3 and 4 civil war to tell. Causes of the civil war in Russia


CIVIL WAR IN RUSSIA

Causes and main stages of the civil war. After the abolition of the monarchy, the Mensheviks and Socialist-Revolutionaries feared civil war most of all, which is why they agreed to an agreement with the Cadets. As for the Bolsheviks, they regarded it as a "natural" continuation of the revolution. Therefore, many contemporaries of those events considered the beginning of the civil war in Russia to be the armed seizure of power by the Bolsheviks. Its chronological framework covers the period from October 1917 to October 1922, that is, from the uprising in Petrograd to the end of the armed struggle in the Far East. Until the spring of 1918, hostilities were mostly local in nature. The main anti-Bolshevik forces were either engaged in political struggle (moderate socialists) or were in the stage of organizational formation (white movement).

From the spring-summer of 1918, a fierce political struggle began to develop into the form of an open military confrontation between the Bolsheviks and their opponents: moderate socialists, some foreign formations, the White Army, and the Cossacks. The second - "frontal stage" stage of the civil war begins, which, in turn, can be divided into several periods.

Summer-autumn 1918 - the period of escalation of the war. It was caused by the introduction of a food dictatorship. This led to the discontent of the middle peasants and wealthy peasants and the creation of a mass base for the anti-Bolshevik movement, which, in turn, contributed to the strengthening of the Socialist-Revolutionary-Menshevik "democratic counter-revolution" and the White armies.

December 1918 - June 1919 - the period of confrontation between the regular red and white armies. In the armed struggle against the Soviet regime, the white movement achieved the greatest success. One part of the revolutionary democracy went to cooperate with the Soviet government, the other fought on two fronts: with the White regime and the Bolshevik dictatorship.

The second half of 1919 - autumn 1920 - the period of the military defeat of the Whites. The Bolsheviks somewhat softened their position in relation to the middle peasantry, declaring "the need for a more attentive attitude towards their needs." The peasantry bowed to the side of the Soviet government.

The end of 1920 - 1922 - the period of the "small civil war". Deployment of mass peasant uprisings against the policy of "war communism". Growing dissatisfaction of the workers and the performance of the Kronstadt sailors. The influence of the Socialist-Revolutionaries and Mensheviks increased again. All this forced the Bolsheviks to retreat, to introduce a new economic policy, which contributed to the gradual fading of the civil war.

The first outbreaks of the civil war. Formation of the white movement.

At the head of the anti-Bolshevik movement on the Don stood Ataman A. M. Kaledin. He declared the insubordination of the Don Cossacks to Soviet power. Everyone dissatisfied with the new regime began to flock to the Don. At the end of November 1917, General M.V. Alekseev began to form the Volunteer Army from the officers who had made their way to the Don. L. G. Kornilov, who had escaped from captivity, became its commander. The volunteer army marked the beginning of the white movement, so named in contrast to the red - revolutionary. The white color symbolized law and order. The participants in the white movement considered themselves to be the spokesmen for the idea of ​​restoring the former power and might of the Russian state, the "Russian state principle" and a merciless struggle against those forces that, in their opinion, plunged Russia into chaos and anarchy - with the Bolsheviks, as well as with representatives of other socialist parties.

The Soviet government managed to form an army of 10,000, which in mid-January 1918 entered the territory of the Don. Most of the Cossacks adopted a policy of benevolent neutrality towards the new government. The decree on land gave little to the Cossacks, they had land, but they were impressed by the decree on peace. Part of the population provided armed support to the Reds. Considering his cause lost, Ataman Kaledin shot himself. The volunteer army, burdened with carts with children, women, politicians, went to the steppes, hoping to continue their work in the Kuban. On April 17, 1918, its commander Kornilov was killed, this post was taken by General A. I. Denikin.

Simultaneously with the anti-Soviet speeches on the Don, the movement of the Cossacks in the South Urals began. A. I. Dutov, the ataman of the Orenburg Cossack army, stood at its head. In Transbaikalia, the ataman G.S. Semenov fought against the new government.

The first uprisings against the Bolsheviks were spontaneous and scattered, did not enjoy the mass support of the population and took place against the backdrop of a relatively quick and peaceful establishment of the power of the Soviets almost everywhere ("the triumphal march of Soviet power", as Lenin said). However, already at the very beginning of the confrontation, two main centers of resistance to the power of the Bolsheviks developed: to the east of the Volga, in Siberia, where wealthy peasant owners predominated, often united in cooperatives and under the influence of the Social Revolutionaries, and also in the south - in the territories inhabited by the Cossacks, known for his love of freedom and commitment to a special way of economic and social life. The main fronts of the civil war were the Eastern and Southern.

Creation of the Red Army. Lenin was an adherent of the Marxist position that after the victory of the socialist revolution, the regular army, as one of the main attributes of bourgeois society, should be replaced by a people's militia, which would be convened only in case of military danger. However, the scope of anti-Bolshevik speeches required a different approach. On January 15, 1918, a decree of the Council of People's Commissars proclaimed the creation of the Workers 'and Peasants' Red Army (RKKA). On January 29, the Red Fleet was formed.

The volunteer recruitment principle, which was initially applied, led to organizational disunity and decentralization in command and control, which had a detrimental effect on the combat effectiveness and discipline of the Red Army. She suffered a number of serious defeats. That is why, in order to achieve the highest strategic goal - to preserve the power of the Bolsheviks - Lenin considered it possible to abandon his views in the field of military development and return to the traditional, "bourgeois", i.e. to universal military service and unity of command. In July 1918, a decree was published on the general military service of the male population aged 18 to 40 years. During the summer - autumn of 1918, 300 thousand people were mobilized into the ranks of the Red Army. In 1920, the number of Red Army soldiers approached 5 million.

Much attention was paid to the formation of command personnel. In 1917-1919. in addition to short-term courses and schools, higher military educational institutions were opened to train the middle command level from the most distinguished Red Army soldiers. In March 1918, a notice was published in the press about the recruitment of military specialists from the tsarist army. By January 1, 1919, approximately 165,000 former tsarist officers had joined the ranks of the Red Army. The involvement of military experts was accompanied by strict "class" control over their activities. To this end, in April 1918, the party sent military commissars to the ships and troops, who oversaw command personnel and carried out the political education of sailors and Red Army men.

In September 1918, a unified command and control structure for fronts and armies was created. Each front (army) was headed by a Revolutionary Military Council (Revolutionary Military Council, or RVS), which consisted of a front (army) commander and two commissars. All military institutions were headed by the Revolutionary Military Council of the Republic, headed by L. D. Trotsky, who also took the post of People's Commissar for Military and Naval Affairs. Measures were taken to tighten discipline. Representatives of the Revolutionary Military Council, endowed with emergency powers (up to the execution of traitors and cowards without trial or investigation), went to the most tense sectors of the front. In November 1918, the Council of Workers' and Peasants' Defense was formed, headed by Lenin. He concentrated in his hands the fullness of state power.

Intervention. From the very beginning, the civil war in Russia was complicated by the intervention of foreign states in it. In December 1917, Romania, taking advantage of the weakness of the young Soviet government, occupied Bessarabia. The government of the Central Council proclaimed the independence of Ukraine and, having concluded a separate agreement with the Austro-German bloc in Brest-Litovsk, returned to Kiev in March together with the Austro-German troops, which occupied almost all of Ukraine. Taking advantage of the fact that there were no clearly fixed borders between Ukraine and Russia, German troops invaded the Orel, Kursk, Voronezh provinces, captured Simferopol, Rostov and crossed the Don. In April 1918, Turkish troops crossed the state border and moved into the depths of Transcaucasia. In May, a German corps also landed in Georgia.

From the end of 1917, British, American and Japanese warships began to arrive at Russian ports in the North and the Far East, ostensibly to protect them from possible German aggression. At first, the Soviet government took this calmly and even agreed to accept aid from the Entente countries in the form of food and weapons. But after the conclusion of the Brest Peace, the presence of the Entente began to be seen as a threat to Soviet power. However, it was already too late. On March 6, 1918, an English landing force landed in the port of Murmansk. At a meeting of the heads of government of the Entente countries, it was decided not to recognize the Treaty of Brest-Litovsk and to interfere in the internal affairs of Russia. In April 1918, Japanese paratroopers landed in Vladivostok. Then they were joined by British, American, French troops. And although the governments of these countries did not declare war on Soviet Russia, moreover, they covered themselves with the idea of ​​fulfilling "allied duty", foreign soldiers behaved like conquerors. Lenin regarded these actions as an intervention and called for a rebuff to the aggressors.

Since the autumn of 1918, after the defeat of Germany, the military presence of the Entente countries has become more widespread. In January 1919, landings were made in Odessa, the Crimea, Baku, and the number of troops in the ports of the North and the Far East was increased. However, this caused a negative reaction from the personnel of the expeditionary forces, for whom the end of the war was delayed for an indefinite period. Therefore, the Black Sea and Caspian landing forces were evacuated in the spring of 1919; the British left Arkhangelsk and Murmansk in the autumn of 1919. In 1920, British and American units were forced to leave the Far East. Only the Japanese remained there until October 1922. A large-scale intervention did not take place, primarily because the governments of the leading countries of Europe and the USA were frightened by the growing movement of their peoples in support of the Russian revolution. Revolutions broke out in Germany and Austria-Hungary, under the pressure of which these major monarchies collapsed.

"Democratic counter-revolution". Eastern front. The beginning of the "front" stage of the civil war was characterized by an armed confrontation between the Bolsheviks and moderate socialists, primarily the Socialist-Revolutionary Party, which, after the dissolution of the Constituent Assembly, felt itself forcibly removed from its legitimate power. The decision to start an armed struggle against the Bolsheviks was strengthened after the latter dispersed in April-May 1918 many newly elected local Soviets, which were dominated by representatives of the Menshevik and Socialist-Revolutionary bloc.

The turning point of the new stage of the civil war was the appearance of the corps, consisting of prisoners of war of the Czechs and Slovaks of the former Austro-Hungarian army, who expressed a desire to participate in hostilities on the side of the Entente. The leadership of the corps proclaimed itself part of the Czechoslovak army, which was under the command of the commander-in-chief of the French troops. An agreement was concluded between Russia and France on the transfer of the Czechoslovaks to the western front. They were supposed to follow the Trans-Siberian Railway to Vladivostok, there they boarded ships and sailed to Europe. By the end of May 1918, trains with parts of the corps (more than 45 thousand people) were stretched by rail from the Rtishchevo station (in the Penza region) to Vladivostok over a distance of 7 thousand km. There was a rumor that the local Soviets were ordered to disarm the corps and extradite the Czechoslovaks as prisoners of war to Austria-Hungary and Germany. At a meeting of regimental commanders, a decision was made - not to hand over weapons and fight their way to Vladivostok. On May 25, the commander of the Czechoslovak units, R. Gaida, ordered his subordinates to seize the stations where they were at the moment. In a relatively short time, with the help of the Czechoslovak corps, Soviet power was overthrown in the Volga region, the Urals, Siberia and the Far East.

The main springboard for the Socialist-Revolutionary struggle for national power was the territories liberated by the Czechoslovaks from the Bolsheviks. In the summer of 1918, regional governments were created, consisting mainly of members of the AKP: in Samara - the Committee of Members of the Constituent Assembly (Komuch), in Yekaterinburg - the Ural Regional Government, in Tomsk - the Provisional Siberian Government. The Socialist-Revolutionary-Menshevik authorities acted under the flag of two main slogans: "Power not to the Soviets, but to the Constituent Assembly!" and "Liquidation of the Brest Peace!" Part of the population supported these slogans. The new governments managed to form their own armed detachments. With the support of the Czechoslovaks, Komuch's People's Army took Kazan on August 6, hoping then to move on Moscow.

