Leon Trotsky's Theory of Fascism - Wistrich 1976
Leon Trotsky's Theory of Fascism - Wistrich 1976
Leon Trotsky's Theory of Fascism - Wistrich 1976
Robert S. Wistrich
157
158 Journal of Co lltelllporary History
Leon Trotsky was still a leading figure in the Russian Bolshevik party
and the Communist International when fascism achieved its first
major success in Italy during 1922. Like Lenin, Zinoviev and other
Bolshevik leaders he did not initially regard Mussolini's victory as
more than a transitory phenomenon, though he recognized in it a
signal that the outcome of the class-struggle outside Russia could not
be taken for granted. The prevailing Bolshevik attitude which did
not take Mussolini seriously was summed up by Lenin's passing remark:
'Perhaps the fascists in Italy, for example, will render us a great service
by explaining to the Italians that their country is not yet sufficiently
enlightened and insured against the Black Hundreds. Perhaps this
will be very useful.'s Zinoviev, in a similarly flippant mood referred
to fascism as a historical 'comedy' and compared the parallel movement
in Bavaria to the abonive White counter-revolution during the Russian
Civil War. 6 The botched Beer-Hall Putsch of 1923 gave a momentary
substance to Zinoviev's opinion that the fascists were 'fools' rather
than serious politicians.
There was however another view in the Communist International
during the early 1920s which interpreted Italian fascism and its German
variants much more realistically. Thus in 1923, Clara Zetkin,the veteran
German communist, described the fascist victory in Italy as the most
serious setback for world communism since the October Revolution.
She sharply distinguished Italian fascism from such
counter-revolutionary 'feudal-capitalist' regimes as that of Admiral
Horthy in Hungary. 7 Fascism, she declared, was a 'movement of
the hungry, the suffering, the frustrated,' of broad social strata,
including a substantial section of the proletariat. 8 Anticipating one
of the theses which Trotsky later adopted, she argued that fascism
was a historic punishment for the failure of the western working~lass
to complete what the Russian revolution had initiated. 9 The reformist
leaders of the Italian socialist party were primarily to blame for this
Wistrich: Leon Trotsky's Theory of Fascism 159
failure, but the fledging Italian Communist Party was also guilty of
having underestimated fascism. 10
Karl Radek, (the Comintern expert on Germany) like Clara Zekin
emphasized the need in 1923 to differentiate between various forms
of eounter'revolution, between fascism as 'the socialism of the petty-
bourgeois masses' and an open dictatorship of the bourgeoisie. Radek
even ad\"ocated a nationalist course for the German Communist Party
(KPD) in order to win the petty-bourgeois masses from fascism. In
a well·known speech he praised the patriotism of Leo Schlageter, a
Nazi martyr executed by the French in the Ruhr. 11
Trotsky was strongly opposed to any flirtation with 'national
communism,' which he unequivocally condemned when it again became
part of KPD propaganda in 1930. He also considered that the German
communist leadership under Brandler had 'enormously overestimated
the power of fascism' in 1923, in order to cover their so-called 'historic
capitulation' in a revolutionary situation. 12 In 1931, when German
fascism had become immeasurably stronger, he attacked the KPD
lcadership for slipping to the opposite extreme and grossly
underestimating the fascist danger. Trotsky saw a clear relationship
between these wrong evaluations of the relationship of forces out of
which grew 'a hesitating, evasive, defensive, cowardly policy.'13 His
fundamental premise in evaluating fascism was that only a determined
revolutionary strategy by the European communist parties to
overthrow capitalism, could prevent fascist ascendancy.
In the 1920s when Hitler was still an obscure adventurer and
Mussolini's fascism appeared to be a peripheral phenomenon belonging
to a backward capitalist country, it was difficult to theorize about
fascism in general terms. The relative novelty of the phenomenon
probably accounts for Trotsky's mistaken assessment of Pilsudski's
coup d'etat in Poland (May 1926) as an example of fascism. At a
session of the Polish Commission of the Executive Committee of
the Comintern (2 July 1926), Trotsky criticized the Polish Communist
Party for calling on the workers to support Pilsudski. He characterized
Pilsudski's coup as a 'plebeian' method of solving the problems of
decaying capitalism, parallel to Italian fascism.
