The February Revolution
- Also called:
- Russian Revolution of 1917
- Date:
- October 24, 1917 - October 25, 1917
- November 6, 1917 - November 7, 1917
- Location:
- St. Petersburg
- Russian Empire
- Participants:
- Bolshevik
- Petrograd Soviet of Workers’ and Soldiers’ Deputies
- Context:
- Soviet Union
- Major Events:
- July Days
- Russian Provisional Government
On February 23 (March 8, New Style), 1917, the revolution began, but it was neither organized nor immediately recognized as such by any of the existing parties or political groups. Strikes for higher wages at some of Petrograd’s factories had been occurring sporadically for some time, and on that day no fewer than 130,000 men were picketing. To this total must be added the considerable number of female workers who were celebrating International Women’s Day. The number of strikers and their sympathizers was large, and although several bakers’ shops were demolished by the mob, neither the leaders of the Duma on the one hand nor the imperial government and the police on the other gave the matter any particular attention. The only precaution taken by the authorities was to prevent the demonstrators from reaching the centre of the city. The next day the strikers were still more numerous and probably amounted to 30 percent of all workers in Petrograd. Some sections of the crowd succeeded in reaching the city centre, and their mood soon became threatening. On that day university students joined the movement, but the primary concern of protesters remained the food shortages that had plagued the capital. Only a few cries were raised denouncing the autocracy and the war.
The third day (February 25 [March 10, New Style]) would prove the turning point. The strike became general, and the strikers assumed an aggressive demeanour, raiding police stations in the factory districts and disarming the police. In this area of the city the police practically disappeared, and the political demonstration began to assume the character of an armed uprising. The Cossacks who had been patrolling the streets as the bulwark of the autocracy suddenly manifested neutrality and even friendliness to the strikers. Sergey Khabalov, the military governor of the capital, received a telegram from the tsar, then at the front, ordering him to suppress the strike. In another telegram Nicholas empowered Prime Minister Nikolai Golitsyn to prorogue the Duma. On February 26 (March 11, New Style), acting on the instructions he had received, Khabalov tried to disperse the demonstrators by force, employing the police as well as cadets from Imperial Guard regiments. The crowds in the centre of the city were temporarily scattered, and scores of demonstrators were shot down. This resort to force on the part of the authorities was not strong enough to crush the strikers and may well have intensified their revolutionary mood.
When the news came that several elite regiments of the Imperial Guard had revolted and joined the demonstrators, there was no longer any doubt that a revolution was underway. Khabalov tried to send a group of 1,000 handpicked troops under the command of Col. Alexander Kutepov, a well-respected officer who had just returned from the front, to arrest the mutinous soldiers. This proved to be the only serious attempt to counter the growing uprising in the capital, but it amounted to nothing. The fate of Kutepov’s force illustrated the transformed mentality of the soldiery. Whole regiments, marching with the avowed intention of obeying orders, no sooner came into contact with the demonstrators than they suddenly fraternized and shared their arms with them. The government then made no more efforts to deal directly with the situation in Petrograd but concentrated on holding out until such time as the troops from the front could arrive to crush the Petrograd garrison and the revolutionaries. Although ministers tried to entrench themselves first at the Winter Palace and then at the Admiralty, they could hold neither place. On the evening of February 27 (March 12, New Style) they went into hiding and were eventually arrested and imprisoned.
The victory of the revolution in the capital was seemingly complete, but the monarchy still survived and was in possession of sufficient forces to crush the uprising. Moreover, the revolutionaries were both intoxicated by victory and poorly organized; the dispatch of a small but disciplined body of troops could easily have reasserted the authority of the tsar. What remained an enigma, however, was the attitude toward the revolution held by the soldiers and officers at the front. Unable to read the mood of the army, Duma leaders hesitated to assert the power which the revolutionaries urged them to assume. Instead of resorting to bold measures, they made frantic efforts to induce the tsar to compromise with the revolution and to accept, at the 11th hour, their old demand for responsible government. Even after the Duma had allowed itself to be prorogued and the garrison had revolted, Mikhail Rodzianko, speaker of the Duma, attempted to salvage the old regime. He not only sent urgent telegrams to the tsar and the leading generals pointing out the necessity of saving the monarchy and the country by conceding the necessary reforms but even held consultations with the very ministers whom he had denounced as treasonable. The vision of the tsar was equally myopic. So blind was he to the facts of the situation that even at this hour he flatly rejected the appeals of the Duma and refused to believe that the strike had culminated in a revolution. When he and his advisers at last learned that the revolt of the Petrograd troops had endangered the existence of the monarchy, they immediately ordered a number of regiments from various parts of the front to proceed to the capital.
The loyalty and discipline of these troops had never been put to the test. The first detachments under Gen. Nikolai Ivanov were prevented from approaching Petrograd by railway workers. Additional regiments were never sent because, by that point, the revolution had developed such impetus and had gained such support at the front that any attempt to crush it by military force was recognized as hopeless. The army indeed could no longer be relied on, and it may plausibly be assumed that even if the troops had been dispatched, they would probably have mutinied and fraternized with the revolutionists.
The Petrograd Soviet and the Provisional Government
While the members of the Duma were marking time and hesitating to take leadership of the revolution, representatives of the workers were taking immediate steps to organize revolutionary forces under the banner of the Petrograd Soviet of Workers’ and Soldiers’ Deputies. Only late in the early morning of February 28 (March 13, New Style), after prolonged discussions and with considerable reluctance, did the members of the Duma Committee make up their minds to constitute a government. Three considerations were obviously instrumental in leading them to this decision: first, a clear consciousness of the elemental force of the revolution; second, the apprehension that the Petrograd Soviet might be tempted to assume power, and third, the hope that by constituting themselves the ruling authority they might be able to cope with the increasing anarchy and save the monarchy and even the dynasty. Georgy Yevgenyevich, Prince Lvov, would serve as prime minister in what would come to be known as the Provisional Government.