The Soviet government created the Eastern Front, which included five armies formed in the shortest possible time. L. D. Trotsky's armored train went to the front with a select combat team and a revolutionary military tribunal, which had unlimited powers. The first concentration camps were set up in Murom, Arzamas, and Sviyazhsk. Between the front and the rear, special barrage detachments were formed to deal with deserters. On September 2, 1918, the All-Russian Central Executive Committee declared the Soviet Republic a military camp. In early September, the Red Army managed to stop the enemy, and then go on the offensive. In September - early October, she liberated Kazan, Simbirsk, Syzran and Samara. Czechoslovak troops retreated to the Urals.

In September 1918, a meeting of representatives of the anti-Bolshevik forces was held in Ufa, which formed a single "All-Russian" government - the Ufa directory, in which the Socialist-Revolutionaries played the main role. The offensive of the Red Army forced the directory to move to Omsk in October. Admiral A. V. Kolchak was invited to the post of Minister of War. The Socialist-Revolutionary leaders of the directory hoped that the popularity he enjoyed in the Russian army would make it possible to unite the disparate military formations that acted against the Soviet regime in the expanses of the Urals and Siberia. However, on the night of November 17-18, 1918, a group of conspirators from the officers of the Cossack units stationed in Omsk arrested the socialists - members of the directory, and all power passed to Admiral Kolchak, who accepted the title of "Supreme Ruler of Russia" and the baton of the fight against the Bolsheviks on the Eastern Front.

"Red Terror". Liquidation of the House of Romanov. Along with economic and military measures, the Bolsheviks began to pursue a policy of intimidation of the population on a state scale, which was called the "Red Terror". In the cities, it assumed wide proportions from September 1918 - after the assassination of the chairman of the Petrograd Cheka, M. S. Uritsky, and the attempt in Moscow on the life of Lenin.

The terror was widespread. Only in response to the assassination attempt on Lenin, the Petrograd Chekists shot, according to official reports, 500 hostages.

One of the sinister pages of the "red terror" was the destruction of the royal family. October found the former Russian emperor and his relatives in Tobolsk, where in August 1917 they were sent into exile. In April 1918, the royal family was secretly transferred to Yekaterinburg and placed in a house that had previously belonged to the engineer Ipatiev. On July 16, 1918, apparently in agreement with the Council of People's Commissars, the Ural Regional Council decided to execute the tsar and his family. On the night of July 17, Nikolai, his wife, five children and servants were shot - a total of 11 people. Even earlier, on July 13, the tsar's brother Mikhail was killed in Perm. On July 18, 18 more members of the imperial family were executed in Alapaevsk.

Southern front. In the spring of 1918, the Don was filled with rumors about the upcoming equalizing redistribution of land. The Cossacks murmured. Then the order arrived in time for the surrender of weapons and the requisition of bread. The Cossacks revolted. It coincided with the arrival of the Germans on the Don. The Cossack leaders, forgetting about past patriotism, entered into negotiations with a recent enemy. On April 21, the Provisional Don Government was created, which began the formation of the Don Army. On May 16, the Cossack "Round of Don Salvation" elected General P. N. Krasnov as ataman of the Don Cossacks, endowing him with almost dictatorial powers. Relying on the support of the German generals, Krasnov declared the state independence of the Region of the Great Don Army. Parts of Krasnov, together with the German troops, launched military operations against the Red Army.

From the troops located in the region of Voronezh, Tsaritsyn and the North Caucasus, the Soviet government created in September 1918 the Southern Front, consisting of five armies. In November 1918, Krasnov's army inflicted a serious defeat on the Red Army and began to move north. At the cost of incredible efforts in December 1918, the Reds managed to stop the advance of the Cossack troops.

At the same time, the Volunteer Army of A.I. Denikin began its second campaign against the Kuban. The "volunteers" adhered to the Entente orientation and tried not to interact with Krasnov's pro-German detachments. Meanwhile, the foreign policy situation has changed dramatically. At the beginning of November 1918, the World War ended with the defeat of Germany and its allies. Under pressure and with the active help of the Entente countries, at the end of 1918, all the anti-Bolshevik armed forces of the South of Russia were united under the command of Denikin.

Military operations on the Eastern Front in 1919. On November 28, 1918, Admiral Kolchak, at a meeting with representatives of the press, stated that his immediate goal was to create a strong and combat-ready army for a merciless fight against the Bolsheviks, which should be facilitated by the sole form of power. After the liquidation of the Bolsheviks, the National Assembly should be convened "for the establishment of law and order in the country." All economic and social reforms must also be postponed until the end of the fight against the Bolsheviks. Kolchak announced mobilization and put 400 thousand people under arms.

In the spring of 1919, having achieved a numerical superiority in manpower, Kolchak went on the offensive. In March-April, his armies captured Sarapul, Izhevsk, Ufa, Sterlitamak. The advanced units were located several tens of kilometers from Kazan, Samara and Simbirsk. This success allowed the Whites to outline a new perspective - the possibility of Kolchak's campaign against Moscow while simultaneously leaving the left flank of his army to join Denikin.

The counteroffensive of the Red Army began on April 28, 1919. The troops under the command of M.V. Frunze in the battles near Samara defeated the elite Kolchak units and took Ufa in June. On July 14 Yekaterinburg was liberated. In November, the capital of Kolchak, Omsk, fell. The remnants of his army rolled further east. Under the blows of the Reds, the Kolchak government was forced to move to Irkutsk. On December 24, 1919, an anti-Kolchak uprising was raised in Irkutsk. Allied troops and the remaining Czechoslovak detachments declared their neutrality. In early January 1920, the Czechs handed over Kolchak to the leaders of the uprising, in February 1920 he was shot.

The Red Army suspended its offensive in Transbaikalia. On April 6, 1920, in the city of Verkhneudinsk (now Ulan-Ude), the creation of the Far Eastern Republic was proclaimed - a "buffer" bourgeois-democratic state, formally independent of the RSFSR, but actually led by the Far Eastern Bureau of the Central Committee of the RCP (b).

Campaign to Petrograd. At a time when the Red Army was winning victories over the Kolchak troops, a serious threat hung over Petrograd. After the victory of the Bolsheviks, many senior officials, industrialists and financiers emigrated to Finland. About 2.5 thousand officers of the tsarist army found shelter here. The emigrants created a Russian political committee in Finland, headed by General N. N. Yudenich. With the consent of the Finnish authorities, he began to form a White Guard army in Finland.

In the first half of May 1919, Yudenich launched an offensive against Petrograd. Having broken through the front of the Red Army between Narva and Lake Peipsi, his troops created a real threat to the city. On May 22, the Central Committee of the RCP(b) issued an appeal to the inhabitants of the country, which said: "Soviet Russia cannot give up Petrograd even for the shortest time ... The importance of this city, which was the first to raise the banner of insurrection against the bourgeoisie, is too great."

On June 13, the situation in Petrograd became even more complicated: anti-Bolshevik demonstrations by the Red Army broke out in the forts of Krasnaya Gorka, Gray Horse, and Obruchev. Not only the regular units of the Red Army, but also the naval artillery of the Baltic Fleet were used against the rebels. After the suppression of these speeches, the troops of the Petrograd Front went on the offensive and threw Yudenich's units back into Estonian territory. In October 1919, Yudenich's second offensive against Petrograd also ended in failure. In February 1920, the Red Army liberated Arkhangelsk, and in March, Murmansk.

Events on the Southern Front. Having received significant assistance from the Entente countries, Denikin's army in May-June 1919 went on the offensive along the entire front. By June 1919, she captured the Donbass, a significant part of Ukraine, Belgorod, Tsaritsyn. An attack on Moscow began, during which the Whites entered Kursk and Orel, and occupied Voronezh.

On Soviet territory, another wave of mobilization of forces and means began under the motto: "Everyone to fight Denikin!" In October 1919, the Red Army launched a counteroffensive. S. M. Budyonny's First Cavalry Army played a major role in changing the situation at the front. The rapid advance of the Reds in the autumn of 1919 led to the division of the Volunteer Army into two parts - the Crimean (it was headed by General P. N. Wrangel) and the North Caucasian. In February-March 1920, its main forces were defeated, the Volunteer Army ceased to exist.

In order to involve the entire Russian population in the fight against the Bolsheviks, Wrangel decided to turn the Crimea - the last springboard of the White movement - into a kind of "experimental field", recreating the democratic order interrupted by October there. On May 25, 1920, the "Law on Land" was published, the author of which was Stolypin's closest associate A.V. Krivoshey, who headed the "government of the South of Russia" in 1920.

For the former owners, part of their possessions is retained, but the size of this part is not fixed in advance, but is the subject of judgment of the volost and uyezd institutions, which are most familiar with local economic conditions ... Payment for alienated land must be paid by the new owners in grain, which is annually poured into the state reserve ... The state's proceeds from the new owners' grain contributions should serve as the main source of remuneration for the expropriated land of its former owners, with whom the Government considers it obligatory to pay.

The "Law on Volost Zemstvos and Rural Communities" was also issued, which could become bodies of peasant self-government instead of rural Soviets. In an effort to win over the Cossacks, Wrangel approved a new regulation on the order of regional autonomy for the Cossack lands. The workers were promised factory legislation that really protected their rights. However, time has been lost. In addition, Lenin was well aware of the threat to the Bolshevik government posed by the plan conceived by Wrangel. Decisive measures were taken to eliminate as quickly as possible the last "hotbed of counter-revolution" in Russia.

War with Poland. Defeat of Wrangel. Nevertheless, the main event of 1920 was the war between Soviet Russia and Poland. In April 1920, the head of independent Poland, J. Pilsudski, ordered an attack on Kiev. It was officially announced that it was only a matter of helping the Ukrainian people to eliminate Soviet power and restore the independence of Ukraine. On the night of May 7, Kiev was taken. However, the intervention of the Poles was perceived by the population of Ukraine as an occupation. These sentiments were taken advantage of by the Bolsheviks, who were able to rally various sections of society in the face of external danger.

Almost all the forces of the Red Army were thrown against Poland, united in the Western and Southwestern fronts. Their commanders were former officers of the tsarist army M.N. Tukhachevsky and A.I. Egorov. On June 12, Kiev was liberated. Soon the Red Army reached the border with Poland, which aroused hopes among some of the Bolshevik leaders for the speedy implementation of the idea of ​​a world revolution in Western Europe. In an order on the Western Front, Tukhachevsky wrote: "On our bayonets we will bring happiness and peace to working humanity. To the West!" However, the Red Army, which entered Polish territory, was rebuffed. The idea of ​​a world revolution was not supported by the Polish workers, who defended the state sovereignty of their country with weapons in their hands. On October 12, 1920, a peace treaty was signed in Riga with Poland, according to which the territories of Western Ukraine and Western Belarus passed to it.

Having made peace with Poland, the Soviet command concentrated all the power of the Red Army to fight Wrangel's army. The troops of the newly created Southern Front under the command of Frunze in November 1920 stormed the positions on Perekop and Chongar, forced the Sivash. The last fight between the Reds and the Whites was especially fierce and cruel. The remnants of the once formidable Volunteer Army rushed to the ships of the Black Sea squadron concentrated in the Crimean ports. Almost 100 thousand people were forced to leave their homeland.

Peasant uprisings in Central Russia. The clashes between the regular units of the Red Army and the White Guards were a facade of the civil war, demonstrating its two extreme poles, not the most numerous, but the most organized. Meanwhile, the victory of one side or another depended on the sympathy and support of the people, and above all the peasantry.

The decree on land gave the villagers what they had been striving for so long - landowners' land. On this, the peasants considered their revolutionary mission ended. They were grateful to the Soviet authorities for the land, but they were in no hurry to fight for this power with weapons in their hands, hoping to wait out the anxious time in their village, near their own allotment. The emergency food policy was met with hostility by the peasants. Clashes with food detachments began in the village. In July-August 1918 alone, more than 150 such clashes were recorded in Central Russia.

