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War communism, new economic policy (1921–28).

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The Civil War and War Communism (1918–21)

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One side can start a war, but it takes two to end one. The Bolsheviks found that this principle applied to themselves after October, when they expected to disengage quickly from World War I . Of the three points of their effective slogan—“Peace, land, and bread”—the first proved to be the most difficult to realize. Trotsky, the silver-tongued Bolshevik negotiator, had lectured the Germans and Austrians on Georg Hegel ’s philosophy and other abstruse subjects at Brest-Litovsk. He thought that he had time on his side. He was waiting for news of revolution in Berlin and Vienna. It never came, and the Bolsheviks found themselves at the Germans’ mercy. The issue of peace or war tore the Bolsheviks apart. Lenin favoured peace at any price, believing that it was purely an interim settlement before inevitable revolution. Nikolay Bukharin , a left-wing Bolshevik in the early Soviet period, wanted revolutionary war, while Trotsky wanted neither war nor peace. Trotsky believed the Germans did not have the military muscle to advance, but they did, and eventually the very harsh peace of the Brest-Litovsk treaty was imposed on Russia. The Socialist Revolutionaries left the coalition, and some resorted to terrorism, the target being the Bolshevik leadership. Ukraine slipped under German influence, and the Mensheviks held sway in the Caucasus . Only part of Russia—Moscow, Petrograd , and much of the industrial heartland—was under Bolshevik control. The countryside belonged to the Socialist Revolutionaries. Given the Bolshevik desire to dominate the whole of Russia and the rest of the former tsarist empire, civil war was inevitable.

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The Red Army was formed in February 1918, and Trotsky became its leader. He was to reveal great leadership and military skill, fashioning a rabble into a formidable fighting force. The Reds were opposed by the “ Whites ,” anticommunists led by former imperial officers. There were also the “Greens” and the anarchists, who fought the Reds and were strongest in Ukraine; the anarchists’ most talented leader was Nestor Makhno. The Allies (Britain, the United States , Italy , and a host of other states) intervened on the White side and provided much matériel and finance. The Bolsheviks controlled the industrial heartland of Russia, and their lines of communication were short. Those of the Whites, who were dispersed all the way to the Pacific, were long. The Reds recruited many ex-tsarist officers but also produced many of their own. By mid-1920 the Reds had consolidated their hold on the country .

The feat of winning the Civil War and the organizational methods adopted to do so made a deep impact on Bolshevik thinking. Joseph Stalin, a party leader, talked about the party in terms of an army. There were political fronts, economic struggles, campaigns, and so on. The Bolsheviks were ruthless in their pursuit of victory. The Cheka (a forerunner of the notorious KGB ), or political police, was formed in December 1917 to protect communist power. By the end of the Civil War the Cheka had become a powerful force. Among the targets of the Cheka were Russian nationalists who objected strongly to the bolshevization of Russia. They regarded bolshevism as alien and based on western European and not Russian norms. Lenin was always mindful of “Great Russian” chauvinism , which was one reason he never permitted the formation of a separate Russian Communist Party apart from that of the Soviet Union. Russia, alone of the U.S.S.R.’s 15 republics, did not have its own communist party. It was belatedly founded in 1990.

Lenin did not favour moving toward a socialist economy after October, because the Bolsheviks lacked the necessary economic skills. He preferred state capitalism, with capitalist managers staying in place but supervised by the workforce. Others, like Bukharin, wanted a rapid transition to a socialist economy. The Civil War caused the Bolsheviks to adopt a more severe economic policy known as War Communism , characterized chiefly by the expropriation of private business and industry and the forced requisition of grain and other food products from the peasants. The Bolsheviks subsequently clashed with the labour force , which understood socialism as industrial self-management. Ever-present hunger exacerbated the poor labour relations , and strikes became endemic , especially in Petrograd. The Bolsheviks, however, pressed ahead, using coercion as necessary. The story was the same in the countryside. Food had to be requisitioned in order to feed the cities and the Red Army. The Reds informed the peasants that it was in their best interests to supply food, because if the landlords came back the peasants would lose everything.

