between Mao’s China and the USSR, for it allowed Mao to claim the crown of world revolutionary leadership.

Worried by the protests, Khrushchev tried to cool off the anti-Stalin campaign. The release of the Gulag prisoners that followed his speech continued, but it was done in silence. Party membership was restored to purge survivors, and they received new jobs, but they were forbidden from discussing the horrors that they had endured.

That silence lasted until 1961, when Khrushchev permitted new revelations of Stalin-era crimes. These were publicly reported and discussed on TV and radio. Stalin’s body was removed from Red Square, Stalin monuments were destroyed, and cities restored their original Soviet names. Stalingrad became Volgograd.

The idea of the Gulag entered our literature with Alexander Solzhenitsyn’s One Day in the Life of Ivan Denisovich. This second anti-Stalinist campaign lasted two years, which was not nearly enough to change the country’s mentality.

The 20th Congress shattered the world Communist movement, and it turned out to be impossible to cement the cracks. The Soviet Union and other socialist countries faced a crisis of faith, as the main threat to communism was not imperialism, or ideological dissidents, but the movement’s own intellectual poverty and disillusion.

So, although it is common today in Russia to blame Gorbachev and Boris Yeltsin for the collapse of the USSR, it is both useless and unfair to do so. The system was dead already, and it is to Yeltsin’s great credit that he was able to bring Russia out of the ruins in one piece. Although Russia’s future is uncertain, its history is becoming clearer, in part because we now know that the 20th Party Congress started the process that brought about the end of Soviet despotism. —DT-PS


TOPICS: Miscellaneous; Russia
KEYWORDS: coldwar; khrushchev; ussr
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To: spanalot
Many Liberals that I talk to still try to support Marx's criticism of capitalism, while admitting that his economic model was flawed. These are the same people that have never read Adam Smith and think that the free market is evil because it allows the rich to take advantage of the labor of the poor (the stupid labor theory of value).
41 posted on 03/06/2006 7:02:02 PM PST by GeorgefromGeorgia
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To: rzeznikj at stout

Are you differentiating between political Socialism and cultural/ethical socialism?


42 posted on 03/06/2006 7:05:03 PM PST by GeorgefromGeorgia
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To: rzeznikj at stout
Are you differentiating between political Socialism and cultural/ethical socialism?
43 posted on 03/06/2006 7:05:30 PM PST by GeorgefromGeorgia
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44 posted on 03/06/2006 7:06:03 PM PST by GretchenM (What does it profit a man to gain the whole world and lose his soul? Please meet my friend, Jesus.)
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To: GeorgefromGeorgia
I'd submit that Soviet Communism died with Lenin, the purges of Bolshevik revolutionaries of the October Revolution and the murder of Leon Trotsky. What followed Lenin and the revolutionary Bolshevik vanguard was simply a new version of a corrupt Czar. The "idealism" died and "Uncle Joe" led the Russians as Russians were conditioned to be led: By simple hegemony.
45 posted on 03/06/2006 7:11:03 PM PST by Thumper1960 (The enemy within: Demoncrats and DSA.ORG Sedition is a Liberal "family value".)
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To: rzeznikj at stout
Socialism is a spirit.

It puts the State on the throne as God.

Sometimes, dictators like Stalin and Hitler want to put themselves on that throne in the name of Statist socialism.

Once you make the State into your God, you turn into weird socialists like Hillary and Ted Kennedy. And these types of personalities will attempt to use socialism's apparent altruism to actually put themselves on the throne. All Freepers know that Hilllary is Mao in a silk turquoise pantsuit.

In Biblical terms, it's the sin of idolatry that these "politicians" are committing, because once they get people to think that the State and politics can solve all their problems and take care of them cradle to grave, they then -- take over.
46 posted on 03/06/2006 7:19:45 PM PST by Californiajones ("The apprehension of beauty is the cure for apathy" - Thomas Aquinas)
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To: Thumper1960
I agree that Stalin used patriotism to defend the Rodina from the Nazis rather than a Communist ideal. However, Lenin was a murdering autocrat as well as Stalin, just not of the same magnitude. Communism has created more butchers like Lenin, Stalin, Mao, Kim Ill-Sung, King Jung Ill, Castro, Causeasnu, Honecker, the list goes on, than than simple apparatchiks like Kruschev or Breshnev.(sorry for some of the spelling of the names)


When did the people know in their hearts that Communism was a fraud? I don't know for sure, but I believe even Gorbachev believe it enough to try to save it (with a human face!).

Solzhenitsyn was right when he said there were more Marxist in western universities than in the SU, but that was decades after Stalin.
47 posted on 03/06/2006 7:26:00 PM PST by GeorgefromGeorgia
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To: GeorgefromGeorgia
Yes, but only to an extent. Though Socialism is political, common socialism is econopolitical--meaning that common socialism is purely an economic and political system in that it fully relies on both the economic system and at a minimum the loose political structure of Socialism to survive.
48 posted on 03/06/2006 7:47:30 PM PST by rzeznikj at stout (This is a darkroom. Keep the door closed or you'll let all the dark out...)
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To: Californiajones
I would say no. Socialism is a political system, and "common socialism"--what we think of as socialism is an economic and political movement.

Stalin exemplified the personality cult--it wasn't so much about the state as it was about him personally. And while personality cults and State worship are all too common in Socialist systems, they are not a defining criterion--a system need not display the premise of the State taking the place of God to be defined as Socialist.

Not all Socialist systems put the state on the throne as God, for example, religious (Christian, Islamic) socialisms don't, and personality cults that develop don't put the State as a god, but the dictator. The dictator is the head of state, but he is not necessarily the complete embodiment of the State (e.g. Saddam, Stalin).

Therefore, it cannot be said that Socialism is a spirit or a God.

49 posted on 03/06/2006 7:55:38 PM PST by rzeznikj at stout (This is a darkroom. Keep the door closed or you'll let all the dark out...)
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To: GeorgefromGeorgia
I do not believe that Communism has ever been practiced, as either an economic or social apparatus, by humans.

Insects, however................

50 posted on 03/06/2006 8:23:29 PM PST by Thumper1960 (The enemy within: Demoncrats and DSA.ORG Sedition is a Liberal "family value".)
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To: rzeznikj at stout
I like how you broke it all down; would only add that "altruistic" sounding socialistic ideals are the bait, tyrannical dictatorship is the sinker. Like what's happening in Venezuela right now.
51 posted on 03/06/2006 11:20:37 PM PST by Californiajones ("The apprehension of beauty is the cure for apathy" - Thomas Aquinas)
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To: Californiajones
would only add that "altruistic" sounding socialistic ideals are the bait, tyrannical dictatorship is the sinker.

Very true. Good Point!

52 posted on 03/07/2006 1:40:29 AM PST by rzeznikj at stout (This is a darkroom. Keep the door closed or you'll let all the dark out...)
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To: Thumper1960
Pure communism envisions the withering away of the state. Just remember the Winter Olympics when they did "Imagine" --Imagine no religion, Imagine no countries, Imagine no possessions---
53 posted on 03/07/2006 4:53:24 AM PST by GeorgefromGeorgia
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To: Thumper1960

"I'd submit that Soviet Communism died with Lenin, the purges of Bolshevik revolutionaries of the October Revolution and the murder of Leon Trotsky"

Not so fast - Lenin and Trotsky were Genocidal Despots guilty of the deaths of millions. They were rascists that looked to line their own pockets.

http://www.ukrweekly.com/Archive/1988/458814.shtml


54 posted on 03/07/2006 5:48:18 PM PST by spanalot
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