When the Revolutionary Military Council announced mobilization into the Red Army, the peasants responded by mass evasion of it. Up to 75% of recruits did not appear at the recruiting stations (in some districts of the Kursk province, the number of evaders reached 100%). On the eve of the first anniversary of the October Revolution, peasant uprisings broke out almost simultaneously in 80 districts of Central Russia. The mobilized peasants, seizing weapons from the recruiting stations, raised their fellow villagers to defeat the commanders, the Soviets, and party cells. The main political demand of the peasantry was the slogan "Soviets without communists!". The Bolsheviks declared the peasant uprisings to be "kulak", although both the middle peasants and even the poor took part in them. True, the very concept of "fist" was very vague and had more political than economic meaning (if you are dissatisfied with the Soviet regime, it means "fist").

Units of the Red Army and detachments of the Cheka were sent to suppress the uprisings. Leaders, instigators of protests, hostages were shot on the spot. The punitive organs carried out mass arrests of former officers, teachers, officials.

"Retelling". Wide sections of the Cossacks hesitated for a long time in choosing between red and white. However, some Bolshevik leaders unconditionally considered the entire Cossacks as a counter-revolutionary force, eternally hostile to the rest of the people. Repressive measures were carried out against the Cossacks, which were called "decossackization".

In response, an uprising broke out in Veshenskaya and other villages of Verkh-nedonya. The Cossacks announced the mobilization of men from 19 to 45 years old. The created regiments and divisions numbered about 30 thousand people. Handicraft production of pikes, sabers, and ammunition developed in forges and workshops. The approach to the villages was surrounded by trenches and trenches.

The Revolutionary Military Council of the Southern Front ordered the troops to crush the uprising "by applying the most severe measures" up to the burning of the rebelled farms, the merciless execution of "all without exception" participants in the speech, the execution of every fifth adult male, and the mass taking of hostages. By order of Trotsky, an expeditionary corps was created to fight the rebellious Cossacks.

The Veshensk uprising, having chained significant forces of the Red Army to itself, suspended the offensive of units of the Southern Front that had successfully begun in January 1919. Denikin immediately took advantage of this. His troops launched a counteroffensive along a wide front in the direction of the Donbass, Ukraine, Crimea, the Upper Don and Tsaritsyn. On June 5, the Veshenskaya rebels and parts of the White Guard breakthrough united.

These events forced the Bolsheviks to reconsider their policy towards the Cossacks. On the basis of the expeditionary corps, a corps was formed from the Cossacks who were in the service of the Red Army. F. K. Mironov, who was very popular among the Cossacks, was appointed its commander. In August 1919, the Council of People's Commissars declared that "it is not going to forcibly tell anyone, it does not go against the Cossack way of life, leaving the working Cossacks their villages and farms, their lands, the right to wear whatever uniform they want (for example, stripes)". The Bolsheviks assured that they would not take revenge on the Cossacks for the past. In October, by decision of the Politburo of the Central Committee of the RCP (b), Mironov turned to the Don Cossacks. The appeal of the most popular figure among the Cossacks played a huge role, the Cossacks in their bulk went over to the side of the Soviet authorities.

Peasants against whites. The mass discontent of the peasants was also observed in the rear of the white armies. However, it had a slightly different focus than in the rear of the Reds. If the peasants of the central regions of Russia opposed the introduction of emergency measures, but not against the Soviet regime as such, then the peasant movement in the rear of the White armies arose as a reaction to attempts to restore the old land order and, therefore, inevitably took on a pro-Bolshevik orientation. After all, it was the Bolsheviks who gave the peasants land. At the same time, the workers also became allies of the peasants in these areas, which made it possible to create a broad anti-White Guard front, which was strengthened by the entry into it of the Mensheviks and Socialist-Revolutionaries, who did not find a common language with the White Guard rulers.

One of the most important reasons for the temporary victory of the anti-Bolshevik forces in Siberia in the summer of 1918 was the vacillation of the Siberian peasantry. The fact is that in Siberia there was no landownership, so the decree on land changed little in the position of local farmers, nevertheless, they managed to get hold of at the expense of cabinet, state and monastery lands.

But with the establishment of the power of Kolchak, who canceled all the decrees of the Soviet government, the position of the peasantry worsened. In response to mass mobilization into the army of the "supreme ruler of Russia," peasant uprisings broke out in a number of districts of the Altai, Tobolsk, Tomsk, and Yenisei provinces. In an effort to turn the tide, Kolchak embarked on the path of exceptional laws, introducing the death penalty, martial law, organizing punitive expeditions. All these measures caused mass discontent among the population. Peasant uprisings engulfed all of Siberia. The partisan movement expanded.

Events developed in the same way in the South of Russia. In March 1919, the Denikin government published a draft land reform. However, the final solution of the land question was postponed until the complete victory over Bolshevism and was assigned to the future legislative assembly. In the meantime, the government of the South of Russia demanded that a third of the entire crop be provided to the owners of the occupied lands. Some representatives of Denikin's administration went even further, starting to settle the expelled landowners in the old ashes. This caused massive discontent among the peasants.

"Greens". Makhnovist movement. The peasant movement developed somewhat differently in the areas bordering the Red and White fronts, where power was constantly changing, but each of them demanded obedience to its own orders and laws, sought to replenish its ranks by mobilizing the local population. Deserting from both the White and the Red Army, the peasants, fleeing from the new mobilization, took refuge in the forests and created partisan detachments. They chose green as their symbol - the color of will and freedom, at the same time opposing themselves to both red and white movements. "Oh, apple, ripe colors, we beat red on the left, white on the right," they sang in the peasant detachments. The performances of the "greens" covered the entire south of Russia: the Black Sea region, the North Caucasus, and the Crimea.

The peasant movement reached its greatest extent in the south of Ukraine. This was largely due to the personality of the leader of the rebel army N. I. Makhno. Even during the first revolution, he joined the anarchists, participated in terrorist acts, and served indefinite hard labor. In March 1917, Makhno returned to his homeland - to the village of Gulyai-Pole, Yekaterinoslav province, where he was elected chairman of the local Council. On September 25, he signed a decree on the liquidation of landownership in Gulyai-Pole, ahead of Lenin in this matter by exactly a month. When Ukraine was occupied by Austro-German troops, Makhno assembled a detachment that raided German posts and burned the estates of the landowners. Fighters began to flock to the "dad" from all sides. Fighting both the Germans and the Ukrainian nationalists - Petliurists, Makhno did not let the Reds with their food detachments into the territory liberated by his detachments. In December 1918, Makhno's army captured the largest city in the South - Ekaterino-Slav. By February 1919, the Makhnovist army had grown to 30,000 regular fighters and 20,000 unarmed reserves. Under his control were the most grain-growing districts of Ukraine, a number of the most important railway junctions.

Makhno agreed to join the Red Army with his detachments for a joint fight against Denikin. For the victories won over Denikin, he, according to some reports, was among the first to be awarded the Order of the Red Banner. And General Denikin promised half a million rubles for Makhno's head. However, while providing military support to the Red Army, Makhno took an independent political position, establishing his own rules, ignoring the instructions of the central authorities. In addition, in the army of the "father" partisan orders reigned, the election of commanders. The Makhnovists did not disdain robberies and wholesale executions of white officers. Therefore, Makhno came into conflict with the leadership of the Red Army. Nevertheless, the rebel army took part in the defeat of Wrangel, was thrown into the most difficult areas, suffered huge losses, after which it was disarmed. Makhno, with a small detachment, continued the struggle against the Soviet regime. After several clashes with units of the Red Army, he went abroad with a handful of loyal people.

"Small Civil War". Despite the end of the war by the Reds and Whites, the policy of the Bolsheviks towards the peasantry did not change. Moreover, in many grain-producing provinces of Russia, the surplus appraisal has become even more stringent. In the spring and summer of 1921, a terrible famine broke out in the Volga region. It was provoked not so much by a severe drought, but by the fact that after the confiscation of surplus products in the fall, the peasants had neither grain for sowing, nor the desire to sow and cultivate the land. More than 5 million people died from starvation.

A particularly tense situation developed in the Tambov province, where the summer of 1920 turned out to be dry. And when the Tambov peasants received a surplus plan that did not take this circumstance into account, they rebelled. The uprising was led by the former police chief of the Kirsanov district of the Tambov province, the Social Revolutionary A. S. Antonov.

Simultaneously with Tambov, uprisings broke out in the Volga region, on the Don, Kuban, in Western and Eastern Siberia, in the Urals, in Belarus, Karelia, and Central Asia. The period of peasant uprisings 1920-1921. was called by contemporaries a "small civil war". The peasants created their own armies, which stormed and captured cities, put forward political demands, and formed government bodies. The Union of the Working Peasantry of the Tambov Province defined its main task as follows: "the overthrow of the power of the communist Bolsheviks, who brought the country to poverty, death and disgrace." The peasant detachments of the Volga region put forward the slogan of replacing Soviet power with a Constituent Assembly. In Western Siberia, the peasants demanded the establishment of a peasant dictatorship, the convocation of a Constituent Assembly, the denationalization of industry, and equal land tenure.

The whole power of the regular Red Army was thrown to suppress the peasant uprisings. Combat operations were commanded by commanders who became famous on the fields of the civil war - Tukhachevsky, Frunze, Budyonny and others. Methods of mass intimidation of the population were used on a large scale - taking hostages, shooting relatives of "bandits", deporting entire villages "sympathetic to the bandits" to the North.

Kronstadt uprising. The consequences of the civil war also affected the city. Due to the lack of raw materials and fuel, many enterprises were closed. The workers were on the street. Many of them went to the countryside in search of food. In 1921 Moscow lost half of its workers, Petrograd two thirds. Labor productivity in industry fell sharply. In some branches it reached only 20% of the pre-war level. In 1922, there were 538 strikes, and the number of strikers exceeded 200,000.

On February 11, 1921, 93 industrial enterprises, including such large plants as Putilovsky, Sestroretsky, and Triangle, were announced in Petrograd due to the lack of raw materials and fuel. Outraged workers took to the streets, strikes began. By order of the authorities, the demonstrations were dispersed by parts of the Petrograd cadets.

The unrest reached Kronstadt. On February 28, 1921, a meeting was convened on the battleship Petropavlovsk. Its chairman, the senior clerk S. Petrichenko, announced the resolution: immediate re-election of the Soviets by secret ballot, since "real Soviets do not express the will of the workers and peasants"; freedom of speech and press; the release of "political prisoners - members of the socialist parties"; liquidation of food requisitioning and food orders; freedom of trade, freedom for the peasants to work the land and have livestock; power to the Soviets, not to the parties. The main idea of ​​the rebels was the elimination of the Bolsheviks' monopoly on power. On March 1, this resolution was adopted at a joint meeting of the garrison and the inhabitants of the city. A delegation of Kronstadters sent to Petrograd, where there were mass strikes of workers, was arrested. In response, a Provisional Revolutionary Committee was set up in Kronstadt. On March 2, the Soviet government declared the Kronstadt uprising a mutiny and introduced a state of siege in Petrograd.

Any negotiations with the "rebels" were rejected by the Bolsheviks, and Trotsky, who arrived in Petrograd on March 5, spoke to the sailors in the language of an ultimatum. Kronstadt did not respond to the ultimatum. Then troops began to gather on the coast of the Gulf of Finland. Commander-in-Chief of the Red Army S. S. Kamenev and M. N. Tukhachevsky arrived to lead the operation to storm the fortress. Military experts could not help but understand how great the victims would be. But still the order to go on the assault was given. The Red Army soldiers advanced on loose March ice, in open space, under continuous fire. The first assault was unsuccessful. Delegates from the 10th Congress of the RCP(b) took part in the second assault. On March 18, Kronstadt ceased resistance. Part of the sailors, 6-8 thousand, went to Finland, more than 2.5 thousand were taken prisoner. Severe punishment awaited them.

Causes of the defeat of the white movement. The armed confrontation between the Whites and the Reds ended in victory for the Reds. The leaders of the white movement failed to offer the people an attractive program. In the territories they controlled, the laws of the Russian Empire were restored, property was returned to its former owners. And although none of the white governments openly put forward the idea of ​​restoring the monarchical order, the people perceived them as fighters for the old power, for the return of the tsar and the landowners. The national policy of the white generals, their fanatical adherence to the slogan "united and indivisible Russia" was not popular either.