Soviet Russia adopted its first constitution in July 1918 and fashioned treaties with other republics such as Ukraine. The latter was vital for the economic viability of Russia, and Bolshevik will was imposed. It was also imposed in the Caucasus, where Georgia , Armenia , and Azerbaijan were tied to Bolshevik Russia by 1921. Many communists regarded Russia as acquiring imperialist ambitions. Indeed, Moscow under the Georgian Joseph Stalin , the commissar for nationalities, regarded imperial Russia’s territory as its natural patrimony. Russia lost control of the Baltic states and Finland , however. Lenin’s nationality policy was based on the assumption that nations would choose to stay in a close relationship with Russia, but this proved not to be the case. Many republics wanted to be independent in order to develop their own brand of national communism. The comrade who imposed Russian dominance was, ironically, Stalin. As commissar for nationalities, he sought to ensure that Moscow rule prevailed.

Forced requisitioning led to peasant revolts, and the Tambov province revolt of 1920 in particular forced Lenin to change his War Communism policy. He and the Bolshevik leadership were willing to slaughter the mutinous sailors of the Kronstadt naval base in March 1921, but they could not survive if the countryside turned against them. They would simply starve to death. A tactical retreat from enforced socialism was deemed necessary, a move that was deeply unpopular with the Bolshevik rank and file. The New Economic Policy (NEP) was inaugurated at the 10th Party Congress in March 1921. A ban on factionalism in the party was also imposed. This ban was needed to prevent local party groups from overturning the decisions of the congress. The key sectors of the economy—heavy industry, communications, and transport—remained in state hands, but light and consumer-goods industries were open to the entrepreneur . The monetary reform of 1923 provided a money tax that brought an end to forced requisitioning. The economy was back to its 1913 level by the mid-1920s, and this permitted a vigorous debate on the future. All Communist Party members agreed that the goal was socialism, and this meant the dominance of the industrial economy. The working class, the natural constituency of the Communist Party, had to grow rapidly. There was also the question of the country’s security. Moscow lived in fear of an attack during the 1920s and concluded a number of peace treaties and nonaggression pacts with neighbouring and other countries.

Soviet Russia gave way to the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics (U.S.S.R.) in 1922, but this did not mean that Russia gave up its hegemony within the new state. As before, Moscow was the capital, and it dominated the union. Lenin ’s death in January 1924 set off a succession struggle that lasted until the end of the decade. Stalin eventually outwitted Trotsky, Lenin’s natural successor, and various other contenders . Stalin, who had become general secretary of the party in 1922, used the party as a power base. The economic debate was won by those who favoured rapid industrialization and forced collectivization. The NEP engendered not only a flowering of Russian culture but also that of non-Russian and non-Slavic cultures . Russia itself had been an empire with many non-Russian citizens, and the emergence of numerous national elites was a trend of considerable concern to Stalin and his leadership.

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Gr. 11 HISTORY T1 W2 Communism in Russia: Lenin's economic policy of War Communism

This week will focus on Lenin`s economic policy of War Communism

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war communism essay grade 11

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  1. History Grade 11

    Communism is a social, economic, and political ideology whose aim is to establish a communist society in which there is a collective ownership of the means of production [1]. The goal of communism is to eliminate social classes in society. Karl Marx and Friedrich Engels are considered the founding fathers of communism [2].

  2. History Grade 11

    History Grade 11 - Topic 1 Essay Questions. Explain to what extent Stalin succeeded in transforming Russia into a superpower by 1939. Stalin came to power on the back of Lenin's death in 1925, after which he instituted a range of far-reaching policy changes that would alter the course of Russian society and politics for the rest of the 20th ...

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    History Classroom Grade 11 Topic 1: Communism in Russia from 1900 to 1940. Overview. Communism is a social, economic, and political ideology whose aim is to establish a communist society in which there is a collective ownership of the means of production . ... Read more. Terms you need to know. Essay Questions and Answers. Source Based ...

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    Dear Grade 11 Historian • Welcome to the Telematics project. The 2022 Gr 11 history programme aims to ... arduous skill of penning a stellar history essay all the time, every time. It will also ... by War Communism, but many hardliner Communists hated the policy as it created a new class differentiation through the NEP

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    The US is sending $125 million in new military aid to Ukraine. Aug. 23, 2024, 3:24 PM ET (AP) Ukraine says it used US glide bombs in Russia's Kursk region and has retaken some land in Kharkiv. The feat of winning the Civil War and the organizational methods adopted to do so made a deep impact on Bolshevik thinking.