Meanwhile, the Petrograd Soviet was acting with haste and purpose. Founded late on the afternoon of February 27 (March 12, New Style), it had succeeded in opening its first plenary sitting the same evening with an attendance of approximately 250 members, consisting of Socialist deputies of the Duma, a number of prominent worker leaders representing the various shades of revolutionary opinion, and members of strike committees who had been active during the few previous days. This meeting of the Petrograd Soviet was chaotic and interrupted by delegates from revolting regiments who had come to offer greetings and proffer allegiance. Nevertheless, the soviet managed to appoint a strong executive committee, which immediately took over the business of securing food supplies and the strategic defense of Petrograd against any possible attack from the autocracy. It also came to the decision to change its constitution by including army deputies along with worker deputies. In this way the soviet made a palpable bid for real power.
From this very moment, enlisting as it did the support of workers and the Petrograd garrison, the Petrograd Soviet was the depository of real power, but its members made no overt or covert attempt to constitute a revolutionary government. When the Duma decided at last to assume the responsibility of forming the new government, the decision was unanimously welcomed by leaders of the soviet. The attitude which these aspiring politicians took up with regard to the question of government is so surprising as to constitute one of the most intriguing problems of the Russian Revolution. Why the Petrograd Soviet refused immediately to proclaim itself the Government of Revolutionary Russia can only be a matter of speculation. Speaking at the first All-Russian Conference of Soviets in late March (early April, New Style) 1917, Yuri Steklov, a prominent member of its executive committee, ascribed the refusal to the uncertainty about the attitude of the army which prevailed at that time: “We were still doubtful,” he said, “whether the revolutionary outbreak would succeed in establishing even a bourgeois regime. We were in the dark not only as to the feelings of the troops at the front but even as to that of the regiments stationed at Tsarskoye Selo…”
This explanation addresses some, but certainly not all, of the soviet’s reticence. An orderly government, representing a compromise between the insurgent masses and the bourgeois classes, promised to be the strongest bulwark against counterrevolution. The desire for the establishment of such a government must undoubtedly have constituted the main factor in the unopposed assumption of power by the Duma. Still, fear of the outbreak of a counterrevolution cannot be regarded as an adequate explanation of the willingness of the soviet’s leaders to delegate power to the Duma. On the contrary, fear of counterrevolution should have induced them to keep the power in their own hands. Their decision to step aside and leave the formation of a government to the bourgeoisie, the class determined to arrest the onrush of the revolution, would be unintelligible unless it is recalled that most of the soviet’s leaders were deeply convinced that the aim of the revolution was solely to establish a democratic regime. It was believed that any attempt to associate the movement with socialist experiments or the dictatorship of the proletariat would ruin it and so repeat the disastrous failure of 1905.
Among those on the soviet’s first executive committee were a few Bolsheviks (Russian: “One of the Majority”), members of the Russian Social-Democratic Workers’ Party who had supported Vladimir Lenin prior to the revolution of 1905. The Bolsheviks believed Lenin’s dictum that the Russian Revolution was to be the vanguard of a world socialist revolution. However, even they failed at the time to declare that the moment had come for establishing a socialist and proletarian government in Russia. So unprepared were they for taking action that when Lenin arrived in Petrograd three weeks later, he found that his most difficult task was to inspire his own party with the necessary enthusiasm for “deepening the revolution.” Whatever may have been the views held by the Bolsheviks at this time, they were in such an insignificant minority both in the Petrograd Soviet and outside that their views did not carry much weight. Moreover, their influence in the soviet, whatever it may have been, was counterbalanced by that of an equally insignificant minority on the right, which denied that the revolution had any aims other than the establishment of a democratic state and bourgeois liberties.
Members of the Duma, on the other hand, had few illusions about where the real political power was vested. They were not only willing to form a government with the consent of the soviet’s leaders, but insisted on the latter issuing an open proclamation of their support. The published program of the Provisional Government was indeed dictated by the soviet’s leaders and was accepted in full by the members of the Duma committee. The status of the government created as a result of this compromise was necessarily precarious in the extreme. Nominally invested with full powers and sovereign authority, the Provisional Government’s position was bound to be unstable because the basis of the compromise which established it was vague and uncertain. The revolutionary impetus of the masses and the constant changes in the constitution of the soviet and in the mentality of its leaders soon combined to render this basis even more untenable. Every day fresh groups joined the soviet and new leaders replaced old ones with the consequence that new adjustments constantly had to be made, and even relative stability became difficult to maintain.
The end of the Romanov dynasty and the arrest of the Russian royal family
While negotiations between the soviet and the Duma were still proceeding and before the Provisional Government formally took over the administration (March 1 [March 14, New Style]), the extremely delicate question of the position of the tsar and the Romanov dynasty needed to be settled. That Nicholas could no longer remain autocrat was a foregone conclusion, but conservative leaders of the Duma dreaded the idea of Russia becoming a republic and were determined to save the monarchy and perhaps even the dynasty. They accordingly dispatched Aleksandr Guchkov and Vasily Shulgin, two members of the Duma, to the tsar’s headquarters at Pskov with the mission of obtaining the tsar’s abdication in favour of the tsarevich Alexis and the appointment of the grand duke Michael as regent. A few days previously such an event would have been regarded as a fantastically successful triumph for the revolution. In those few days, however, the revolutionary movement had developed such an impetus that any attempt to save the dynasty was recognized as utterly impossible. The tsar therefore refused to risk the safety of his son and, abdicating both for himself and the tsarevich, proclaimed his brother Michael his successor.
