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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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1 posted on 03/05/2006 6:39:19 PM PST by voletti
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To: voletti
The system was dead already"

No, it's alive and well. It has merely transported itself from the USSR to universities across Europe and America, a entire new culture to breed on and corrode.....

2 posted on 03/05/2006 6:45:38 PM PST by ScreamingFist (Annihilation - The result of underestimating your enemies. NRA)
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To: ScreamingFist

"No, it's alive and well. It has merely transported itself from the USSR to universities across Europe and America, a entire new culture to breed on and corrode....."

You got that right - and look at the crap they are going to ordain at the Oscars tonite.


3 posted on 03/05/2006 6:50:37 PM PST by spanalot
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To: voletti
"secret speech"

That's a borderline oxymoron.

I guess the audio crew for the speech turns the volume on the amplifier down to "secret" level where only the first three rows can hear it.

4 posted on 03/05/2006 6:51:33 PM PST by capt. norm (Error: Keyboard not attached. Press F1 to continue)
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To: voletti
There are so many theories on when Communism really died as an ideal in the Soviet Union. One theory was that when Stalin needed to defeat the Nazis he reached back to patriotic reasons. Instead of fighting for Communism and the Party, the they were fighting for the Rodina.

In a sense Communism under Stalin became a methodology of enforcing his will on the population. Central Planning and Communist philosophy made it easier to control the people. Khrushchev and later Gorbachev tried to reform Communism, and failed because the system failed. The economic system was designed to extinguish individualism and initiative. To the extent it was successful, the economy collapsed. While Gorbachev loosed the bonds with the Soviet satellite states, the desire for freedom overcame the fear of repression. Of course by then any idealism that remained was history.

Unfortunately, there are still too many people around the world that believe in state control of the economy and the government redistributing massive amounts of wealth. Most of those people in our country reside in our Universities, as stated by Solzhenitsyn some years ago.
5 posted on 03/05/2006 6:52:33 PM PST by GeorgefromGeorgia
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To: ScreamingFist

To this day the Marxists professors deny that Stalinism was (a) as evil as Hiterism and (2) that socialism is anything more than state capitalism.


6 posted on 03/05/2006 6:53:34 PM PST by RobbyS ( CHIRHO)
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To: RobbyS

***To this day the Marxists professors deny that Stalinism was (a) as evil as Hiterism and (2) that socialism is anything more than state capitalism.***

"State Capitalism".....that one always made me laugh.

Capitalism always seeks to maximize efficiency.
Government always seeks to minimize efficiency.

How can the two be deeply intertwined like Communism promotes? =P


7 posted on 03/05/2006 7:00:03 PM PST by Zeppelin (Texas Longhorns === National Champions !!!)
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To: GeorgefromGeorgia
True. Ultimately communism carried the seeds of its destruction within its own DNA. My hope is islam too carried within itself the seeds of its own destruction. Like the sci-fi whackos would say "Initiating irreversible self destruct sequence...10...9..."
8 posted on 03/05/2006 7:14:00 PM PST by voletti (Awareness and Equanimity.)
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To: Zeppelin

State-capitalism aimply means that the state allocates capital--with all the recent efficiency of General Motors.


9 posted on 03/05/2006 7:16:45 PM PST by RobbyS ( CHIRHO)
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To: voletti
The use of suicide bombers is a sign of failure. The Japanese used Kamikazes to bleed our forces and force us into a negotiated settlement. The Islamic radicals are hoping to do the same. If we truly have the will to persevere, their demise is certain. The Islamic world will get tired of the failed policy. The real war is with our Media and the hearts and minds of the American People.
10 posted on 03/05/2006 7:20:18 PM PST by GeorgefromGeorgia
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To: Bookmaestro

commies killed 100+ million.


11 posted on 03/05/2006 7:21:28 PM PST by fooman (Get real with Kim Jung Mentally Ill about proliferation)
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To: spanalot
It was the communist infiltration of Hollywood during Ronald Reagan's tenure as head of the Screen Actors Guild that awakened him to the red menace goal of propagandizing from our entertainment venues.

I'm sure Reagan would be stunned to see how successful the anti-American, pro socialist elites in Hollywood and New York have become today.

These traitorous useful idiots will be on parade in full regalia tonight.
12 posted on 03/05/2006 7:23:29 PM PST by Tail Gunner John
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To: voletti
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.

I blame Ronald Reagan.

13 posted on 03/05/2006 7:33:54 PM PST by Moonman62 (Federal creed: If it moves tax it. If it keeps moving regulate it. If it stops moving subsidize it)
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To: voletti
Groan. So now we have Krushchevist-revisionism?
14 posted on 03/05/2006 7:34:48 PM PST by fat city ("Journalists are sloppy, lazy and on expense account")
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To: Tail Gunner John
It has always amazed me how communism has appealed to so many well-educated people. If you read about communists and communist sympathizers in the government during the 1930s and 1940s, many were Ivy League graduates.
15 posted on 03/05/2006 7:39:33 PM PST by BW2221
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To: Tail Gunner John
I don't think it would surprise him at all. One of the reasons Reagan became head of the Screen Actors Guild was because of the heavy influence of communists in Hollywood.

Remember, one of the major reasons Hollywood support the WWII effort was because the Soviet Union was our ally.
16 posted on 03/05/2006 7:42:49 PM PST by BW2221
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To: voletti


Communism ended?


17 posted on 03/05/2006 7:49:31 PM PST by Paperdoll (On the cutting edge)
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To: BW2221


Apparently Communism has a certain intellectual appeal. Unfortunately, sometimes the higher the intellect, the lower the common sense. Believe me.


18 posted on 03/05/2006 7:52:17 PM PST by Paperdoll (On the cutting edge)
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To: BW2221
When you read "Witness" by Whittaker Chambers it is amazing to find that these are the same people with the same education, with the same pedigree, using the same play book now as then.
19 posted on 03/05/2006 7:52:20 PM PST by Tail Gunner John
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To: voletti

Sounds like lots of interesting intrigue - maybe enough to make, say a movie. Hmm, wonder if Hollyweird would be interested?


20 posted on 03/05/2006 7:56:23 PM PST by tang-soo (Prophecy of the Seventy Weeks - Read Daniel Chapter 9)
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