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Jeremy Smith
The Bolsheviks and the National Question 1917-23
Macmillan, 1999
Pp. xviii + 281
Reviewed by: Professor
Raymond Pearson
University of Ulster
For almost half a century, the classic description and analysis of
Communist treatment of the nationalities question over the early years of
the Bolshevik regime has been Richard Pipes magisterial The Formation of
the Soviet Union: Communism and Nationalism, 1917- 1923, published by
Harvard University Press in 1954. To suggest that Pipes depicts the
ideology-mandated suppression of the non-Russians drive for independence
and their forcible incorporation into a Soviet Prison of Nations whose
management is passing from the mistaken idealism of Lenin to the brutal
megalomania of Stalin might caricature his interpretation but still
conveys the essence of what has been seen by many as a sub-zero Cold
Warrior work of history. With the end of the Cold War, the greater
availability of primary sources from ex-Soviet archives is enabling
historians to add documentary substance to their past misgivings about
Pipes antagonistic interpretation. That the new preface to the third and
latest edition of The Formation of the Soviet Union published as
recently as 1997 makes no serious attempt to update a perception dating
from the darkest days of the Cold War could be regarded as provocative.
It is therefore no surprise that a new-generation researcher mining the
archive collections of the Russian Federation has now challenged the
long-established but arguably outmoded holy writ of Pipes and produced
what could be taken for the first post-Cold War interpretation of the
critical foundation years of the USSR.
Jeremy Smith diplomatically suggests that Pipes covers rather
different territory from his own study, for example focusing on the major
nations which became the Union Republics rather than the smaller
nationalities within Russia and the Transcaucasian peoples targeted by
himself. He also claims that while Pipes considers the earlier processes
by which the borderlands were sovietised and brought under Bolshevik
control, his own work focuses on the policies which were implemented once
Soviet power was in place (p.xi). Notwithstanding this modest disclaimer
of the challenge implicit in his study, Smiths tactful proposition that
the two works are distinct yet complimentary (sic) cannot mask the
fundamental divergences of interpretation which suffuse virtually every
page of the text.
To take just three of the most striking examples of clash of
interpretation. First, while Pipes account postulates an Olympian duel of
titans between Lenin and Stalin over the direction of Soviet
nationalities strategy, Smiths line emphasises the broader debate within
a Bolshevik elite which could hardly have been less monolithic in its
attitude to the national question. To Smith, while Lenin and Stalin were
indisputably the champions of debate and the second-rankers like Trotsky,
Bukharin, Kamenev and Zinoviev played only modest roles, middle rankers
little known in the West like Frunze, Kuibyshev, Ordzhonikidze and
Rakovsky were perhaps unexpectedly prominent and influential. Smith also
underlines the shifting nature of the political positions of the leading
players, in particular claiming that Lenin and Stalin (not to mention the
legendary anti-revisionist Rosa Luxemburg) changed their minds and
positions so frequently and radically over the national question that the
later terms Leninist and Stalinist have no coherent meaning in the period
1917-23. The tacit Pipes dichotomy between the idealist-cum-intellectual
camp headed by Lenin and the practitioner-cum-managerial camp
masterminded by Stalin is a retrospective myth of polarisation which
cannot be sustained under close historical examination.
Second, Smith contests Pipes emphasis on ideological grand strategy
(which again may well reflect the historical conspiracy theory typical of
the climate of Cold War and McCarthyism over the late 1940s and early
1950s when The Formation of the Soviet Union was being written). Aside
from the kaleidoscope variety and patent confusion of the opinions of the
Bolshevik elite over the national question, ideological commitment was
bound to be an early casualty of the immensely complex and infinitely
demanding early years of the Soviet state. Stressing the accelerating
primacy of improvisation, Smith persuasively argues that the Bolsheviks
national policy, based on ambiguous and frequently inconsistent theories,
was neither foreseen nor planned [but] instead evolved haphazardly in
response to particular circumstances (p.241).