When the terms of abdication became known on the following day, even this solution had to be promptly abandoned. The very same members of the Duma committee who had pinned their faith to the dynasty proceeded to the palace of the grand duke and strongly urged him to refuse the throne until the Constituent Assembly had drawn up a constitution. Michael declined the throne, and with that decision, three centuries of Romanov rule came to an end. A few days later the question of the dynasty came up again in a dramatic fashion, and the incident demonstrated both the strength of the soviet and its determination when necessary to use its power in defiance of the government. The tsar had requested the new ministers to arrange for the departure of himself and his family to Great Britain, a request which the leaders of the soviet learned of by mere accident. At once they decided to prevent this outcome, and they called on the government to put the tsar and his family under arrest. Even before their protest could be dealt with, they gave orders to railway operators to stop the imperial train and authorized one of their members, supported by a strong detachment of armed workers, to arrest the tsar. These steps proved unnecessary, however, for the new ministers themselves proceeded to arrest the royal family.
The role of the army in the Russian Revolution
This and other incidents demonstrated that the members of the Provisional Government were essentially caretakers, but the soviet still felt that it could rely only on the workers of the capital and had yet to receive the all-important support of the soldiers at the front. The struggle for the soul of the army would consume the next few weeks. The battle centred on two questions: one dealing with the new status of the army and the other regarding the continuation or termination of the Russian war effort. The leaders of the soviet championed the civil rights now claimed by the soldiers, whereas the Duma appealed to them in the name of national safety. It was obvious that the semifeudal conditions which had prevailed in the barracks had to be modified, and Guchkov, the minister of war, was preparing an official declaration to this effect. Guchkov wished to expand civil liberties for soldiers within the strict limits of military discipline, but leaders of the soviet declared that these rights must be granted unconditionally.
This resolve to gain the support of the soldiery at all costs was responsible for the publication of the soviet’s Order No. 1, which directed the military, among other things, to obey only its orders and not those of the Provisional Government. It ordered that committees of soldiers were to be formed in all military and naval units in Petrograd. In their political actions, units were to be subject to their committees and to the soviet. Arms were to be under the control of the committees and on no account were to be given up if demanded by the officers. Strict discipline was to be preserved when on duty, but salutes when off duty were abolished. Special titles used in addressing officers and references to the officer’s noble birth were abolished. Officers were forbidden to use the second person singular in addressing soldiers. This practice of paying court to the army remained the settled policy of the leaders of the soviet until the outbreak of the Bolshevik revolt in November 1917, when Leon Trotsky gained unconditional allegiance of the Petrograd garrison by championing its claim to remain idle in the capital.
Despite all the privileges which the Petrograd Soviet had granted to the soldiers, the loyalty of the army at the front and even in the capital remained an open question. At first the Provisional Government seemed to have won the backing of the army. When the ministers proclaimed the necessity of a more vigorous prosecution of the war, the army rallied enthusiastically to their support. For about two weeks regiments stationed at Petrograd, as well as delegations sent by those in the provinces and at the front, marched to the Duma commanded by their officers, proclaimed their readiness to serve the revolution, and offered the government their allegiance and joyful support. The political significance of these demonstrations was considerable, but the army’s enthusiasm for prosecuting the war soon began to cool.
On March 27 (April 9, New Style) the soviet issued a manifesto to the world declaring that Russia sought no gains from the war and was ready to conclude peace on the basis of “no annexations” and “no indemnities.” From this time onward the question of peace terms became the main bone of contention between the Provisional Government and the soviet, with the government adhering to the secret treaties made by the Allies, and the soviet insisting on the denunciation of these treaties and on an agreement to continue the war only for purposes of self-defense. The pressure put on the government to identify itself with the principles laid down in the soviet’s manifesto became so strong that ministers felt compelled to make a public declaration on April 8 (April 22, New Style) in which Russia’s war aims were formulated as the establishment of a permanent peace on the basis of the self-determination of the people. This declaration was hailed as a great victory by the soviet, which thereupon demanded that the Provisional Government take “the next step” and communicate this to the Allied powers, with a view to their adopting its principles. After some hesitation Pavel Milyukov, the foreign minister, made an official announcement of the declaration. In a cover letter which he dispatched to Russian ambassadors at large, however, he asked them to reassure the governments to which they were accredited by informing them that Russia’s position regarding the war remained unchanged.
Milyukov’s note became known in Russia on May 2 (May 15, New Style), the day after Labor Day had been celebrated all over Russia. This holiday had been given official recognition by the government and saw participation from the garrisons in the towns as well as the regiments at the front. The manifestations of national unity which were the striking feature of that day were now exchanged for the ugly mood of division and party passion. For two days Russia seemed to be on the brink of civil war, the outbreak of which was finally prevented by the action of the soviet, which prohibited all meetings and demonstrations for three days and ordered the garrisons to remain in their barracks. The strength and discipline shown by the masses at this time finally convinced the soviet’s leaders that the real power was in their hands.