The White movement could not become the core consolidating all the anti-Bolshevik forces. Moreover, by refusing to cooperate with the socialist parties, the generals themselves split the anti-Bolshevik front, turning the Mensheviks, Socialist-Revolutionaries, anarchists and their supporters into their opponents. And in the white camp itself there was no unity and interaction either in the political or in the military field. The movement did not have such a leader, whose authority would be recognized by all, who would understand that a civil war is not a battle of armies, but a battle of political programs.

And finally, according to the bitter admission of the white generals themselves, one of the reasons for the defeat was the moral decay of the army, the use of measures against the population that did not fit into the code of honor: robberies, pogroms, punitive expeditions, violence. The White movement was started by "almost saints" and finished by "almost bandits" - such a verdict was passed by one of the ideologists of the movement, the leader of Russian nationalists V. V. Shulgin.

The emergence of nation-states on the outskirts of Russia. The national outskirts of Russia were drawn into the civil war. On October 29, the power of the Provisional Government was overthrown in Kiev. However, the Central Rada refused to recognize the Bolshevik Council of People's Commissars as the legitimate government of Russia. At the All-Ukrainian Congress of Soviets convened in Kiev, the supporters of the Rada had the majority. The Bolsheviks left the congress. On November 7, 1917, the Central Rada proclaimed the creation of the Ukrainian People's Republic.

The Bolsheviks who left the Kiev Congress in December 1917 in Kharkov, populated mainly by Russians, convened the 1st All-Ukrainian Congress of Soviets, which proclaimed Ukraine a Soviet republic. The congress decided to establish federal relations with Soviet Russia, elected the Central Executive Committee of the Soviets and formed the Ukrainian Soviet government. At the request of this government, troops from Soviet Russia arrived in Ukraine to fight the Central Rada. In January 1918, armed protests by workers broke out in a number of Ukrainian cities, during which Soviet power was established. On January 26 (February 8), 1918, Kiev was taken by the Red Army. On January 27, the Central Rada turned to Germany for help. Soviet power in Ukraine was liquidated at the cost of the Austro-German occupation. In April 1918 the Central Rada was dispersed. General P. P. Skoropadsky became the hetman, proclaiming the creation of the "Ukrainian State".

Relatively quickly, Soviet power won in Belarus, Estonia and the unoccupied part of Latvia. However, the revolutionary transformations that had begun were interrupted by the German offensive. In February 1918, Minsk was captured by German troops. With the permission of the German command, a bourgeois-nationalist government was created here, which announced the creation of the Belarusian People's Republic and the separation of Belarus from Russia.

In the frontline territory of Latvia, controlled by Russian troops, the positions of the Bolsheviks were strong. They managed to fulfill the task set by the party - to prevent the transfer of troops loyal to the Provisional Government from the front to Petrograd. The revolutionary units became an active force in the establishment of Soviet power in the unoccupied territory of Latvia. By decision of the party, a company of Latvian riflemen was sent to Petrograd to protect the Smolny and the Bolshevik leadership. In February 1918, the entire territory of Latvia was captured by German troops; the old order began to be restored. Even after the defeat of Germany, with the consent of the Entente, its troops remained in Latvia. On November 18, 1918, the Provisional Bourgeois Government was established here, declaring Latvia an independent republic.

On February 18, 1918 German troops invaded Estonia. In November 1918, the Provisional Bourgeois Government began to operate here, signing on November 19 an agreement with Germany on the transfer of all power to it. In December 1917, the "Lithuanian Council" - the bourgeois Lithuanian government - issued a declaration "on the eternal allied ties of the Lithuanian state with Germany." In February 1918, with the consent of the German occupation authorities, the "Lithuanian Council" adopted an act of independence for Lithuania.

Events in Transcaucasia developed somewhat differently. In November 1917, the Menshevik Transcaucasian Commissariat and national military units were created here. The activities of the Soviets and the Bolshevik Party were banned. In February 1918, a new body of power arose - the Seim, which declared Transcaucasia "an independent federal democratic republic." However, in May 1918 this association collapsed, after which three bourgeois republics arose - Georgian, Azerbaijani and Armenian, headed by governments of moderate socialists.

Construction of the Soviet Federation. Part of the national outskirts, which declared their sovereignty, became part of the Russian Federation. In Turkestan, on November 1, 1917, power passed into the hands of the Regional Council and the executive committee of the Tashkent Council, which consisted of Russians. At the end of November, at the Extraordinary All-Muslim Congress in Kokand, the question of the autonomy of Turkestan and the creation of a national government was raised, but in February 1918, the Kokand autonomy was liquidated by detachments of local Red Guards. The Regional Congress of Soviets, which met at the end of April, adopted the "Regulations on the Turkestan Soviet Federative Republic" as part of the RSFSR. Part of the Muslim population perceived these events as an attack on Islamic traditions. The organization of partisan detachments began, challenging the Soviets for power in Turkestan. The members of these detachments were called Basmachi.

In March 1918, a decree was published declaring part of the territory of the Southern Urals and the Middle Volga the Tatar-Bashkir Soviet Republic within the RSFSR. In May 1918, the Congress of Soviets of the Kuban and the Black Sea Region proclaimed the Kuban-Black Sea Republic an integral part of the RSFSR. At the same time, the Don Autonomous Republic, the Soviet Republic of Taurida in the Crimea were formed.

Having proclaimed Russia a Soviet federal republic, the Bolsheviks at first did not define clear principles for its structure. Often it was conceived as a federation of Soviets, i.e. territories where Soviet power existed. For example, the Moscow region, which is part of the RSFSR, was a federation of 14 provincial Soviets, each of which had its own government.

As the power of the Bolsheviks consolidated, their views on the construction of a federal state became more definite. State independence began to be recognized only for the peoples who organized their national councils, and not for each regional council, as was the case in 1918. The Bashkir, Tatar, Kirghiz (Kazakh), Mountain, Dagestan national autonomous republics were created as part of the Russian Federation, and also the Chuvash, Kalmyk, Mari, Udmurt Autonomous Regions, the Karelian Labor Commune and the Commune of the Volga Germans.

The establishment of Soviet power in Ukraine, Belarus and the Baltic states. On November 13, 1918, the Soviet government annulled the Brest Treaty. The issue of expanding the Soviet system through the liberation of the territories occupied by the German-Austrian troops was on the agenda. This task was completed rather quickly, which was facilitated by three circumstances: 1) the presence of a significant number of the Russian population, which sought to restore a single state; 2) armed intervention of the Red Army; 3) the existence in these territories of communist organizations that were part of a single party. "Sovietization", as a rule, took place according to a single scenario: the preparation of an armed uprising by the communists and the call, allegedly on behalf of the people, to the Red Army to provide assistance to establish Soviet power.

In November 1918, the Ukrainian Soviet Republic was recreated, and the Provisional Workers' and Peasants' Government of Ukraine was formed. However, on December 14, 1918, the bourgeois-nationalist Directory, headed by V.K. Vinnichenko and S.V. Petlyura, seized power in Kiev. In February 1919, Soviet troops occupied Kiev, and later the territory of Ukraine became the arena of confrontation between the Red Army and Denikin's army. In 1920, Polish troops invaded Ukraine. However, neither the Germans, nor the Poles, nor the White Army of Denikin enjoyed the support of the population.

But the national governments - the Central Rada and the directory - did not have mass support either. This happened because national issues were paramount for them, while the peasantry was waiting for the agrarian reform. That is why the Ukrainian peasants ardently supported the Makhnovist anarchists. The nationalists could not count on the support of the urban population either, since in large cities a large percentage, primarily of the proletariat, were Russians. Over time, the Reds were able to finally gain a foothold in Kiev. In 1920, Soviet power was established in the left-bank Moldavia, which became part of the Ukrainian SSR. But the main part of Moldova - Bessarabia - remained under the rule of Romania, which occupied it in December 1917.

The Red Army was victorious in the Baltics. In November 1918, the Austro-German troops were expelled from there. Soviet republics emerged in Estonia, Latvia and Lithuania. In November, the Red Army entered the territory of Belarus. On December 31, the communists formed the Provisional Workers' and Peasants' Government, and on January 1, 1919, this government proclaimed the creation of the Byelorussian Soviet Socialist Republic. The All-Russian Central Executive Committee recognized the independence of the new Soviet republics and expressed its readiness to render them all possible assistance. Nevertheless, Soviet power in the Baltic countries did not last long, and in 1919-1920. with the help of European states, the power of national governments was restored there.

Establishment of Soviet power in Transcaucasia. By mid-April 1920, Soviet power was restored throughout the North Caucasus. In the republics of Transcaucasia - Azerbaijan, Armenia and Georgia - power remained in the hands of national governments. In April 1920, the Central Committee of the RCP(b) formed a special Caucasian Bureau (Kavbyuro) at the headquarters of the 11th Army operating in the North Caucasus. On April 27, Azerbaijani communists presented the government with an ultimatum to transfer power to the Soviets. On April 28, units of the Red Army were introduced into Baku, with which prominent figures of the Bolshevik Party G.K. Ordzhonikidze, S.M. Kirov, A.I. Mikoyan arrived. The Provisional Revolutionary Committee proclaimed Azerbaijan a Soviet Socialist Republic.

On November 27, Ordzhonikidze, chairman of the Kavburo, issued an ultimatum to the Armenian government: to transfer power to the Revolutionary Committee of the Armenian Soviet Socialist Republic, formed in Azerbaijan. Without waiting for the expiration of the ultimatum, the 11th Army entered the territory of Armenia. Armenia was proclaimed a sovereign socialist state.

The Georgian Menshevik government enjoyed authority among the population and had a fairly strong army. In May 1920, during the war with Poland, the Council of People's Commissars signed an agreement with Georgia, which recognized the independence and sovereignty of the Georgian state. In return, the Georgian government undertook to allow the activities of the Communist Party and withdraw foreign military units from Georgia. S. M. Kirov was appointed Plenipotentiary Representative of the RSFSR in Georgia. In February 1921, a Military Revolutionary Committee was created in a small Georgian village, asking the Red Army for help in the fight against the government. On February 25, the regiments of the 11th Army entered Tiflis, Georgia was proclaimed a Soviet socialist republic.

The fight against Basmachi. During the civil war, the Turkestan Autonomous Soviet Socialist Republic was cut off from Central Russia. The Red Army of Turkestan was created here. In September 1919, the troops of the Turkestan Front under the command of M.V. Frunze broke through the encirclement and restored the connection of the Turkestan Republic with the center of Russia.

On February 1, 1920, under the leadership of the Communists, an uprising was raised against the Khan of Khiva. The rebels were supported by the Red Army. The Congress of Soviets of People's Representatives (Kurultai) held soon in Khiva proclaimed the creation of the Khorezm People's Republic. In August 1920, the pro-communist forces raised an uprising in Chardzhou and turned to the Red Army for help. The Red troops under the command of M.V. Frunze took Bukhara in stubborn battles, the emir fled. The All-Bukhara People's Kurultai, which met in early October 1920, proclaimed the formation of the Bukhara People's Republic.

In 1921, the Basmachi movement entered a new phase. It was headed by the former Minister of War of the Turkish government, Enver Pasha, who hatched plans to create a state allied with Turkey in Turkestan. He managed to unite the scattered Basmachi detachments and create a single army, establish close ties with the Afghans, who supplied the Basmachi with weapons and gave them shelter. In the spring of 1922, the army of Enver Pasha captured a significant part of the territory of the Bukhara People's Republic. The Soviet government sent a regular army from Central Russia to Central Asia, reinforced by aviation. In August 1922, Enver Pasha was killed in battle. The Turkestan Bureau of the Central Committee compromised with the adherents of Islam. Mosques were given back their land holdings, Sharia courts and religious schools were restored. This policy has paid off. Basmachism lost the mass support of the population.

What you need to know about this topic:

Socio-economic and political development of Russia at the beginning of the 20th century. Nicholas II.