These two currents undoubtedly have common features; their shock troops
are recruited . . . among the petty bourgeoisic; both Pilsudski and Mussolini
operated by extra-parliamentary, nakedly violent means, by the methods
of civil war; both of them aimed not at overthrowing bourgeois society,
but at saving it. flaving raised the petty-bourgeois masses to their fcet, they
both clashed openly with the big bourgeoisie after coming to power.14
160 Journal of COl/temporary History
Trotsky's point in drawing this rather facile parallel was that the
bourgeoisie in decline required fascism as a means of self-defence
but that it disliked employing such methods to resolve crises.
Even by Trotsky's own criteria the parallel was unsatisfactory
because it ignored those traits in Pilsudski's regime which were clearly
not fascist. but corresponded more closely to what he later designated
as a Bonapartist form of power. IS Writing in July 1934 on the same
topic, Trotsky conceded that Pilsudski had used the techniques
of a military conspiracy and trcated the workers' organizations 'in a
much more circumspect manner' than either Mussolini or Hitler.
lie attributed the lack of 'specific political weight' in Polish fascism,
its inability to usc mass terror and to destroy the proletarian
organizations, to the peculiarities and contradictions in the class and
national relationships within the Polish state. Not only had the
communists supported his coup, but according to Trotsky the 'growing
hostility of the Ukrainian and Jewish petty bourgeoisie towards the
Pilsudski regime made it, in turn, more difficult for him to launch a
general attack upon the working class.'16
Trotsky was more convincing in his evaluation of Italian fascism
which he used primarily as an example to illuminate the dangers
confronting the German proletariat between 1930 and 1933. The first
and most important lesson of the Italian experience to Trotsky I was
that it revealed the consequences which would ensue if the proletarian
vanguard failed to place itself at the head of the nation and to
transform the situation of all classes, including the petty bourgeoisie.
Italian fascism had come to power only after the 'disruption of the
revolutionary movement' of 1920. It had been made possible by the
fear and timidity of the Italian socialist leaders who had 'betrayed'
the revolutionary movement of the proletariat after it had seized
and occupied the factories and industries in September 1920. 17 ,In
the face of a fascist backlash, the Social Democrats had sought to
pacify middle·c1ass public opinion and 'restrained the workers with
might and main from giving battle to Mussolini's bands.'18 Trotsky
argued that this indecision availed them nothing, for the Crown and
the upper crust of the bourgeoisie had swung over to Mussolini and
the delayed call for a general strike turned into a fiasco. Once in power,
Mussolini though moving gradually, was able within two years to
complete the 'strangulation of all independent mass organizations.'
With regard to Hitler, the German Social Democrats had in Trotsky's
words repeated the same error 'more ponderously' and with less
temperament. Both reformist parties had failed to see that fascism
Wistrich: Leoll Trotsky's Tbeory of Fascism 161
spontaneous movement of large masses, with new leaders from the rank
and file. It is a plebeian movement in origin, directed and financed by big
capitalist powers. It issued forth from the petty bourgeoisie, the slum
proletariat, and even to a certain extent from the proletarian masscs;
Mussolini, a fonner socialist, is a 'self-made' man arising from the
rnovement. 22
With its ability to draw broad strata of the population to its banner
and the 'socialist demagogy' of its leaders, Italian fascism could not
be equated with 'counter-revolutionary' dictatorship such as the Primo
de Rivera regime in Spain. 23 But it was the forerunner of the Nazi
movement and Trotsky predicted in January 1932 that 'Hitler's victory
in Germany would mean a new and a long lease of life for Mussolini.'24
Surprisingly, (and this was a drawback in his ~eory), he saw no'
essential difference between the two movements, either in terms of
their social content or their techniques of attaining and securing power.