The Petrograd Soviet joins the government
Discredited and disheartened, Lvov issued a proclamation in which he expressed his belief that the inclusion of soviet representatives in the government was essential to the safety of the state. The soviet at first (May 10 [May 23, New Style]) refused to entertain the idea of joining a coalition with the bourgeois parties. When Guchkov resigned as war minister and the Provisional Government seemed on the verge of collapse, the soviet reconsidered its decision and agreed to enter the government (May 18 [May 31, New Style]). In the letter of resignation which he forwarded to the prime minister, Guchkov reviewed the political situation: “Our illness,” he declared, “consists in an odd divorce of power and responsibility. Some are in full possession of power without a shadow of responsibility; while those who are visibly in full possession of responsibility possess not a shadow of power.”
Resolved now to assume its share of responsibility and having solemnly engaged to give the Provisional Government its complete support, the soviet was allotted five portfolios in the reconstructed cabinet: Justice, Agriculture, Labour, Food Supplies, and Post and Telegraphs. The last-mentioned ministry was created specifically to make room for Irakli Tsereteli, a Menshevik (Russian: “One of the Minority”—member of the non-Leninist wing of the Russian Social-Democratic Workers’ Party) from the second Duma who had been banished to Siberia and who was now the most popular and powerful member of the soviet. To this list of soviet and Socialist ministers must be added the name of Aleksandr Kerensky, who, though nominally a member of the executive committee of the soviet, had previously joined the Provisional Government on his own responsibility. He was now promoted from the Ministry of Justice to the all-important Ministry of War, and Mikhail Tereshchenko, minister of finance in the first Provisional Government, replaced Milyukov as minister for foreign affairs.
There were two main causes behind the fall of the first Provisional Government. The first was the government’s assumption of responsibility without the backing of power. The second was its equivocal foreign policy that tried to balance the war aims of the Allies, which involved an indefinite prolongation of the war, and the soviet’s policy of limiting the war to a “revolutionary defense,” which was based on the idea that an honourable peace might at once be concluded. The new government occupied a more favourable position because it represented both the bourgeoisie and the masses, but it was still confronted by formidable difficulties. Not only was the crucial question of peace or war to be settled, but also there was growing unrest in the countryside. In addition, the dissolution of the Russian Empire into separate national units called urgently for solutions which the government was totally unable to furnish. The consequence was that the coalition lasted only two months and was finally brought down by the resignation of the three Liberal (Kadet) ministers, who were protesting the concessions made to independence movements in Ukraine and Finland. These troubles would coincide with the greatest crisis for the revolution thus far: the disastrous failure of the offensive in Galicia and the first Bolshevik rising in the capital.
June Offensive
The origin of the decision to renew the offensive on the Eastern Front is obscure, but pressure exerted by the Allies was at least partly responsible for it. Many in the government were totally opposed to it, as they felt that it was likely to fail and thereby to accelerate the disintegration of the army. They pointed out that an offensive, if not strong and decisive enough, would give the Germans a much wanted excuse for counterattacking on a wider front than the Russians could hold. The plan which the Kerensky government adopted was obviously undertaken more for political than for military reasons. The attack, it was believed, would have one of two clear results. If victory were achieved, it would prove that Russia was still a legitimate threat and compel the Germans to come forward with the offer of a separate peace. In the event of defeat, the offensive might compel German Socialists to take a stand either in defense of the Russian Revolution or in support of German militarism.
Kerensky engaged in a tour of the front, where he delivered impassioned speeches to the troops and declared that the country expected them to work a miracle. The soldiers listened to Kerensky, applauded him, and even swore to fight and to die for the revolution. The moment the war minister left, however, they went back to their barracks and would not return to the trenches. Several regiments had to be disbanded for refusal to obey orders. It was in this atmosphere that the offensive was launched on June 18 (July 1, New Style), 1917. The Russian army, commanded by Gen. Aleksey A. Brusilov, attacked the Austro-German forces along a broad front in Galicia and pushed toward Lviv. At first the offensive proved remarkably successful. The Austrians were driven back and many prisoners and guns were taken. In just two weeks, however, any gains had been erased. A German counterattack shattered the Russian lines, and the army fled in disarray. As Lenin said, the Russian soldiers had “voted for peace with their legs.” Not only was the Russian army destroyed, but Russia had effectively ceased to exist as a great power.
The July Days
While the army was disintegrating, the Bolsheviks were making their first bid for power in the capital. Ever since his arrival from Zurich and his inauspicious debut at the Petrograd Soviet, Lenin had been biding his time and maturing his plans. He initially showed disdain for the soviet as a petit bourgeois assembly and was determined to single-handedly organize the proletariat for a revolt against the state. After witnessing the anti-Milyukov demonstrations, however, he perceived that this assembly could easily be used as a recruiting ground and rallying point for such a revolt. With that in mind, he coined the phrase “all power to the Soviets” and disseminated it widely among the masses. When the leaders of the soviet joined the Provisional Government, he viewed the move as a betrayal of principles and began to fear that they would be unlikely to show either the courage or the zeal which would enable him to bring about the second or socialist revolution. In June, during the sittings of the first All-Russian Congress of Soviets, Lenin returned to his original plan of staging a purely Bolshevik revolt.
A plot was formed to mobilize Bolshevik adherents among the factory workers, the Petrograd garrison, and a strong detachment of Kronshtadt sailors, but news of it leaked, and Lenin, not yet prepared to break with the soviet, postponed the venture. The plan was soon revived, however, and the subsequent rising would become known as the July Days. The members of the Bolshevik central committee hesitated to identify themselves with it beforehand for fear it might prove unsuccessful. Ostensibly a demonstration in favour of the transference of power to the soviet, it was in essence an attempt to assert control of that assembly, a fact which its leaders promptly recognized. For two days (July 3–4 [July 16–17, New Style]) armed Bolsheviks occupied parts of the capital, but their lack of any clear objective or leadership paralyzed their efforts. The obvious failure of the enterprise prevented Lenin and the Bolshevik central committee from showing their hands, and they attempted to disavow any connection to the uprising, in which more than 400 people lost their lives.