  6. PDF NATIONAL SENIOR CERTIFICATE GRADE 11

    GRADE 11 HISTORY P1 JUNE 2018. History/P1 2 NW/June 2018 Grade11 ... 1.2.1 What, according to the source, was the rationale behind War Communism? (1 x 1) (1) 1.2.2 Explain the historical term War Communism. (1 x 2) (2) 1.2.3 Using the information in the source and your own knowledge, explain why ... SECTION B: ESSAY QUESTIONS

  7. PDF GRAAD 12 NATIONAL SENIOR CERTIFICATE GRADE 11

    Candidates may use the following points to answer the question: Source 1A focuses on the failures and effects of War Communism on Russia. Source 1B focuses on the reasons why Lenin introduced the NEP. Also highlights what the NEP entailed. Source 1C depicts the production figures in coal, cattle, pigs, grain , steel between 1913 to 1929.

  8. PDF NATIONAL SENIOR CERTIFICATE GRADE 11

    GRADE 11 P1 MEMORANDUM JUNE 2018 . 2 ... ESSAY QUESTIONS 2.1 The essay questions require candidates to: ... It provides different historian interpretation of the reasons for the War Communism It highlights some characteristics of War Communism-food requisition,

  9. War communism

    War communism or military communism (Russian: Военный коммунизм, Vojenný kommunizm) was the economic and political system that existed in Soviet Russia during the Russian Civil War from 1918 to 1921. War communism began in June 1918, enforced by the Supreme Economic Council (Russian: Высший Совет Народного Хозяйства), known as the Vesenkha.

  10. PDF GRADE 11 NOVEMBER 2020 HISTORY P1 EXEMPLAR

    QUESTION 1: COMMUNISM IN RUSSIA, 1900-1940. QUESTION 2: CAPITALISM IN THE USA, 1900-1940. SECTION B: ESSAY QUESTIONS. QUESTION 4: COMMUNISM IN RUSSIA, 1900-1940. QUESTION 5: CAPITALISM IN THE USA, 1900-1940. SECTION A consists of TWO source-based questions. Source material that is required to answer these questions can be found in the ...

  11. PDF NATIONAL SENIOR CERTIFICATE GRADE 11

    grade 11 history mid-year examination 2019 . ... section b: essay questions question 4: communism in russia 1900 to 1940: stalin's interpretation of marxism ... question 1: what were the effects of war communism on the people of russia in the 1920s? study sources 1a, 1b, 1c and 1d and answer the questions that follow. ...

  12. Communism in Russia

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  14. PDF NATIONAL SENIOR CERTIFICATE GRADE 11

    This source focuses on the failure of the policy of War Communism. While War Communism was clearly a drastic departure from capitalism and ensured that the Communists won the Civil War, it came at a terrible cost. By 1921 there was famine which ironically endedonly when the United States -the largest capitalist state

  15. History Grade 11

    1. Why, according to the source, was Russia ill-equipped for the war? (3x1) (3) 2. Use the source and your own knowledge to explain the outcome of Russia's participation in the First World War. (2x2) (4) Russia's participation in the war led to severe food shortages in Russia.

  16. War Communism In Russia Essay

    Open Document. War communism was the economic and political system that existed in Soviet Russia during the Russian Civil War, from 1918 to 1921. According to Soviet historiography, this policy was adopted by the Bolsheviks with the goal of keeping towns and the Red Army stocked with weapons and with food. The system had to be used because the ...

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  20. 2020 History Grade 11 SBA Final

    GRADE 11 SBA GUIDELINE 2020 CONTENTS. ... Source-based OR essay tasks in controlled conditions. ( 50 ) 1 ... War Communism (b) Civil War (2x2) (4) 1.1 Why, according to the information in the source, did the Bolsheviks adopt the policy of War Communism? (1x2) (2) 1.1 Quote TWO reasons from the source that contributed to the failure of War ...

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  22. PDF GRADE 11

    GRADE 11. HISTORY P1. NOVEMBER 2019. ADDENDUMThis addendum consists of. urn overQUESTION 1: HOW DID LENIN APPLY THE IDEOLOGY OF MARXISM IN THE UNION OF SOVIET SOCIALIST REPUBLICS (USSR) FROM 1918. OURCE 1AThe source below highlights the reforms introduced by Lenin.