lie argued that both Mussolini and Hitler utilized the masses of the
petty bourgeoisie to win power and then strangled these forces in the
vice of the bourgeois state apparatus. They were both exceptional
agitators, popular tribunes, whose momentum derived from the
movements they had forged. In contrast to Stalin (whom Trotsky
persisted in regarding as a mediocrity), Mussolini and Hider had
'displayed initiative, roused the masses to action, pioneered new paths
through the political jungle.'25 Mussoljni was 'mentally bolder and
more cynical,' with a greater responsiveness to the inter-relationships
between social classes, that Trotsky attributed to his schooling in
socialist thought. This Marxist background allowed Mussolini, 'after
162 jOllTllal of COlltcmporary History
he had jumped into the opposing camp, to mobilize the middle classes
against the proletariat. Hitler accomplished the same feat in translating
the methodology of fascism into the language of German mystieism.'26
Hitler had borrowed the forms and techniques of power from
Mussolini and both dictators sought consciously to reduce the
proletariat to an amorphous state and prevent its independent
crystallization by smashing the workers' organizations. The fascist
party in power did not however mean the rule of the petty bourgeoisie,
but on the contrary 'the most ruthless dictatorship of monopoly
capital.' Trotsky correctly predicted that Hitler, like Mussolini, would
discard the 'socialistic' slogans and petty-bourgeois illusions of his
followers once he had assumed control of the state, His prognosis
in January 1932 for Italian fascism prefigured his analysis of the
likely emlution of German National Socialism a year later. Fascism
in Italy, Trotsky wrote, had become bureaucratic and thereby
approached 'very closely to other forms of military and police
dictatorship.'27 It had lost the social support of its chief reserve,
the petty bourgeoisie, and only 'historical inertia' enabled it to keep
the proletariat dispersed and helpless. Trots~y over'lptimistically
believed that this bureaucratic degeneration of fascism would be
one of the factors that would change the correlation of forces in
favour of the workers and lead to revolution from within. But as
he came to recognize after the victory of German National Socialism,
the immediate perspectives for the overthrow of fascism were far from
being imminent.
Even before Hitler's coming to power, he realized that 'the far
greater maturity and acuteness of social contradictions in Germany'
made Italian fascism 'appear as a pale and almost humane experiment
in comparison with the work of the German National Socialists.'7 8
Gut he took somewhat illusory comfort from the greater dynamism
of German fascism, assuming that it would 'wear itself out sooner
than its Italian precursor.'29 Nazism, likc Italian fascism, would
inevitably become transformed from a 'people's movement' into a
police apparatus. In Trotsky's self·fulfilIing dialectical schema, this
process of bureaucratization meant a weakening rather than a
strengthening of fascism, 'the beginning of its end.'30
not yet official Comintern dogma, nor did they determine the strategy
of the German Communist Party - hence Trotsky probably saw little
need to comment.35 It is nevertheless true that even at that time, the
KPD was depicting the Strcsemann coalition govcrnment. which
enjoyed the support of the Social Democrats, as the capitalist wing
of fascism. The SPD leaders were already being described as a 'faction
of German fascism under a socialist mask.' There could be no question
therefore, of a Communist coalition with 'fascist social democrats. 36
This attitude, based on the assumption that all bourgeois parties
(especially the Social Democrats) assumed a more or less 'fascist'
character with the decline of bourgeois society, did not become
obviously pernicious until National Socialism emerged as a serious
political factor in 1930.37 By that time the Comimern had officially
sanctified the theory of social fascism which emerged in its
fully-fledged Stalinist fo~ as a decisive clement in German Communist
policy. Underpinning the theory of social fascism was the proclamation
of the 'third period' (at the Sixth World Congress of the Comintern
in i 928) which announced the end of capitalist stabilization, the
radicalization of the masses, and predicted a final death-agony of
the capitalist system ending in proletarian revolution. 3s Trotsky
rejected this terminology ('a combination of Stalinist bureaucratism