Throughout the July Days the government was almost entirely quiescent, but Kerensky had perceived an opportunity within the crisis almost immediately. On the first day of the uprising he proceeded to the front, where he gathered a handpicked force. These troops arrived in the capital on the day after the movement had fizzled out. Any attempt to renew disturbances was rendered hopeless by the publication of documents (most probably forgeries) which purported to prove that Lenin was a spy and a paid agent of the German general staff. The result was the practical suppression of the Bolshevik Party and the scattering or incarceration of its leadership. Lenin and Grigory Zinovyev went into hiding, and Trotsky, Lev Kamenev, and Anatoly Lunacharsky were thrown into prison. The office of Pravda, the Bolshevik Party newspaper, was raided, and its printing presses were destroyed by a mob.
Kerensky and the Kornilov revolt
Emboldened by his success in the July Days, Kerensky now put himself forward as a candidate for the premiership. The soviet members of the government presented Prince Lvov with an ultimatum which required him to declare Russia a republic, to suppress the Duma, and to accept the soviet’s policy of forbidding any sale of land without the approval of the Constituent Assembly. The prince refused to comply with these demands, regarding them as an usurpation of the rights of the Constituent Assembly, and promptly submitted his resignation. The government was then reconstructed, with Kerensky becoming prime minister as well as minister of war and Tsereteli succeeding Lvov as minister of the interior. With the formation of the new government, the Russian Revolution entered a new phase—a phase of inaction. Kerensky failed to put new vigour into the prosecution of the war and left the question of concluding peace just as he found it. He was so indifferent to agrarian policy that he allowed the peasants to settle matters as best they could, and his attempts to unite the various political factions succeeded only in alienating them.
The only real achievements of Kerensky’s administration were the declaration of Russia as a republic and the convocation of a spectacular State Assembly in Moscow. This body was to represent all classes and all political groups in the country, and it is clear that Kerensky had hoped that the State Assembly would invest in his government the moral authority and sanction which it had hitherto lacked. Nothing remarkable came from its three meetings save a series of speeches in which Kerensky announced his determination to support the revolution and to suppress its enemies, whether they came from the right or from the left.
While Kerensky struggled to claim a political mandate, generals at the front and members of the general staff in the capital began to think that their time had come. Taking stock of the anarchy prevailing in the countryside and the disorganization of the army, they considered the establishment of a military dictatorship. Kerensky was actually in favour of such an idea, and he supported Gen. Lavr Kornilov, commander-in-chief, in the preliminary steps for establishing the dictatorship. Kerensky only balked at the plan when he realized that the general himself was aspiring to become dictator. Suspecting Kornilov’s designs, Kerensky promptly declared him a traitor and an enemy to the revolution. Kornilov responded by sending Cossack regiments under the command of Gen. Aleksandr Krymov to Petrograd with the object of intimidating Kerensky and forcibly suppressing the soviet.
Kerensky, having lost the generals, turned to the left for support. The soviet appealed to the workers to fight the threatened counterrevolution, and Bolshevik leaders, now released from prison, took up the challenge with enthusiasm. They proceeded to arm the workers in anticipation of the arrival of Krymov’s troops, but no battle for the capital took place. Deputies from the soviet went to meet the Cossacks and persuaded them that they had been sent on a false errand. Thus the plan for setting up a military dictatorship failed, with the result that Kornilov, his ally Anton Denikin, and three other generals were arrested and imprisoned. Krymov shot himself after being interrogated by the prime minister.
The Bolshevik Revolution
Just as the failure of the Bolshevik rising in July proved to be the opportunity of the right, so now the collapse of Kornilov’s attempted coup gave a chance to the extreme left. Soviet Russia was in a state of feverish activity. It was arming itself physically and morally for a fight against the counterrevolutionary movement. The first result of this revival of revolutionary fervour was a renewal of the hatred of the officer class. A new wave of massacres swept the country, and the All-Russian Executive Committee of Soviets was forced to send emissaries to stop these outrages. These representatives had to be chosen from the Bolshevik ranks, as the moderates were speedily losing their hold on the masses. Lenin’s supporters were now increasing their numbers at such a rate that, by the middle of September, both the Petrograd and the Moscow soviets had Bolshevik majorities. The moderate leaders, who had presided over these bodies since their creation, were now replaced by Leon Trotsky in Petrograd and by Viktor Nogin in Moscow.
Lenin wrote to the Executive Committee, calling upon them to break away from Kerensky and to declare themselves the government of the country. The committee rejected this overture; although they still continued unofficially to support Kerensky, they withdrew their representatives from his government. The united front of Soviet democracy, which had seemingly been reestablished by the challenge thrown out by Kornilov, was now finally broken. The Bolsheviks proceeded to declare the Executive Committee traitors to the revolution and began working openly for the overthrow Kerensky’s government.
Six months from the beginning of the revolution the new republic was in a state of rapid disintegration. The Provisional Government was formally invested with full and sovereign power and was responsible neither to the Petrograd Soviet nor to the recently convoked Council of the Republic (or “pre-parliament”). In practice, however, it possessed no real power at all. The actual authority was held by the soviets in the cities and provincial towns; they openly defied the government and exercised, each in its area, legislative as well as executive powers. In most of the soviets the Bolsheviks now counted on solid majorities, and many of the provincial soviets constituted themselves as quasi-independent republics. Various nationalities, which had long been clamouring for autonomy, now began openly to secede. They organized their own armies by withdrawing their nationals from the Russian army under the auspices of defending their newly created frontiers. The whole country was in a state of feverish unrest, which soon developed into riots and anarchy. In the towns bread riots broke out, and in the villages the demand was for land.