Domestic policy of tsarism. Nicholas II. Strengthening repression. "Police socialism".

Russo-Japanese War. Reasons, course, results.

Revolution of 1905 - 1907 The nature, driving forces and features of the Russian revolution of 1905-1907. stages of the revolution. The reasons for the defeat and the significance of the revolution.

Elections to the State Duma. I State Duma. The agrarian question in the Duma. Dispersal of the Duma. II State Duma. Coup d'état June 3, 1907

Third June political system. Electoral law June 3, 1907 III State Duma. The alignment of political forces in the Duma. Duma activities. government terror. The decline of the labor movement in 1907-1910

Stolypin agrarian reform.

IV State Duma. Party composition and Duma factions. Duma activities.

The political crisis in Russia on the eve of the war. The labor movement in the summer of 1914 Crisis of the top.

The international position of Russia at the beginning of the 20th century.

Beginning of the First World War. Origin and nature of war. Russia's entry into the war. Attitude towards the war of parties and classes.

The course of hostilities. Strategic forces and plans of the parties. Results of the war. The role of the Eastern Front in the First World War.

The Russian economy during the First World War.

Workers' and peasants' movement in 1915-1916. Revolutionary movement in the army and navy. Growing anti-war sentiment. Formation of the bourgeois opposition.

Russian culture of the 19th - early 20th centuries.

Aggravation of socio-political contradictions in the country in January-February 1917. The beginning, prerequisites and nature of the revolution. Uprising in Petrograd. Formation of the Petrograd Soviet. Provisional Committee of the State Duma. Order N I. Formation of the Provisional Government. Abdication of Nicholas II. Causes of dual power and its essence. February coup in Moscow, at the front, in the provinces.

From February to October. The policy of the Provisional Government regarding war and peace, on agrarian, national, labor issues. Relations between the Provisional Government and the Soviets. The arrival of V.I. Lenin in Petrograd.

Political parties (Kadets, Social Revolutionaries, Mensheviks, Bolsheviks): political programs, influence among the masses.

Crises of the Provisional Government. An attempted military coup in the country. Growth of revolutionary sentiment among the masses. Bolshevization of the capital Soviets.

Preparation and conduct of an armed uprising in Petrograd.

II All-Russian Congress of Soviets. Decisions about power, peace, land. Formation of public authorities and management. Composition of the first Soviet government.

The victory of the armed uprising in Moscow. Government agreement with the Left SRs. Elections to the Constituent Assembly, its convocation and dissolution.

The first socio-economic transformations in the field of industry, agriculture, finance, labor and women's issues. Church and State.

Treaty of Brest-Litovsk, its terms and significance.

Economic tasks of the Soviet government in the spring of 1918. Aggravation of the food issue. The introduction of food dictatorship. Working squads. Comedy.

The revolt of the left SRs and the collapse of the two-party system in Russia.

First Soviet Constitution.

Causes of intervention and civil war. The course of hostilities. Human and material losses of the period of the civil war and military intervention.

The internal policy of the Soviet leadership during the war. "War Communism". GOELRO plan.

The policy of the new government in relation to culture.

Foreign policy. Treaties with border countries. Participation of Russia in the Genoa, Hague, Moscow and Lausanne conferences. Diplomatic recognition of the USSR by the main capitalist countries.

Domestic policy. Socio-economic and political crisis of the early 20s. Famine of 1921-1922 Transition to a new economic policy. The essence of the NEP. NEP in the field of agriculture, trade, industry. financial reform. Economic recovery. Crises during the NEP and its curtailment.

Projects for the creation of the USSR. I Congress of Soviets of the USSR. The first government and the Constitution of the USSR.

Illness and death of V.I. Lenin. Intraparty struggle. The beginning of the formation of Stalin's regime of power.

Industrialization and collectivization. Development and implementation of the first five-year plans. Socialist competition - purpose, forms, leaders.

Formation and strengthening of the state system of economic management.

The course towards complete collectivization. Dispossession.

Results of industrialization and collectivization.

Political, national-state development in the 30s. Intraparty struggle. political repression. Formation of the nomenklatura as a layer of managers. Stalinist regime and the constitution of the USSR in 1936

Soviet culture in the 20-30s.

Foreign policy of the second half of the 20s - mid-30s.

Domestic policy. The growth of military production. Extraordinary measures in the field of labor legislation. Measures to solve the grain problem. Military establishment. Growth of the Red Army. military reform. Repressions against the command personnel of the Red Army and the Red Army.

Foreign policy. Non-aggression pact and treaty of friendship and borders between the USSR and Germany. The entry of Western Ukraine and Western Belarus into the USSR. Soviet-Finnish war. The inclusion of the Baltic republics and other territories in the USSR.

Periodization of the Great Patriotic War. The initial stage of the war. Turning the country into a military camp. Military defeats 1941-1942 and their reasons. Major military events Capitulation of Nazi Germany. Participation of the USSR in the war with Japan.

Soviet rear during the war.

Deportation of peoples.

Partisan struggle.

Human and material losses during the war.

Creation of the anti-Hitler coalition. Declaration of the United Nations. The problem of the second front. Conferences of the "Big Three". Problems of post-war peace settlement and all-round cooperation. USSR and UN.

Beginning of the Cold War. The contribution of the USSR to the creation of the "socialist camp". CMEA formation.

Domestic policy of the USSR in the mid-1940s - early 1950s. Restoration of the national economy.

Socio-political life. Politics in the field of science and culture. Continued repression. "Leningrad business". Campaign against cosmopolitanism. "Doctors' Case".

Socio-economic development of Soviet society in the mid-50s - the first half of the 60s.

Socio-political development: XX Congress of the CPSU and the condemnation of Stalin's personality cult. Rehabilitation of victims of repressions and deportations. Intra-party struggle in the second half of the 1950s.

Foreign policy: the creation of the ATS. The entry of Soviet troops into Hungary. Exacerbation of Soviet-Chinese relations. The split of the "socialist camp". Soviet-American Relations and the Caribbean Crisis. USSR and third world countries. Reducing the strength of the armed forces of the USSR. Moscow Treaty on the Limitation of Nuclear Tests.

USSR in the mid-60s - the first half of the 80s.

Socio-economic development: economic reform 1965

Growing difficulties of economic development. Decline in the rate of socio-economic growth.

USSR Constitution 1977

Socio-political life of the USSR in the 1970s - early 1980s.

Foreign Policy: Treaty on the Non-Proliferation of Nuclear Weapons. Consolidation of post-war borders in Europe. Moscow treaty with Germany. Conference on Security and Cooperation in Europe (CSCE). Soviet-American treaties of the 70s. Soviet-Chinese relations. The entry of Soviet troops into Czechoslovakia and Afghanistan. Exacerbation of international tension and the USSR. Strengthening of the Soviet-American confrontation in the early 80s.

USSR in 1985-1991

Domestic policy: an attempt to accelerate the socio-economic development of the country. An attempt to reform the political system of Soviet society. Congresses of People's Deputies. Election of the President of the USSR. Multi-party system. Exacerbation of the political crisis.

Exacerbation of the national question. Attempts to reform the national-state structure of the USSR. Declaration on State Sovereignty of the RSFSR. "Novogarevsky process". The collapse of the USSR.

Foreign policy: Soviet-American relations and the problem of disarmament. Treaties with leading capitalist countries. The withdrawal of Soviet troops from Afghanistan. Changing relations with the countries of the socialist community. Disintegration of the Council for Mutual Economic Assistance and the Warsaw Pact.

Russian Federation in 1992-2000

Domestic policy: "Shock therapy" in the economy: price liberalization, stages of privatization of commercial and industrial enterprises. Fall in production. Increased social tension. Growth and slowdown in financial inflation. The aggravation of the struggle between the executive and legislative branches. The dissolution of the Supreme Soviet and the Congress of People's Deputies. October events of 1993. Abolition of local bodies of Soviet power. Elections to the Federal Assembly. The Constitution of the Russian Federation of 1993 Formation of the presidential republic. Aggravation and overcoming of national conflicts in the North Caucasus.

Parliamentary elections 1995 Presidential elections 1996 Power and opposition. An attempt to return to the course of liberal reforms (spring 1997) and its failure. The financial crisis of August 1998: causes, economic and political consequences. "Second Chechen War". Parliamentary elections in 1999 and early presidential elections in 2000 Foreign policy: Russia in the CIS. The participation of Russian troops in the "hot spots" of the near abroad: Moldova, Georgia, Tajikistan. Russia's relations with foreign countries. The withdrawal of Russian troops from Europe and neighboring countries. Russian-American agreements. Russia and NATO. Russia and the Council of Europe. Yugoslav crises (1999-2000) and Russia's position.

  • Danilov A.A., Kosulina L.G. History of the state and peoples of Russia. XX century.

The civil war that took place in Russia from 1917 to 1922 was a bloody event, where in a brutal massacre brother went against brother, and relatives took up positions on opposite sides of the barricades. In this armed class clash on the vast territory of the former Russian Empire, the interests of opposing political structures intersected, conditionally divided into “reds” and “whites”. This struggle for power took place with the active support of foreign states that tried to extract their interests from this situation: Japan, Poland, Turkey, Romania wanted to annex part of the Russian territories, while other countries - the USA, France, Canada, Great Britain expected to receive tangible economic preferences.

As a result of such a bloody civil war, Russia turned into a weakened state, the economy and industry of which were in a state of complete ruin. But after the end of the war, the country adhered to the socialist course of development, and this influenced the course of history throughout the world.

Causes of the civil war in Russia

A civil war in any country is always caused by aggravated political, national, religious, economic and, of course, social contradictions. The territory of the former Russian Empire was no exception.

  • Social inequality in Russian society has been accumulating for centuries, and at the beginning of the 20th century it reached its apogee, since the workers and peasants found themselves in an absolutely powerless position, and their working and living conditions were simply unbearable. The autocracy did not want to smooth out social contradictions and carry out any significant reforms. It was during this period that the revolutionary movement grew, which managed to lead the Bolshevik parties.
  • Against the backdrop of the protracted First World War, all these contradictions became noticeably aggravated, which resulted in the February and October revolutions.
  • As a result of the revolution in October 1917, the political system in the state changed, and the Bolsheviks came to power in Russia. But the overthrown classes could not reconcile themselves to the situation and made attempts to restore their former dominance.
  • The establishment of Bolshevik power led to the rejection of the ideas of parliamentarism and the creation of a one-party system, which prompted the parties of the Cadets, Socialist-Revolutionaries, and Mensheviks to fight Bolshevism, that is, the struggle between the “whites” and the “reds” began.
  • In the fight against the enemies of the revolution, the Bolsheviks used non-democratic measures - the establishment of a dictatorship, repression, the persecution of the opposition, the creation of emergency bodies. This, of course, caused discontent in society, and among those dissatisfied with the actions of the authorities were not only the intelligentsia, but also workers and peasants.
  • The nationalization of land and industry caused resistance from the former owners, which led to terrorist actions on both sides.
  • Despite the fact that Russia ceased its participation in the First World War in 1918, a powerful interventionist group was present on its territory, which actively supported the White Guard movement.

The course of the civil war in Russia

Before the start of the civil war, there were regions on the territory of Russia that were loosely interconnected: in some of them, Soviet power was firmly established, while others (south of Russia, the Chita region) were under the rule of independent governments. On the territory of Siberia, in general, one could count up to two dozen local governments, not only not recognizing the power of the Bolsheviks, but also at enmity with each other.

When the civil war began, then all the inhabitants had to decide, that is, to join the “whites” or “reds”.

The course of the civil war in Russia can be divided into several periods.

First period: October 1917 to May 1918

At the very beginning of the fratricidal war, the Bolsheviks had to suppress local armed rebellions in Petrograd, Moscow, Transbaikalia and the Don. It was at this time that a white movement was formed from those dissatisfied with the new government. In March, the young republic, after an unsuccessful war, concluded the shameful Treaty of Brest-Litovsk.