and Bukharinist metaphysics') and the tactical turn of the Communist
International after 1928, which he forcsaw as having particularly
dangerous consequences for Germany. The KPD leadership under
Ernst Thaelmann was operating on the assumption that there was no
difference bet\veen the existing Weimar democracy and open fascist
dictatorship; the Communists depicted the whole development of
Social Democracy and of the reformist trade unions as being
responsible for the process of 'fascisization' in Germany.39
. lIence,according to the KPD, it was not the Nazis and the Stabibellll,
who were the primary representatives of fascism in Germany and
the main class enemies of the proletariat, but the Cabinet of Chancellor
Bruening (leader of the Catholic Centre Party) and his 'social-fascist
agents,' the 51'0. 40 In this interpretation the Social Democrats and
the Nazis represented two wings of fascism, but the former were
more active clements in the 'fascisization' process as well as the chief
social support of the bourgeoisie. 41 The conclusion to be drawn
from this aberrant analysis was that victory o\'er Nazism could not
be achieved without the total destruction of the 51'0.42
The electoral results of 14 September 1930 which brought a
spcctacular increase in the Nazi \'Ote from 810,000 (2.6 per cent)
Wisnich: Leoll Trotsky's 71Jeory of Fascism 165
to 6,409,600 (18.3 per cent) merely intensified the hard line of the
Communist leaders, Thaclmann, Remmele and Heinz Neumann, against
the SPD. They blamed the Nazi gains on the 'social-fascist methods'
of the social democrats. Dic Rote r~lIJ11e, the organ of the KPD,
dismissed the significance of the leap in electoral support for the
Nazis, declaring on 15 September 1930: 'Yesterday was lIerr Hitler's
"great day," but the so-called electoral victory of the Nazis is only
the beginning of their end.' Thaelmann, the leader of the KPD,
announced at the plenum of the Ecd (Executive Committee of the
Communist International) in April 1931:
We have soberly and firmly established the fact that 14 September [1930:
was in a certain sense Hitler's best day, and that afterwards will not come
better days but worse. This evaluation which we made of the development
of this party is confirmed by the events.... Today the fascists have no reason
for laughing. 43
Again and again he emphasized that the historic role of fascism was
to extirpate all independent proletarian organizations from the most
revolutionary to the most conservative; it would physically annihilate
'all the defensive bulwarks of the proletariat' achie\"ed over the past
century by the Social Democrats and the trade unions. Trotsky's
definition of fascism distinguished it sharply from the emergency
decrees of the Bruening cabinet which were mere half-hearted,
unreliable and temporary measures compared with what the Nazis
had in view. 'Pascism is not merely a system of reprisals, of brutal
force, and of police terror~ Trotsky wrote in January 1932, 'Fascism
is a particular governmental system based on the uprooting of all
elements of proletarian democracy within bourgeois society.'5o This
definition exposed as 'absolute balderdash,' the communist
identification of Social Democracy with National Socialism.
The so-called 'red referendum' of 1931 in which the communists
along with the Nazis campaigned to remove the SPD -led government
of Otto Braun and Carl Severing in Prussia was a practical illustration
of the KPD line which Trotsky foresaw would lead to disaster. The
KPD leaders, instead of working for a united front with the Social
Democrats, had adopted as their own the Nazi slogan of a 'people's
revolution,' and called on the Nazi masses to join with the communists
in a common struggle against the Versailles treaty, the Young Plan
Wistrich: Leoll Trotsky's Tbeory of Fascism 167
that the socialist leaders had no stomach for the fight against fascism,
he hoped nonetheless that the working-class masses who supported
the party could be won over to a more militant posture. Hence his
emphasis on the irreducible conflict of interests between fascism
and the Social Democrats. Time and again he stressed that Hitler
in power would destroy not only the proletarian vanguard but also
the bourgeois-parliamentary regime on which the existence of Social
Democracy final1y dcpendcd. 64 Needless to say, Trotsky's warnings
were dismissed hy the socialist and especially the communist leaders,
who on Stalin's promptings, attacked him as a 'panic-monger' and
even as a 'fascist agent.'
Reviewing the lessons of the German catastrophe in May 1933.