In the countryside, peasants began expropriating land, driving off cattle, burning down landowners’ dwellings and barns, and demolishing agricultural machinery. Many of those landowners who did not flee were captured, tortured, and murdered. Yet the ministers were inactive and helpless. They lacked the necessary military backing to put down this violence by force. Even the Cossacks refused to obey orders, remembering how they had been repudiated by Kerensky in the Kornilov episode. Reprisals would in any case have proved ineffective. The only measure which might have tranquilized the countryside would have been the speedy convocation of the Constituent Assembly and a guarantee that it would enact land reform. The government, composed as it were of landlords and capitalists, could not and would not take this step.
The peasants’ revolt was accompanied by a wave of crimes committed by bands of renegade soldiers who spread over the whole country robbing and killing. At the front the army still preserved a certain degree of cohesion, but the mutual distrust between soldiers and officers was so profound that an open clash could be expected at any time. A shortage of food and supplies became full-fledged famine in some areas, making the preservation of military discipline increasingly difficult. It was obvious that the army was likely to desert en masse before the winter had passed. The soldiers discussed this possibility openly, declaring that they cared neither for freedom nor for land but only for peace. Even leading generals, such as Vladimir Cheremisov (who held the Northern Command), advised the government that the army was unreliable and might of its own volition withdraw from the field at any time.
Trotsky and the Second Congress of Soviets
While the Russian state was collapsing, the war on the Eastern Front continued, and the Germans were penetrating further and further into the Baltic provinces. On September 29 (October 12, New Style), with the support of their fleet, they occupied the island of Saaremaa and so secured the command of the Baltic. Petrograd was now obviously menaced, and ministers declared their intention of transferring the seat of government to Moscow. This attempt to abandon the capital strengthened enormously the Bolshevik scheme for overthrowing the government. To dream of continuing the war after abandoning Petrograd, the biggest arsenal in the country, was denounced as sheer treason, and the Bolsheviks found it easy to rouse the workers to oppose the evacuation plan. Ministers, realizing their mistake, speedily reversed course, but not before the Bolsheviks had denounced them as usurpers and traitors.
The proposal to evacuate Petrograd furnished the Bolsheviks with an admirable lever for stirring up the masses, but a subsequent government attempt to secure Petrograd miscarried even more spectacularly. Ministers moved to replace the Petrograd garrison with more reliable troops from the front, and this action was used by the Bolsheviks as a pretext for openly organizing military forces for an attack on the government. The Petrograd Soviet, under Trotsky’s command, promptly came forward and countermanded the redeployment of troops. The leaders of the soviet constituted a revolutionary committee which declared itself the highest military authority in the capital and province of Petrograd. This step was ostensibly taken for the defense of the capital against Germany, but its true purpose was the creation of a general staff for the Bolshevik Revolution. In the weeks that followed Trotsky openly organized his forces without meeting with the slightest interference from the Provisional Government.
The Bolshevik Revolution would be inseparably connected with the convocation of the Second All-Russian Congress of Soviets. The first congress, which took place in June 1917, elected a Central Executive Committee, and this body was empowered to convene a second congress no later than the end of September. Since the majority of soviets had subsequently become Bolshevik-controlled, the committee, which consisted entirely of Mensheviks and Social Revolutionaries (both supporters of Kerensky), was reluctant to convene a second congress and repeatedly postponed doing so. When the Petrograd Soviet finally threatened to convene the congress itself, the committee fixed October 25 (November 7, New Style) as the date of convocation.
It was obvious that the congress would have a Bolshevik majority and would promptly declare against the Provisional Government, and many believed that the final test of strength between the parties of Kerensky’s coalition and the Bolsheviks would take place at the congress. This assumption made it easy for Trotsky to pretend that all his preparations were being made for the establishment of a soviet government under the auspices of existing constitutional processes. Why Kerensky should have been so naive as to accept this explanation remains a mystery. The opening of the Second All-Russian Congress of Soviets was preceded by a number of regional congresses, all of which declared for a termination of the coalition and the establishment of a soviet government. The immediate aims of this government would be to propose terms of peace, to give land to the peasants, to place workers in control of the factories, and to deal with food shortages by expropriating supplies from capitalists and landlords. These resolutions were broadcast all over Russia.
Government ministers waited patiently on events, believing that nothing could happen until the opening of the congress on October 25. Trotsky, however, had no intention of behaving so predictably. On October 21 (November 3, New Style) he confronted the general staff with a demand that all its orders should be countersigned by the Military Revolutionary Committee. When the general staff refused, Trotsky ordered the Petrograd garrison to take up arms in defense of the committee. On October 22 (November 4, New Style) delegates from the garrison passed a resolution refusing to obey the commands of the general staff and recognizing the committee as the sole organ of power. News of this was immediately circulated over government telephones to all the regiments in the capital.
