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The first
few years of Soviet rule were marked by an extraordinary outburst of social
and cultural change. Although the Bolsheviks had maintained complete control
of the economy during the civil war, Lenin decided at its end that a partial
return to a market economy would help the country recover from the destruction
of the previous three years. His New Economic Policy, or NEP, brought
about a period of relative prosperity, allowing the young Soviet government
to consolidate its political position and rebuild the country's infrastructure.
This was also the period during which the Russian Avant-Garde reached
its height, developing the radical new styles of Constructivism,
Futurism, and Suprematism. Although the country still faced enormous
challenges, there was a widespread sense of optimism and opportunity.
Lenin's death in 1924 was followed
by an extended and extremely divisive struggle for power in the Communist
Party. By the latter part of the decade, Joseph Stalin had emerged as
the victor, and he immediately set the country on a much different course.
The NEP was scrapped, to be replaced by an economic plan dictated from
the top. Agricultural lands were collectivized, creating large, state-run
farms. Industrial development was pushed along at breakneck speed, and
production was almost entirely diverted from consumer products to capital
equipment. Art and literature were placed under much tighter control,
and the radical energy of the Russian Avant-Garde was replaced by the
solemn grandeur of Soviet realism. Religion was violently repressed, as
churches were closed, destroyed, or converted to other uses. Stalin purged
all opposition to himself within the party as well as all opposition to
party policy in the country. By the end of the 1930s, the Soviet Union
had become a country in which life was more strictly regulated than ever
before. Experimentation had ended, and discipline was the rule of the
day.
With the outbreak of the Second
World War, the Soviet Union found itself unprepared for the conflict.
Political purges had stripped the military of much of its experienced
leadership, and industrial production was slow in converting from civil
to military production. Although its non-aggression pact with Germany
(1939) served for a while to forestall an attack by Hitler, the Soviets
were caught by surprise by the invasion of June 1941. By the end of the
year, the Germans had seized most of the Soviet territory in the west,
surrounded St. Petersburg (having been renamed once again as Leningrad),
and advanced to within a few hundred miles of Moscow. With tremendous
effort, a Russian counter-offensive pushed back the advance on the capital,
but in the summer of 1942 the Germans launched a new invasion against
the southern front in an attempt to gain control of the rail center of
Stalingrad on the Volga and the vital Caucasus oil fields. Despite an
overwhelming disadvantage in numbers and inferior weaponry, the Russian
army succeeded in holding out against the enormous German army. In November,
a relieving force managed to encircle the attackers and compel the surrender
of the entire force, marking a decisive turning point in the war. From
that point onward, the Russian army remained on the attack. By 1944 they
had driven the Germans back to Poland, and on May 2, 1945, Berlin fell.
As was the case with the Napoleonic
Wars, the Soviet Union emerged from World War II considerably stronger
than it had been before the war. Although the country suffered enormous
devastation and lost more than twenty million lives, it had gained considerable
territory and now ranked as one of the two great world powers along with
the United States. Nonetheless, life in the country continued to suffer.
Industrial production was once again concentrated on heavy industry, agricultural
failures produced widespread famine, political freedoms were restricted
even further, and another huge wave of purges was carried out. As the
Cold War got underway, an increasing proportion of the Soviet Union's
resources were funneled into military projects, further exacerbating the
quality of life. Stalin remained in power until 1953, when he died of
a cerebral hemorrhage.
Almost immediately after the
death of Stalin, many of the repressive policies that he had instituted
were dismantled. Under the leadership of Nikita Khruschev, political controls
were to some degree relaxed, and cultural life experienced a brief period
of revival. However, opposition to Khruschev gradually gained strength
within the party, and in 1964 he was ousted. In a notable break with historical
traditions, Khruschev was permitted to quietly retire. By the 1970s, Leonid
Brezhnev, as general secretary of the Communist party of the Soviet Union
(CPSU), had become the next prominent Soviet leader. His tenure was marked
by a determined emphasis on domestic stability and an aggressive foreign
policy. The country entered a decade-long period of stagnation, its rigid
economy slowly deteriorating and its political climate becoming increasingly
pessimistic. When Breshnev died in 1982 he was succeeded as general secretary
first by Yuri Andropov, head of the KGB, and then by Konstantin Chernenko,
neither of whom managed to survive long enough to effect significant changes.