Trotsky concluded:
One eannot, unfortunately, deny the superiority of the fascist over the proleta-
rian leadership. Rut it is only out of an unbecoming modesty that the beaten
chiefs keep silent about their own part in the \ictory of Hitler. There is
a game of draughts and there is also the game of losers·win. The game that
was played in Germany has this singular feature, that Hitler played draughts
and his opponents played to lose. As for political genius, IIitler had no need
for it. The strategy of his enemy compensated largely for anything his own
strategy lacked.65
The real task of the Papcn-Schleicher regime was 'to avoid civil
war by amicably disciplining the National Socialists and chaining
the proletariat to police fetters.'74 German Bonapartism, as Trotsky
suggested, needed a powerful fascist party in order to exist at alI,
but that did not make it identical with fascism in power. Fascism
was the reaction of bourgeois society to the specific threat of
proletarian revolution, but as long as this danger was not imminent,
the ruling classes preferred a Bonapartist dictatorship. The great land-
owners, finance capitalists and generals who stood behind Papen
would only turn to Hitler in the last resort.
Trotsky's conceptual distinction between Bonapartism and fascism
alIowed him to make an acute analysis of the contradictions in the
'counter-revolutionary camp.' He realized that the camarilla of property
owners and East Prussian Junkers in the German Nationalist Party
who made common cause with Hitler, did so only because he had
become indispensable. 7 5 But the Nazis even in February 1933 were
only one of several armies at the disposal of the possessing classes - the
Reichswehr, the police and the Stahlhelm were not yet in Hitler's
hands. The National Socialists, Trotsky pointed out, would only
achieve complete victory if they successfully provoked the semblance
of civil war, in order to forcibly suppress the workers' organizations. 76
Trotsky's Bonapartist model was designed to explain the
transitional, intermediate situations through which a parliamentary
regime passed over into fully-fledged fascism. In contrast to Stalinist
theory, it recognized the fact that finance capital did not act in a void,
that it had 'to reckon with other strata of the bourgeoisie and with
the resistance of the oppressed classes.'77 Stalinist theory had produced
an absurdly indiscriminate lumping together of such diverse political
172 jOllmal o[Co/ltelllporary History
The workers are by no means immunized once for all against the innuence
of fascism. The proletariat and the pettY bourgeoisie interpenetrate, especially
174 jOllmal of COl/temporary History
under the present conditions, when the reserve army of workers cannot
but produce petty traders and hawkers, etc., while the bankrupt petty
bourgeoisie effuses proletarians and iumpenproletarians. 88
Trotsky did not take \"ery seriously this Nazi ideology, which he
once described as the 'refuse of international political thought.' As
a Marxist he found it more convenient to attribute it to the 'undigested
barbarism,' the 'cultural excrement' vomited up by a moribund
capitalist society.98 Trotsky thereby underestimated and trivialized
the sources and consequences of fascist barbarism, just as he evaded
the issue by dismissing Hitler's millions· of followers as 'human
rubbish: 99 His analytical ac~teness enabled him to forecast more
or less accurately the logic of Nazi expansionist policies, but his Marxist
presuppositions prevented him from seeing the full implications of
J litler's totalitarian racist ideology.
176 Joumal of COl/telllporary History
In all these three easc;s the Social'Democracy and the Comintern criminally
and viciously disrupted the conquest of power and thereby placed society
in an impasse, Only undcr these conditions and in this situation did the
stormy rise of fascism and its gaining of power prove possible,104
of the temporary coalition between the big bourgeoisie and the mass
movements of the petty bourgeoisie, whose historic function was
to wear down and demoralize the proletariat by mass terror and street
warfare. In Trotsky's writings on Nazism, which were characterized
by a special polemical verve and sense of urgency, he constantly
stressed that the fascist goal was the total destruction of proletarian
mass organizations. 105 For this purpose a military dictatorship or a
police state was in itself insufficient.
Trotsky rejoined orthodox communist theory in his depiction of
the fascist movements as gendarmes of finance capital set in motion
by the need of the big bourgeoisie to preserve its social hegemony,
even at the risk of its eventual political expropriation. 10G Like a
number of other independent Marxist thinkers, (notably Otto Bauer
and August Thalheimer), Trotsky also used the model of Donapartism
to highlight the inter-relations between social classes that favoured
the emergence of fascism. Trotsky however, dismissed Thalheimer's
approach as too academic and argued that it ignored the qualitative
difference between Bonapartism and fascism. Unlike traditional
Bonapartist dictatorships, founded on the support of the army,
bureaucracy and police, fascism was only possible under conditions
of industrial monopoly capitalism which produced the mass basis
for these 'plebeian' movements. 107
Despite the parallels in their theory of fascism, Trotsky was even
harsher in his estimate of Otto Bauer, whose practical policies he
considered as the embodiment of sociahicmocratic 'impotence.'