Kerensky replied the following day with an ultimatum, demanding that the Military Revolutionary Committee withdraw the resolution. The committee ignored this demand and promptly called out elements of the Petrograd garrison and organized worker detachments (“Red Guards”) for the defense of the Smolny Palace, the headquarters of the soviet and the committee. Kerensky tried to counteract these measures by raising Petrograd’s bridges to prevent communication between the left and right banks of Neva River. He then proceeded to the Marian Palace, where the Council of the Republic was in session, and demanded that he be invested with dictatorial powers to cope with the Bolshevik revolt. The council deliberated all night before finally rejecting Kerensky’s proposal, preferring instead to set up a Committee of Public Defense. While the council debated, the Bolsheviks quietly and systematically took over—without firing a shot—the telegraph, the telephone, and all government offices with the exception of the Winter Palace and the offices of the general staff. That same night Lenin, who had been in hiding since July, appeared at a meeting of the Petrograd Soviet and in glowing language congratulated the delegates on inaugurating a new era. The new regime, which established the soviet as the embodiment of supreme power in the state, was thus created one day in advance of the meeting of the Soviet Congress, which had been proclaimed by the Bolsheviks as the sole authority able to make such a decision. This was obviously an irregularity, but no objection was raised by the soviet. Lenin announced that the first step taken by the new government would be the offer to all belligerents of a just peace.
The defeat of Krasnov and the collapse of the Provisional Government
Early in the morning of October 25 (November 7, New Style), Kerensky left for the front, in order to bring back troops to crush the revolt. The other members of the government decided to await his return at the Winter Palace. When they were informed that the guns of the cruiser Aurora and the batteries of Peter-Paul Fortress were trained on the palace, they decided to surrender and told their defenders, a detachment of cadets and a women’s battalion, that they might disperse. When the Congress of Soviets formally opened, the non-Bolshevik members and the old executive committee registered a vigorous protest against the unconstitutional methods of the Bolsheviks and withdrew from the congress to join the Committee of Public Defense. Kerensky meanwhile made frantic efforts to move troops from the front to the capital, but the response from both officers and soldiers was thoroughly discouraging. He succeeded only in persuading the Cossack general Pyotr Krasnov to move against Petrograd. On October 29 (November 11, New Style) Krasnov’s troops were reported outside Gatchina, about 28 miles (45 km) from the capital.
Encouraged by this news and definitely expecting a crushing defeat of Trotsky’s Red Guards, the Committee of Public Defense ordered military school cadets to arrest the Revolutionary Military Committee and to make a general attack on all the soviet strongholds. The attack was made in the morning, but by 3:00 pm the Bolsheviks, supported by cruisers of the Baltic Fleet at Kronshtadt, had decisively repelled it and occupied the military schools. In the report of the events of the day, which he sent to the Petrograd Soviet, Trotsky made the following declaration: “We hoped to establish a compromise without bloodshed. But now when blood has been shed there is only one way left, a ruthless fight. It would be childish to expect that victory can be achieved by other means. Now is the actual moment. We have shown that we can take the power. We must show that we are able to keep it. I summon you to a ruthless fight.” That same night Trotsky proceeded to the Gatchina front. On October 30 (November 12, New Style) he reported that Krasnov’s advanced detachments had been repulsed. At the Battle of Pulkovo (October 31 [November 13, New Style]) Krasnov’s forces were completely routed. Krasnov subsequently surrendered, Kerensky fled, and the Bolshevik regime was now for a time immune from internal military threats.
The October Revolution swept Russia. There were a few days of street fighting in Moscow and sporadic resistance elsewhere, but by the end of November 1917 the soviets held power throughout the country. In the urban centres the victory was won under the slogan “All power to the workers’ soviets.” The promise of “peace, land, and bread” gave the Bolsheviks the support of the soviets of peasants and soldiers. The soviets were the only strong political force in a social structure whose disintegration was nearly complete. They were the organs of the proletariat, upon which the Bolsheviks, adhering to the Marxist doctrine of revolution, were resolved to build their state. They challenged not only the weakened capitalism of Russia but also the capitalist system throughout the world. In the first days of success they exaggerated the effect of war-weariness upon the masses of western Europe. Their dream of a new proletarian utopia and their appeals to fellow workers of the world to throw off the burdens of capital and war prepared the way for the conflict that was soon to plunge the new state into a three-year fight for life.
The Soviet government at work
In an all-night session on October 25–26 (November 7–8, New Style) the Congress of Soviets in Petrograd declared the power of government to be vested in the Council of People’s Commissars appointed mainly from the ranks of the Bolshevik Central Committee, with Lenin as premier and Trotsky as commissar of foreign affairs. The new rulers set out immediately to fulfill the promises which had won them popular support. The first act of the Soviet government on October 26 was to decree that all land belonged to those who worked it, without rent or other payment. This declaration satisfied the peasants, who had been expropriating landlords’ estates for several months, and their chief political organization, the Left Socialist Revolutionary Party, decided to collaborate with the Bolsheviks. Vigorous measures were taken to ensure a supply of food for Petrograd and other urban and industrial centres. To reinforce the victory of the industrial proletariat, a universal eight-hour day was instituted on October 29 (November 11, New Style), and the factory soviets were given control over industry by successive decrees in the next two months.
The peace campaign began on October 27 (November 9, New Style), when Trotsky sent out a wireless invitation to all the belligerent powers to conclude an immediate armistice. The Allied governments at once protested, and their representatives in Russia tried to enlist the commander-in-chief of the army, Gen. Nikolay Dukhonin, to oppose the Council of Commissars. Dukhonin was replaced by Nikolay Krylenko, a member of the Bolshevik Central Committee, by a Soviet decree of November 9 (November 22, New Style), and on November 20 (December 3, New Style) Dukhonin was murdered by a mob of soldiers. Lenin had correctly gauged the temper of the army and knew that any effort by the Allies to prolong the fighting would be fruitless. In addition to their natural hostility to a communist government, the Allied powers seemed convinced that Lenin and his associates were acting in the interests and possibly in the pay of Germany. Washington was at first more friendly, but the American ambassador in Petrograd, David Francis, soon indicated that he shared the view of his Allied colleagues. The attitude of the German government was equivocal. It accepted the armistice proposal, and after brief negotiations within the German lines, a 10-day truce was signed on November 22 (December 5, New Style). The Central Powers agreed not to transfer troops from the Eastern Front to the West, but they moved several divisions to France before the end of the year.