Second period: June to November 1918

At this time, a full-scale civil war began: the Soviet Republic was forced to fight not only with internal enemies, but also with interventionists. As a result, most of the Russian territory was captured by enemies, and this threatened the existence of the young state. In the east of the country, Kolchak dominated, in the south Denikin, in the north Miller, and their armies tried to close the ring around the capital. The Bolsheviks, in turn, created the Red Army, which achieved its first military successes.

Third period: November 1918 to spring 1919

In November 1918, the First World War ended. Soviet power was established in the Ukrainian, Belarusian and Baltic territories. But already at the end of autumn, the Entente troops landed in the Crimea, Odessa, Batumi and Baku. But this military operation was not crowned with success, since revolutionary anti-war sentiments reigned in the troops of the interventionists. During this period of the struggle against Bolshevism, the leading role belonged to the armies of Kolchak, Yudenich and Denikin.

Fourth Period: Spring 1919 to Spring 1920

During this period, the main forces of the interventionists left Russia. In the spring and autumn of 1919, the Red Army won major victories in the East, South and North-West of the country, defeating the armies of Kolchak, Denikin and Yudenich.

Fifth period: spring-autumn 1920

The internal counter-revolution was completely destroyed. And in the spring the Soviet-Polish war began, which ended in complete failure for Russia. According to the Riga Peace Treaty, part of the Ukrainian and Belarusian lands went to Poland.

Sixth period:: 1921-1922

During these years, all the remaining centers of the civil war were liquidated: the rebellion in Kronstadt was suppressed, the Makhnovist detachments were destroyed, the Far East was liberated, the struggle against the Basmachi in Central Asia was completed.

The results of the civil war

  • As a result of hostilities and terror, more than 8 million people died from hunger and disease.
  • Industry, transport and agriculture were on the verge of disaster.
  • The main result of this terrible war was the final assertion of Soviet power.

Every Russian knows that in the Civil War of 1917-1922, two movements opposed - "red" and "white". But among historians there is still no consensus on how it began. Someone believes that the reason was Krasnov's March on the Russian capital (October 25); others believe that the war began when, in the near future, the commander of the Volunteer Army, Alekseev, arrived on the Don (November 2); there is also an opinion that the war began with the fact that Milyukov proclaimed the “Declaration of the Volunteer Army, delivering a speech at the ceremony, called the Don (December 27). Another popular opinion, which is far from unfounded, is the opinion that the Civil War began immediately after the February Revolution, when the whole society split into supporters and opponents of the Romanov monarchy.

"White" movement in Russia

Everyone knows that "whites" are adherents of the monarchy and the old order. Its beginnings were visible as early as February 1917, when the monarchy was overthrown in Russia and a total restructuring of society began. The development of the "white" movement was during the period when the Bolsheviks came to power, the formation of Soviet power. They represented a circle of dissatisfied with the Soviet government, disagreeing with its policy and principles of its conduct.
The "whites" were fans of the old monarchical system, refused to accept the new socialist order, adhered to the principles of traditional society. It is important to note that the "whites" were very often radicals, they did not believe that it was possible to agree on something with the "reds", on the contrary, they had the opinion that no negotiations and concessions were allowed.
The "Whites" chose the tricolor of the Romanovs as their banner. Admiral Denikin and Kolchak commanded the white movement, one in the South, the other in the harsh regions of Siberia.
The historical event that became the impetus for the activation of the "whites" and the transition to their side of most of the former army of the Romanov empire is the rebellion of General Kornilov, which, although it was suppressed, helped the "whites" strengthen their ranks, especially in the southern regions, where, under the command of the general Alekseev began to gather huge resources and a powerful disciplined army. Every day the army was replenished due to newcomers, it grew rapidly, developed, tempered, trained.
Separately, it must be said about the commanders of the White Guards (this was the name of the army created by the "white" movement). They were unusually talented commanders, prudent politicians, strategists, tacticians, subtle psychologists, and skillful speakers. The most famous were Lavr Kornilov, Anton Denikin, Alexander Kolchak, Pyotr Krasnov, Pyotr Wrangel, Nikolai Yudenich, Mikhail Alekseev. You can talk about each of them for a long time, their talent and merits for the "white" movement can hardly be overestimated.
In the war, the White Guards won for a long time, and even brought their troops to Moscow. But the Bolshevik army was growing stronger, besides, they were supported by a significant part of the population of Russia, especially the poorest and most numerous sections - workers and peasants. In the end, the forces of the White Guards were smashed to smithereens. For some time they continued to operate abroad, but without success, the "white" movement ceased.

"Red" movement

Like the "whites", in the ranks of the "reds" there were many talented commanders and politicians. Among them, it is important to note the most famous, namely: Leon Trotsky, Brusilov, Novitsky, Frunze. These commanders showed themselves excellently in battles against the White Guards. Trotsky was the main founder of the Red Army, which was the decisive force in the confrontation between the "whites" and the "reds" in the Civil War. The ideological leader of the "red" movement was Vladimir Ilyich Lenin, known to every person. Lenin and his government were actively supported by the most massive sections of the population of the Russian State, namely, the proletariat, the poor, landless and landless peasants, and the working intelligentsia. It was these classes who quickly believed the tempting promises of the Bolsheviks, supported them and brought the "Reds" to power.
The main party in the country was the Russian Social Democratic Labor Party of the Bolsheviks, which was later turned into a communist party. In fact, it was an association of intelligentsia, adherents of the socialist revolution, whose social base was the working classes.
It was not easy for the Bolsheviks to win the Civil War - they had not yet completely strengthened their power throughout the country, the forces of their fans were dispersed throughout the vast country, plus the national outskirts began a national liberation struggle. A lot of strength went into the war with the Ukrainian People's Republic, so the Red Army during the Civil War had to fight on several fronts.
Attacks of the White Guards could come from any side of the horizon, because the White Guards surrounded the Red Army soldiers from all sides with four separate military formations. And despite all the difficulties, it was the “Reds” who won the war, mainly due to the broad social base of the Communist Party.
All representatives of the national outskirts united against the White Guards, and therefore they also became forced allies of the Red Army in the Civil War. To win over the inhabitants of the national outskirts, the Bolsheviks used loud slogans, such as the idea of ​​"one and indivisible Russia."
The Bolsheviks won the war with the support of the masses. The Soviet government played on the sense of duty and patriotism of Russian citizens. The White Guards themselves also added fuel to the fire, since their invasions were most often accompanied by mass robbery, looting, violence in its other manifestations, which could not in any way encourage people to support the "white" movement.

Results of the Civil War

As has been said several times, the victory in this fratricidal war went to the "Reds". The fratricidal civil war became a real tragedy for the Russian people. The material damage caused to the country by the war, according to estimates, amounted to about 50 billion rubles - unimaginable money at that time, several times higher than the amount of Russia's external debt. Because of this, the level of industry decreased by 14%, and agriculture - by 50%. Human losses, according to various sources, ranged from 12 to 15 million. Most of these people died from starvation, repression, and disease. During the hostilities, more than 800 thousand soldiers from both sides gave their lives. Also, during the Civil War, the balance of migration dropped sharply - about 2 million Russians left the country and went abroad.

The civil war is one of the bloodiest pages in the history of our country in the 20th century. The front line in this war did not pass through fields and forests, but in the souls and minds of people, forcing a brother to shoot at his brother, and a son to raise a saber against his father.

Beginning of the Russian Civil War 1917-1922

In October 1917, the Bolsheviks came to power in Petrograd. The period of the establishment of Soviet power was distinguished by the swiftness and speed with which the Bolsheviks established control over military depots, infrastructure and created new armed detachments.

The Bolsheviks had extensive social support thanks to the decrees on peace and land. This massive support compensated for the poor organization and combat training of the Bolshevik detachments.

At the same time, mainly among the educated part of the population, which was based on the nobility and the middle class, there was an understanding that the Bolsheviks came to power illegitimately, and, therefore, they should be fought. The political struggle was lost, only the armed one remained.

Causes of the Civil War

Any step taken by the Bolsheviks gave them both a new army of supporters and opponents. Therefore, the citizens of the Russian Republic had reason to organize armed resistance to the Bolsheviks.

The Bolsheviks demolished the front, seized power, launched terror. This could not help but force those whom they used to take up the rifle as a bargaining chip in the future construction of socialism.

The nationalization of the land caused discontent among those who owned it. This immediately turned the bourgeoisie and landlords against the Bolsheviks.

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The "dictatorship of the proletariat" promised by V. I. Lenin turned out to be the dictatorship of the Central Committee. The publication of the decree "On the arrest of the leaders of the Civil War" in November 1917 and on the "Red Terror" allowed the Bolsheviks to calmly exterminate their opposition. This caused retaliatory aggression on the part of the Socialist-Revolutionaries, Mensheviks and anarchists.

Rice. 1. Lenin in October.

The methodology of the government did not correspond to the slogans that the Bolshevik Party put forward during its coming to power, which forced the kulaks, the Cossacks and the bourgeoisie to turn away from them.

And, finally, seeing how the empire was collapsing, the neighboring states actively tried to get personal benefit from the political processes taking place on the territory of Russia.

Date of the beginning of the Civil War in Russia

There is no consensus on the exact date. Some historians believe that the conflict began immediately after the October Revolution, others call the beginning of the war in the spring of 1918, when foreign intervention took place and opposition to Soviet power was formed.
There is also no single point of view on the question of who is to blame at the beginning of the Civil War: the Bolsheviks or those who began to resist them.

First stage of the war

After the dispersal of the Constituent Assembly by the Bolsheviks, among the dispersed representatives there were those who did not agree with this and were ready to fight. They fled from Petrograd to territories not controlled by the Bolsheviks - to Samara. There they formed the Committee of Members of the Constituent Assembly (Komuch) and declared themselves the only legitimate authority and made it their task to overthrow the power of the Bolsheviks. The Komuch of the first convocation included five Social Revolutionaries.

Rice. 2. Members of the Komuch of the first convocation.

Forces opposing Soviet power were also formed in many regions of the former empire. Let's show them in the table:

In the spring of 1918, Germany occupied the Ukraine, the Crimea, and part of the North Caucasus; Romania - Bessarabia; England, France and the United States landed in Murmansk, while Japan deployed its troops in the Far East. In May 1918, the uprising of the Czechoslovak Corps also took place. So Soviet power was overthrown in Siberia, and in the south the Volunteer Army, having laid the foundation of the White Army "Armed Forces of the South of Russia", set off on the famous Ice Campaign, freeing the Don steppes from the Bolsheviks. Thus ended the first phase of the Civil War.

“every righteous blood that you shed will be exacted from you” (Luke 11:51)

95 years ago, in 1917, events took place in Russia that radically transformed the way and traditions of life of the peoples of our vast multinational country, changing its entire centuries-old history - the February and October revolutions. As a result of these two grandiose events, Russia turned from a great power, with which not only Europe, but the whole world was considered, into a certain space with dozens of self-proclaimed states, torn apart by enmity and ambitions of various rulers and leaders, a territory where the Civil War went on for years, and hundreds of thousands of people died in bloody battles, died from wounds, hunger and disease.

Who unleashed the Civil War? What are its reasons? Any revolution is a complex and lengthy process of changing moods in broad social strata. It was believed that the February Revolution was "bloodless". Minister of the Provisional Government Pavel Milyukov stated: “Both revolutions stood in complete contrast with each other. The first, February, we called "bloodless" and considered national and reasonable. But the second revolution, the October one, on the contrary, divided the nation and became the signal of a long civil war in which the worst forms of violence were used. This assessment is only partly correct, because it is precisely as a result of The February Revolution, against the background of the people's fatigue from the ongoing World War, class hatred became extremely aggravated. And here is freedom! Many understood freedom as permissiveness - you can rob and smash the landowners' estates, kill policemen, and inflict reprisals on officials and officers. But if during the February Revolution all this was of a spontaneous, unorganized nature, then the October Revolution legitimized these wild reprisals by decreeing terror, mass executions, robberies, and the arrest of hostages. Moreover, the usurpation of power by the Soviets was met with hostility, of course, by the former ruling classes. The Brest peace especially offended the patriotic feelings of the officers and most of the intelligentsia. It was after this act that voluntary detachments of the White Guard began to be massively formed. Violence from the side of the Soviet government caused retaliatory violence.