Third, while Pipess 1923 scenario posits a definitive Stalinist
victory over an idealistic but ailing Lenin who only had months to live,
Smith argues that the autonomist-devolutionary position of the
nationalities was still strong: it was not inevitable either that
administrative centralism would prevail or that the authoritarian process
would be headed by Stalin. Far from the course of the future Soviet Union
being already immutably determined by the time of the death of Lenin in
January 1924, the situation was still remarkably ambivalent. For
instance, the policy of korenizatsia or indigenisation successfully
recruited many minority nationality activists into the Communist Party
establishment, stabilised Bolshevik control across its non-Russian
jurisdiction and unintentionally ensured that national consciousness
survived the russification of the 1930s (p.162). Nothing was pre-ordained
by the first five years of the Bolshevik regime: the discrete competitive
dynamics of the remainder of the 1920s and the Second Revolution of the
1930s were cumulatively required to effect the Stalinist state.
For all its meticulous scholarship and indefatigable research, Smiths
commendable study exhibits some relatively condonable shortcomings.
Much of the unrelieved denseness of the text comes with its
ideological-cum-political territory: the bewildering plethora of
institutional acronyms makes reading impossible without regular recourse
to the thoughtfully-provided collected list of abbreviations. However,
the uncompromising character of the unrevised doctoral thesis is all too
evident. The single small map provided is insufficient to illustrate the
detailed narrative and closer copy-editing would have prevented some
minor blemishes (like spelling the adjective principal as principle
throughout). Moreover, there seems to have been no effort to make the
text more accessible to either the general or specialist reader, an issue
which the editors of the Studies in Russia and East Europe series might
care to re-examine.
More generally, the study is so short on context as to be almost
hermetic. Concentrating on Smiths unforgiving text, it is easy to forget
that his coverage of the ideological debates should be set against the
backdrop of a bloody and chaotic Civil War which eventually claimed some
twenty million lives through battle, disease and starvation. The index
significantly contains only five references to the Whites and just three
references to the Civil War, a revealing demonstration of the studys
tunnel-vision focus on the tortuously Byzantine, occasionally murderously
Florentine political intrigues of the new Bolshevik establishment.
An even broader sense of contemporary historical perspective would
have been more than appropriate. The cataclysmic effects of the First
World War meant that most of Europe faced similar dilemmas over the
immediate post-war years. While the jurisdictional fate of much of the
ex-tsarist empire was taxing the Bolshevik leadership, the political
disposition of the remainder of eastern and central Europe was being
determined by the Allied statesmen at the Paris Peace Conferences of
1919-23. Europe east and west was suffering a mirror-problem: how to
contain rampant nationalism in an era of imperial collapse through
geopolitical contrivances hopefully concocted to promote stability and
progress. The national question over which the Bolsheviks agonised was
just part of a fresh, post-war challenge which was already exercising all
Europe and much of Asia and was soon to become global in scope.
In conclusion, while it seems timely (and therefore tempting) to greet
the approaching ten-year anniversary of the collapse of Soviet power with
a comprehensive post-mortem, it is apparent that Smith would not claim to
have produced either a complete refutation of the Pipes interpretation or
an exhaustive analysis of the period 1917-23. He is admirably candid in
conceding that the opening of the archives has not yet produced
stunning revelations (p.xii) but rather a better understanding of the
day-to-day workings of the Communist Party and Soviet government. Various
processes and episodes remain impenetrably mysterious: considering
Lithuanian-Belorussian rapprochement in 1919, Smith concedes that none of
these [interpretations] provides a convincing explanation of Litbel
(p.75); investigating the Ukrainian Borotbists over 1919-20, he confesses
that no adequate explanation for this abrupt reversal has come to light
(p.122); and contemplating Lenins wavering role in the Georgian Affair of
1922, he confesses that the precise reasons for this U-turn are not clear
(p.203). It is to be hoped that the current re-evaluation of the early
Soviet period will continue to be fueled by a further opening-up of
ex-Soviet archives in (and possibly outside) the Russian Federation. In
the meantime, Smith must be congratulated on contributing a thoroughly
professional, laudably open-minded (and occasionally present-minded)
piece of work-in-progress. This study may not have sensationally
transformed our perception of the period, in other words revolutionised
the historiography of the Revolution, but it has undoubtedly deepened and
enriched our understanding of its always complex and often contradictory
processes. Whether Smith can eventually construct a definitive
replacement for the classic Pipes volume by building upon the present
penetrating critique of, and necessary and welcome corrective to, its
Cold War assumptions and features remains to be seen.
October 1999
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