In March of 1985, when Mikhail Gorbachev became general secretary, the
need for reforms was pressing.
Gorbachev's platform for a new
Soviet Union was founded on two now-famous terms--glasnost (openness)
and perestroika (restructuring). Like Khruschev, Gorbachev intended to
revitalize the Soviet economy by loosening up a bit on social control,
opening some room for new ideas, relaxing control of the economy, and
generally allowing for a little fresh air. Restructuring began in earnest,
with a vigorous housecleaning of the bureaucracy and a significant investigation
into corruption. Glasnost, however, lost some credibility right at the
outset when it was discovered in April 1986 that the government had waited
several days before admitting to the infamous nuclear disaster at Chernobyl--a
reactor explosion that had thrown radioactive material over a wide area
of the country. Backed into a corner on Chernobyl, Gorbachev countered
with the dramatic removal of all controls on reporting--and at that point
the fresh air really began to howl.
For the first time in decades,
the problems of the country became subjects for open public discussion.
Poverty, corruption, the enormous mismanagement of the country's resources,
the unpopularity of the Afghan war, and a host of other problems and grievances
were raised. Radical reform leaders emerged, including the new Moscow
Party chief Boris Yeltsin, and prominent dissidents like Andrei Sakharov
were able to voice their views for the first time. For some peculiar reason,
the government found that it was the target of most of the criticism,
but it also found that it wasn't any longer in much a position to do anything
but try to move with the flow of events. Early in 1989, Soviet troops
were withdrawn from Afghanistan. In the spring of 1989, the first open
elections since 1917 were held, allowing voters a novel choice of more
than one candidate for seats in the Congress of People's Deputies. The
governments of the Soviet satellite states in Eastern Europe, subjected
to the same rising tide of public criticism, fell one after the other
in a rapid series of revolutions culminating in the fall of the Berlin
wall.
In 1990, the Soviet Union itself
began to unravel. Its own constituent republics began to issue declarations
of independence. In the Russian Republic, Yeltsin was elected chairman
of the Parliament, taking a lead in the independence movement. Large scale
strikes shattered the Communist Party's traditional claim to be the representative
of workers' rights. Demonstrations against the government and the party
intensified. The economy worsened, food shortages became a problem, and
the crime rate began to skyrocket. Gorbachev, caught between popular demands
for more radical reform and party demands for the re-imposition of strict
control, failed to satisfy either side.
The following summer, the radical
reform movements became strong enough to openly defy the government. In
the press, criticism of Gorbachev intensified. Yeltsin, on the other hand,
was the overwhelming victor in June elections for the Russian presidency.
On August 18, party conservatives made a desparate bid for power. A group
led by Defense Minister Dmitry Yazov and Vice President Gennady Yanayev
detained Gorbachev at his country retreat in the Crimea. After he refused
to support the imposition of military law, the head of state was placed
under house arrest. The next morning the coup leaders issued the announcement
that Gorbachev had resigned and that a state of emergency had been declared.
Military units were dispatched to enforce the authority of the new government,
but they were met with overwhelming popular protest led by Yeltsin and
the other presidents of the republics. After three days the attempted
coup had collapsed. Gorbachev was reinstated, only to realize that his
position had become completely obsolete. By the end of the year the Soviet
Union had been voted out of existence, to be replaced by a Commonwealth
of Independent States (CIS). On December 25, Gorbachev resigned, and on
midnight of December 31, the Soviet flag atop the Kremlin was replaced
by the Russian tricolour.
Ancient
Russia | The
Mongols & the Emergence of Moscow | The
Romanovs |
Napoleon's
Invasion | The
Path to Revolution | The
Soviet Era
Copyright (c) 2000 Dm.Core
Ltd.. All rights reserved.
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