Red Goals were clearly indicated in the "Internationale" - the anthem of the Bolsheviks "... we will destroy the whole world of violence to the ground, and then we will build ours, we will build a new world ...", and for this it was necessary:

Seize and hold power at any cost, including by force of arms;

Destroy the old state system: legislative and executive power, local government, armed forces, police, court, prosecutor's office, advocacy;

- "Turn the imperialist war into a civil war!" (V.I. Ulyanov (Lenin), and through the Civil War to establish the dictatorship of the proletariat (in fact, the Bolshevik Party), to abandon the government of the country by democratic methods; to suppress the resistance of the overthrown classes by force;

Eliminate private ownership of land, tools and means of production;

Overcoming the natural inequality of people, to impose on people a "new consciousness" - a dangerous utopia of socialism, communism, i.e. "levelling".

White Goals were diametrically opposed to the goals of the Reds. In the program of General L.G. Kornilov dated January 18, 1918: it was planned: “Restoration of the rights of citizenship: all citizens are equal before the law without distinction of gender and nationality. Destruction of class privileges, preservation of the inviolability of the person and home, freedom of movement, residence, etc. Full restoration of freedom of speech and press; restoration of freedom of industry and trade, the abolition of the nationalization of private enterprises. Restoration of the Russian army on the basis of genuine military discipline. The army must be formed on a voluntary basis, without committees, commissars and elected positions; full fulfillment by Russia of allied commitments and international treaties. The war must be carried through to the end in close unity with our allies. Peace must be concluded universal and honorable on the democratic principle, that is, with the right to self-determination of the oppressed peoples. Introduction in Russia of universal compulsory primary education with broad school autonomy. The convocation of the Constituent Assembly, thwarted by the Bolsheviks, to which all the fullness of state-legal power should be transferred. It must work out the basic laws of the Constitution and finally construct the state system of Russia. Restoration of the integrity of the Russian Empire, violated by the shameful conditions of the Treaty of Brest-Litovsk, concluded by the Bolsheviks with the Germans; restoration of order in the country, destroyed by the October coup. Restoration of the foundations of private ownership of land, tools and means of production. Obtaining by the Church full autonomy in matters of religion, the elimination of state guardianship over matters of religion, freedom of religion is fully exercised. The complex agrarian question is submitted for resolution to the Constituent Assembly. Before the development of the final form of the land issue and the issuance of relevant laws, any kind of anarchist-grabbing actions of citizens are recognized as unacceptable. Equality of all citizens before the court. The death penalty remains in force, but is applied only in cases of the gravest state crimes. Preservation for the workers of all the political and economic gains of the revolution in the field of labor regulation, freedom of workers' unions, meetings and strikes, with the exception of the forcible socialization of enterprises and workers' control, leading to the death of domestic industry. Recognition for the individual peoples that are part of Russia, the right to broad local autonomy, provided, however, the preservation of state unity. Poland, Ukraine and Finland, formed into separate, national-state units, should be widely supported by the Government of Russia in their aspirations for state revival, in order to further solder the eternal and indestructible union of fraternal peoples.

Approximately the same were the programs of other leaders of the White movement: Generalov A.I. Denikin, P.N. Wrangel, A.V. Kolchak. None of them set as their goal the restoration of the monarchy, the elimination of the gains of the February Democratic Revolution, the dismemberment of Russia or its transfer to foreign interventionists. Here, for example, is the program of General A.I. Denikin: “The unity of all forces in the fight against the Bolsheviks. The unity of the country and power. The widest autonomy of the outskirts. Loyalty to agreements with allies in the war. Preservation of United and Indivisible Russia.

What was the policy of the Bolsheviks? Representatives of the ruling circles - nobles, bourgeois, officials, officers, merchants were expelled from all state and local authorities, they all lost their former rights and privileges. Their lack of rights and discrimination were enshrined in decrees of the Soviet government. The attitude towards them and their families was mostly mocking, they were treated as freeloaders and parasites. Distrust was shown even to those of them who collaborated with the Soviet government. For this reason, many representatives of the old governmentNaturally, they strove with all their might to restore their former position.

In addition, the RCP(b) did not want to share power with anyone. The activities and publication of newspapers of other parties were banned, except for the Left Socialist-Revolutionary Party, but after July 6, 1918, this party as well. All civil rights and freedoms of a person, which were guaranteed by the tsar's manifesto on October 17, 1905, were abolished, namely: inviolability of the person and home, freedom of assembly, speech, press, universal, equal and direct elections by secret ballot. For the period from 1905 to 1913. elections were held to the State Duma!, 2nd, 3rd and 4th convocations from various parties, including opposition parties. The Bolsheviks were also elected to the 4th Duma: A.E. Badaev, G.I. Petrovsky, M.K. Muralov, N.R. Shagov, F.N. in 1915 from the Duma). The Pravda newspaper, published since 1912, was banned several times for anti-government articles, but after some time it was published under a new name. So Emperor Nicholas II was not so “bloody” as the Bolshevik press portrayed him. And if we talk about the "bloody" regime, then over the last 50 years of tsarist rule - from 1863 to 1913, about 7,000 people were executed. (including criminals), and in the first years of Soviet power, the number of executed was tens and hundreds of thousands of people.

Under the slogan "Expropriate the expropriators!" the Bolsheviks destroyed the centuries-old foundations of property, plundered and destroyed landowners' estates, cultural objects. In practice, mass robbery began, and not only "landlords and bourgeois", but also - mainly - ordinary peasants - the breadwinners of the Russian land. Already two days after the October Revolution, on November 9, the first food detachments took bread and other agricultural products from the peasants.

In the Cossack regions, in accordance with the letter of the Central Committee of the RCP (b) dated January 24, 1919, signed by Sverdlov, the policy of “decossackization” was carried out with cruel methods: mass terror, up to execution, in relation to the Cossacks who fought against Soviet power, confiscation bread and other agricultural products. The Cossacks were deprived of all rights and privileges and equated with newcomers "out of town".

The traditional concepts of religion and faith were destroyed, religion was declared "an opium for the people", "priestly nonsense", hundreds of churches and monasteries were looted and destroyed, desecration of shrines took place, and clergy, especially the Russian Orthodox Church, were persecuted, declared reactionaries, counter-revolutionaries; they were arrested and imprisoned in prisons and concentration camps, tens of thousands of them were executed. The most amazing thing is that all these destructions, arrests and executions were carried out by the hands of the same Russian people who yesterday still visited churches, baptized and married their children, prayed to God. Where was their faith in God? In the cross and icons? But Orthodoxy should be not only and not so much in icons and the cross, but in the minds and hearts of people, in their observance of the ten commandments of Christ. Did those who destroyed churches, mocked shrines and shot priests have a genuine Faith?!

The traditional views of the Russian people on culture and spiritual values ​​were destroyed; the people were imposed the concepts of “socialist culture”, “socialist morality and morality”, “moral is everything that helps to build a communist society,” Lenin proclaimed. Everything else was declared "bourgeois". Creative freedom was banned. Sexual promiscuity was encouraged, even the current “Down with shame and disgrace!” arose. In some provinces, it came to decrees on the socialization of women. The internal policy of the Bolsheviks, the disdainful attitude towards the intelligentsia, pushed most of it away from cooperation with the "people's" government. As a result - mass forced emigration from Russia of scientists, engineers, doctors, teachers, writers, artists.

The cruel, anti-democratic policy of the Soviet government, and led to the beginning of the Civil War.

About terror. They write and talk a lot about white terror, about red terror. Whose terror was more cruel? The truth is that there was violence on both sides. Some, propagandized and led by the Bolsheviks, strove for a general redistribution: of the whole world, and of the neighbor's economy, his land and cattle. Others did not agree that they were being robbed, deprived of property, land, housing, which their great-grandfathers owned. Old grievances and claims broke out. The villainous murder by the Bolsheviks - contrary to all human and state laws - of the royal family, including children - opened the floodgates of general mistrust, despair, bestial hatred, unprecedented cruelty, fear, meanness and betrayal. All human and religious values ​​were trampled, the sacred was mixed with dirt, everything spiritual was forgotten, everything material was turned into a bogey. "Rob and kill!" The war was not only between the Whites and the Reds, it was between the city and the countryside, between nations and estates, between good and evil, the war entered every home, every family. War without borders and without mercy.

The writer Vladimir Nikolaev characterizes this period well in the novel “Sivtsev Vrazhek”: “Wall against wall are two fraternal armies, and each had its own truth and its own honor. There were heroes both there and here, and the happiness of the heart too, andvictims, and feats, and high extra-book humanity, and animal brutality, and fear, and disappointment, and strength, and weakness, and dull despair. It would be too simple both for people and for history if there was only one truth and only falsehood was fought; but there were and fought among themselves two truths and two honors, and the battlefield was littered with the corpses of the best and most honest.

The Soviet government gave terror mass character and the force of law. A special apparatus was created to destroy the "class enemy". In January 1918, at the 3rd Congress of Soviets, the leader of the Bolsheviks, V Ulyanov (Lenin), declared: “Not a single issue of the class struggle has ever been resolved in history except by violence. Violence, when it occurs on the part of the working people, the exploited masses against the exploiters – yes, we are for such violence.” Fulfilling the instructions of the leader, the Soviet government created the "All-Russian Extraordinary Commission for the Fight against Counter-Revolution and Sabotage" (VChK) headed by F. Dzerzhinsky. This punitive body dealt mercilessly and cruelly with those who did not agree with the policy of the Bolsheviks. On the mere suspicion of hostile actions or statements, people were seized, imprisoned, executed - without trial or investigation. The court, the prosecutor's office, the legal profession were recognized as "bourgeois relics". It was necessary to be guided only by "revolutionary expediency". The main criterion for accusation is not specific guilt, but class affiliation, and the leaders of the Cheka Peters, Latsis, Atarbekov and others called for this. The number of repressions in connection with the murder of Volodarsky in Petrograd and the attempt on Lenin's life increased especially. The order of the People's Commissar of Internal Affairs No. 15 of September 4, 1918 stated: “Significant numbers of hostages must be taken from the bourgeoisie and officers. At the slightest attempt at resistance or the slightest movement among the White Guards, mass execution must be unconditionally used. And in response to the murder of Uritsky, 900 people were shot. And after the assassination attempt on Lenin, more than 6 thousand people were shot, about 15 thousand people were imprisoned, more than 6 thousand people were sent to concentration camps (that's when and where they appeared!), about 4 thousand people were taken hostage . It was the triumph of the Bolshevik "democracy"! The “work” of the Cheka was actually a war of the “Reds” against their own people. Terror against the people.

The whites did not have such directives, but there were orders for reprisals against traitors. So, for example, the order of the Commander-in-Chief of the Volunteer Army dated November 14, 1918 read: “... To the shame and disgrace of the Russian officers, many officers, even in high ranks, serve in the ranks of the Red Army. I declare that no motive will justify this act. Waging a mortal battle with Bolshevism, we do not need provocateurs. All those who did not immediately leave the ranks of the Red Army will face the curse of the people and the field court of the Russian Army - harsh and merciless. Lieutenant General Denikin. As already mentioned, the Whites also used mass brutal reprisals against those whom they considered the enemy, but these reprisals were rather spontaneous spokesmen for hatred and were not decreed from above.

The Reds won the Civil War, because the leaders of the Whites made serious mistakes: they failed to avoid moral degeneration and internal disunity; they also failed to create an effective power structure, resolve the land issue and convince the national outskirts that the slogan "United and Indivisible Russia" does not contradict their interests. A. I. Denikin’s confession, made by him in 1925, is curious: “None of the governments (anti-Bolsheviks - Z. F.) could create a flexible and strong apparatus that could swiftly and quickly overtake, force, act and force others to act. The Bolsheviks also did not capture the soul of the people, they also did not become a national phenomenon, but they were infinitely ahead of us in the pace of their actions, in energy, mobility and ability to coerce. We, with our old methods, old psychology, old vices of the civil and military bureaucracy, with the Petrine table of ranks, did not keep up with them ... ".