Meanwhile, the Soviet government was facing serious internal difficulties. The bourgeois classes, at first stunned by the success of the revolution, began to rally, using passive resistance in an attempt paralyze the Bolshevik regime. The Bolsheviks had no civil service and no personnel trained in finance, transport, and the management of industry, but the new government was suddenly called upon to undertake the administration of all of these. Lenin met the bourgeois offensive with characteristic energy. When the financial powers of Petrograd refused to cooperate, he replied with a decree nationalizing the banks. When representatives of industry tried to sabotage production, a decree nationalized their factories and created a Supreme Economic Council to manage them. Other decrees followed in rapid succession, as one branch after another of the old economic system was folded into the state. At first these measures were probably a matter of immediate necessity rather than a part of the Bolsheviks’ deliberate program, but they were harbingers of the implementation of War Communism.
Full responsibility for these steps cannot be laid upon Bolshevik shoulders, as some form of centralization was necessary to prevent economic collapse. Lenin had previously published a pamphlet demanding state control over transport and the means of production, not as a form of socialist expropriation, but to save the country from chaos. Indeed, similar measures had already been adopted by the other belligerents in World War I. The nationalization of industries was legalized in December 1917. At first it was applied haphazardly, to counter specific acts of sabotage by individual enterprises or groups. No entire industry was nationalized until May 1918, when a department of the Supreme Economic Council was organized to supervise the monopoly production of sugar. The following month oil production was centralized in the same way, and various commodities, such as yarn, matches, tobacco, tea, coffee, and spices, were declared state monopolies. It was not until June 28, 1918, that all industrial and commercial enterprises worth more than one million rubles were declared the property of the state.
The Treaty of Brest-Litovsk
While the Soviet government was trying to rebuild the economy and weld local soviets into an administrative machine, relations with Germany were still unsettled. Peace negotiations began on December 9 (December 22, New Style), 1917 (Soviet authorities had begun reckoning dates according to the “New Style” Gregorian calendar, a process that was formalized in February 1918; hereafter all dates are New Style). On behalf of the soviet, Trotsky put forward the principles of no annexation or indemnity and self-determination of subject peoples. At first the Germans seemed willing to accept, with certain reservations. On December 28 they demanded the independence from Russia of Poland, Finland, and the Baltic states, and on January 8, 1918, the independence of Ukraine. On February 10 Trotsky announced the soviet’s refusal to sign a ‘‘peace of annexation,” but declared the war between Russia and the Central Powers at an end. A week later the German general staff ordered an immediate advance. Narva, in northern Estonia, was occupied in order to threaten Petrograd, and German troops drove toward Moscow from the Polish border.
Lenin at once decided for peace, but acceptance of the German terms was not reached without a struggle in the Communist Central Committee. Lenin still believed that a general European revolution, as the result of war exhaustion, was not far distant. His prime object, therefore, was to gain time—a breathing space, as he called it. His associates argued that to yield was to betray the revolution. Trotsky remained neutral. He produced an epigrammatic phrase, “Neither peace nor war!” and proposed to allow the Germans to advance without resistance. Verbatim reports of this discussion published in Moscow showed that it was only by a threat of resignation that Lenin beat down the adverse majority in the Central Committee. Trotsky was replaced as commissar of foreign affairs by Georgy Chicherin, an experienced diplomat who renewed negotiations at Brest-Litovsk on February 28. On March 3 Chicherin accepted the German terms on behalf of the soviet government. The independent government of Ukraine had already signed a separate treaty, and this Chicherin was forced to affirm. The soviet government further agreed to pay a large indemnity or its equivalent in raw materials. Poland and the Baltic states were left in the hands of the Germans, and Gen. Carl Gustaf Mannerheim soon expelled the Bolsheviks from Finland.
The death of the tsar and the Russian Civil War
Lenin had won his breathing space, and he used it to patch up the administrative and economic machine of the new Soviet state and to drill an army to defend the revolution. Adversaries of the new regime were growing bolder. Trouble was brewing in the Cossack provinces and in Manchuria, where a reactionary army was assembling on Chinese soil. The German threat against Petrograd had driven the Soviet government in flight to Moscow. The fact that the Allied ambassadors, instead of accompanying the government, had preferred residence at Vologda, a railway junction that allowed for escape eastward to Siberia and north to Arkhangelsk, was not a good omen for future relations with the powers they represented. Anti-Bolshevik forces were coalescing into “white” armies, and a legion of Czech and Slovak deserters had seized control of the Trans-Siberian Railroad. On the Pacific coast, Japanese troops had landed at Vladivostok.
These developments would bring death to Nicholas II, who, with his wife and family, had been held under guard for some months at Ekaterinburg, in the foothills of the Urals, The local soviet professed to believe that the imperial family was planning to escape to Omsk, where the “white” Adm. Aleksandr Kolchak had established a counterrevolutionary government. Without a trial, the soviet voted to execute “Citizen and Citizeness Romanov, their son and four daughters.” The sentence was carried out on July 17, when the Romanovs were shot and stabbed to death in the basement of the house where they had been confined. With the slaughter of the royal family, the last remnants of the old order had been swept away, and the revolution gave way to civil war.