The inability or unwillingness of the leaders of the White movement to win over the people, the peasantry, weak, even naive propaganda, and the absence of clearly defined programs and goals also played a role. Supporters of the White movement often had a poor idea of ​​the life of the common people, their needs and aspirations, treated the workers and peasants with distrust. Even such "good" words of the Whites as democracy, the constitution, universal suffrage, the right to vote, press, assemble, etc. - did not find a response in the soul of a Russian peasant or a worker - yesterday's peasant. His thinking did not go beyond protecting his village, his home.

The Reds, on the other hand, had more active, more sophisticated propaganda. Their slogans are “Peace to the huts, war to the palaces!”, “Land to the peasants!”, “Factories to the workers!”, “The Whites bring us the return of the tsarist autocracy, the power of the landowners and capitalists”, “We will build a new, happy future”, “We are on the mountain We will fan the world fire to all the bourgeoisie!” - these slogans attracted the masses, although they carried colossal destructive power. The peasantry for the most part believed the Bolsheviks and sided with them. And when he became disillusioned with their politics, saw the lies in the Bolshevik slogans, and began to actively advocate for his rights and a “better lot”. One indicator of this was the mass desertion from the Red Army in 1919, the year of the most severe trials for Soviet power: in February - 26115 people, in March - 54696, in April - 28326, in June 146453, in July - 270737, in August - 299839, in September - 228850, in October - 190801, in November 263671, in December - 172831. And in total - 1761165 people! Often, captured Red Army soldiers fought, and quite successfully, in the ranks of the White armies. But it was already too late. Power, and considerable, was on the side of the Soviet government.

Another reason. The leaders of the White movement rejected any concessions to the supporters of national independence. At the same time, the Bolsheviks promised unlimited national self-determination, which benefited Lenin. (It is only known that the Bolsheviks did not fulfill this promise either then or later. Such was the price of their other promises.)

The territorial disunity of the White armed forces also played a significant role, while the Reds, located in the center of the European part of the country, had an advantage in replenishing the size of the army, maneuvering troops and supplying them with weapons, ammunition, and provisions. It also mattered numerically - 1.5 - 2.5 times - the advantage of the Red Army over the Whites.

We should not forget about this factor: on the side of the Reds, voluntarily or under duress, about 700 generals (!) And 50 thousand officers of the old army served, who not only developed plans for military operations against the White armies, but also professionally led the Red detachments. “Without these officers, we would not have created the Red Army,” Lenin admitted,

Yes, and assistance to the Whites from the Entente countries became more and more limited, until it stopped altogether.

Consequences of the Civil War. The peoples of Russia suffered colossal human losses. In total, 950 thousand people were killed and died from wounds in the Red Army, in the White and national armies - 650 thousand people, in partisan detachments - 900 thousand people. 1.2 million people died from the red terror, 300 thousand people from the white terror, 500 thousand people from partisan terror. Died from hunger and disease - 6 million people. Total dead10, 5 million people

The country is in ruins. Industrial production dropped to 4–20% of the 1913 level, agriculture by 40%. In most provinces, hunger and disease reigned: typhus, "Spanish flu". Peasant farms are ruined. The Bolsheviks were afraid of the peasantry, which then accounted for 83% of the population of Russia, but, treating the peasant owners as reactionaries, they demanded from them: "Bread, bread!" And they beat out bread with the help of food detachments and committees (committees of the poor), dooming the robbed to starvation and death. Leon Trotsky's dismissive statement is characteristic: "The peasantry constitutes the historical manure from which the working class grows." Due to the dissatisfaction of the peasantry with the Soviet government, which was trying to introduce “fixed prices”, due to robbery by the food detachments, a wave of peasant unrest and uprisings swept across Russia, which covered 118 counties. A particularly fierce struggle was waged in the Volga region, which was helped by the rebellion of the Czechoslovak corps, on the Don, Kuban, in Western Siberia, in Primorye. In the Tambov region, by order of M. Tukhachevsky No. 0116 of June 12, 1921, the Red troops unleashed cruel repressions on the peasants, up to executions and the use of asphyxiating gases. (The movie “Once upon a time there was a woman” tells well about this period). In 1921 sailors revolted in Kronstadt, demanding re-elections of the Soviets, but without commissars and communists. Until 1928, the Basmachi movement continued in Central Asia.

In connection with these events, it is impossible not to recall the angry words of Patriarch Tikhon of Moscow and All Russia (1865-1925) from a letter with which he addressed the Council of People's Commissars on October 13 (26), 1918: “...Seizing power and calling on the people to trust you, what promises did you make to them, and how did you keep those promises? In truth, you gave him a stone instead of bread and a snake instead of a fish (Matt.-7.9.10). To the people, exhausted by the bloody war, you promised to give peace "without annexations and indemnities." Instead of annexations and indemnities, our great homeland has been conquered, dismembered, and in payment of the tribute imposed on it, you are secretly exporting to Germany the gold accumulated not by you ... You have divided the entire people into warring camps and plunged them into fratricide unprecedented in cruelty ... You replaced the love of Christ with hatred and, instead of peace, you artificially kindled class enmity. And the end of the war you have created is not foreseen, since you are striving with the hands of Russian workers and peasants to bring triumph to the specter of world revolution... Nobody feels safe, everyone lives under constant fear of search, robbery, eviction, arrest, execution... bishops, priests, monks and nuns, innocent of anything, but simply on a sweeping accusation of some kind of vague and indefinite counter-revolutionary ... By tempting the obscure and ignorant people with the possibility of easy and unpunished gain, you misled their conscience and drowned out in them the consciousness of sin , but no matter what names the atrocities hide behind, murder, violence, robbery will always remain serious and crying out to heaven for revenge by sins and crimes ... Celebrate the anniversary of your stay in power by freeing prisoners, ending bloodshed, violence, ruin, oppression of faith, turn not to destruction, but to the establishment of order and legality, give the people the desired and well-deserved rest about t internecine strife. Otherwise, “every righteous blood that you shed will be exacted from you” (Luke 11:51), “you yourselves who take the sword will perish by the sword” (Mat. 25:52).

The response of the Council of People's Commissars was silence and increased repressions against the clergy and the people.

One of the most significant consequences of the Civil War was the flight and forced evacuation of members of the former ruling classes and intellectuals. In addition to the soldiers and officers of the White armies, tens of thousands of people left Russia - voluntarily or under duress. Of the most famous, several hundred people left the country in 1917-1931, especially in 1920-1921, including world-famous people: Vladimir Zworykin, an inventor in the field of electronics, aircraft designers Igor Sikorsky and Mikhail Grigorashvili, an aeronautical engineer and pilot - Tester Boris Sergievsky, economist Vasily Leontiev, chemist Alexei Chichibabin, historians Georgy Vernadsky, Pavel Milyukov, writers Leonid Andreev, Sasha Cherny, Alexander Kuprin, Dmitry Merezhkovsky, Vladimir Nabokov, Arkady Averchenko, Ivan Bunin, Zinaida Gippius, Nadezhda Teffi, Marina Tsvetaeva , Ivan Shmelev, Evgeny Zamyatin, writer and historian Fyodor Stepun; well-known doctors: pathologist Alexander Pavlovsky, immunologist Petr Grabar, surgeon Alexander Aleksinsky, embryologist Konstantin Davydov, therapist Kazimir Buinevich, physiologist Boris Babkin, neuropathologist Grigory Troshin; famous world-famous chess player Alexander Alekhin; painter and graphic artist Grigory Kandinsky, painters Leonid Pasternak and Marc Chagall; sculptors Sergei Konenkov, Stepan Nefedov (Erzya) and Osip Zadkin; film actors Ivan Mozzhukhin and Mikhail Chekhov; legendary singer Fyodor Chaliapin; popular pop singers Pyotr Leshchenko, Alexander Vertinsky and the famous performer of Russian folk songs Nadezhda Plevitskaya; composers Sergei Rachmaninov and Alexander Grechaninov; director Fyodor Komissarzhevsky; famous musicians: violinist Yasha Kheyfets, pianists Vladimir Horowitz and Alexander Siloti, cellist Grigory Pyatigorsky; choreographers and teachers Mikhail Fokin, Serge Lifar, Georgy Balanchine, ballerina Matilda Kshesinskaya and many, many others...

In 1922-1923, about 200 people were deported from the RSFSR on the so-called "philosophical ships". including philosophers Ivan Ilyin, Nikolai Lossky, Sergei Bulgakov, Semyon Frank, historians Lev Karsavin and Sergei Melgunov, sociologist Pitirim Sorokin, historiographer Fyodor Stepun and many others.

As one of the leaders of the Bolsheviks, Lev Trotsky, cynically admitted: “We expelled these people because there was no reason to shoot them, and it was impossible to endure.” It also had an effect on the fact that the Soviet government strove during these years to establish normal relations with foreign states, and such a “loyal” policy towards the intelligentsia contributed to this goal.

Total emigrated2 million people And Russia has lost everything12.5 million their sons and daughters!

What can be said at the end?

1. The February revolution in Russia was a forced and necessary action, because. the autocratic system has outlived its usefulness, hindering not only the development of the military operations of the Russian army in the war, but also the further development of Russia along the path of democracy and progress.

2. The Provisional Government, which replaced the monarchy, was also unable to rally society around itself, did not have a clear program of action, often acted against the will of the people and the voice of reason, in many cases allowing softness, short-sightedness and inability to see problems and prospects, and moreover, inability to to organize the fulfillment of vital tasks for the people. It is appropriate to quote here the words of the famous philosopher Pitirim Sorokin: “The fall of the regime is not so much the result of the efforts of the revolutionaries, but rather the decrepitude, impotence and inability for the creative work of the regime itself.”

3. The October coup was illegal and unnecessary. The Constituent Assembly elected by the people of Russia could solve many state issues on a democratic basis. But it was dispersed by the Bolsheviks, who saw themselves in a minority among the elect. The Bolsheviks usurped power. And the dispersal of the Constituent Assembly and the Treaty of Brest-Litovsk stimulated the beginning of a bloody, large-scale, fratricidal Civil War.

4. The moral and ethical aspect of the mass terror of the warring parties - "all against all" - turned out to be possible due to the general savagery of the warring parties, their extreme bitterness and categorical unwillingness to heed the voice of reason.

5. Believing the Whites, believing the Reds, having risen to the Civil War, people finally got some - life in a foreign land, often in poverty and lack of rights, and others - the construction of socialism, i.e. destruction of Temples and desecration of the Faith, endless five-year plans in four years, collective farm slavery, famine of the 30s, omnipotence of the VChK-OGPU-NKVD-KGB and fabricated lawsuits, mass repressions and the Gulag, elections without choice, constant need for food, housing , work and everywhere lies, lies, lies ...

Unfortunately, we feel the echoes of these phenomena even now, almost a century later! Yes, it is easier to invent and create something material - a new device, a car, an atomic bomb, a TV set, a computer - than to change the consciousness of a person who has been subjected to such a devastating impact of two World Wars and revolutions during the 20th century.

6. We, who live now, must understand that the path of the revolution is a dead end. Never and nowhere in the world, in any country over the past almost 100 years has a revolution led to the happiness and prosperity of people, but only to the degradation of society, the destruction of a thousand-year-old culture, to spiritual and material impoverishment of people, to murders and wars in the name of an illusory "happy future". As Patriarch Kirill rightly noted: “Not a single revolution has carried out the slogans it called for. Not a single revolution has resolved the contradictions of society.”

Whoever calls for war is a criminal!

Whoever calls for revolution and civil war is a hundred times more criminal! God save us from these criminals!

Now decide for yourself who won the Civil War.

Drawings by artist Pavel Ryzhenko

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