Otto Bauer did not believe in the possibility of a proletarian offel1sive
against fascism after the ebbing of the revolutionary flood in 1923,
whereas Trotsky's wllole theory was geared to this premise. The exiled
Bolshe\ik leader argued that unless the proletariat defined the struggle
for power, it would inevitably lose the vacillating middle strata of
the population to fascism. In the tactics of Austro-Marxism, Trotsky
saw only a continuation of that sterile and passive defence of bourgeois
democracy through which the Social Democrats had already
chloroformed the working class in Germany.1 08 Trotsky's contempt
for Austro-Marxism and other forms of social-democratic 'reformism'
reflected his Bolshevik intransigence, shaped by the October Revolution
of 1917. Inevitably however, the stabilization of fascist regimes in
the 1930s and the degeneration of the workers' state in the USSR
called for a reappraisal of this revolutionary perspective. Trotsky
was obliged, for example, to admit that in techniques of government,
in the cult of the infallible leader and in its methods of propaganda,
178 joumal of Colltclllporary History
The totalitarian State, subjecting all aspccts of cconomic, political and cultural
life to finance capital, is the instrument for creating a supernationalist State,
an imperiali~t empire, the rule over continents, the rule ovcr the whole
world. 116
Though he had littic doubt that Hitler's New Ordcr would fail,
Trotsky by now believed that if capitalism survivcd, superfascism
would become necessary to preserve the 'dictatorship of the trusts.'
Thc only factor which could prevcnt this dcvelopment would be the
transformation of the imperialist war into a new re\·olutionary wave
in accordance with the Leninist strategy of 1917. Though the working
class had failed to stop Mussolini, Hitler and Franco, Trotsky
remained faithful to the pristine Marxist vision, that it alone could
180 JOllrnal of COl/temporary History
NOTES
(26 September 1930) in Leon Trotsky, op. cit., IS.Trotsky alleged that Brandler
(a member of the Spartakusbund and a founder of the KPO) 'in spite of all our
warnings monstrously exaggerated the forces of fascism.' The Bolshe\ik leaders
made Urandler the scapegoat for the failure of the German Communist uprising
in 1923.
13. Trotsky, op. cit.
14. 'The Only Road' (14 September 1932), in Trotsky, op. cit., 270.
15. See 'Uonapartism and Fascism' (15 july 19H) in Trotsky, op. cit.,
456-57 for a partial admission that the I'ilsudski regime was Bonapanist. Also
Isaac Deutscher, op. cit. 276 and Henryk Wereszycki, 'Fascism in Poland' in
Peter F. Sugar, cd., Nalit'e Fascis/ll in Ihe Successor SIJleS, 1918-/945 (Santa
Barbara 1971),85-91.
16. 'Bonapartism and Fascism' in Trotsky, op. cit., 457.
17. 'Lessons of the Italian Experience', (27 January 1932), Leon Trotsky,
op_ cit., 164-65.
18. Ibid,165.
19. Ibid,166-67.
20. Ibid,167.
21. Ibid.
22. This assessment was first made in a letter to an English comrade,
published in The MililanI (16 january 1932). See Leon Trotsky, Fascism - IVbat
Is It a"d How 10 Figbl II (New York 1972), 5.
23. Trotsky, Tbe Slmggle AgainSI Fascism, op. cit., 168,argued that failure
to distinguish between different types of capitalist reaction and to analyze the
specific nature of fascism, was 'vulgar radicalism' which would paralyze the
will to resistance of the working class.
24. Ibid,166.
2S. Quoted in Isaac Deutscher, Heretics and Uenegades and olber Essays
(London 1955), 84.
26. 'What is National Socialism?' (IO june 1933) in Trotsky, Tbe SII'uggle
Against Fascism, op. cit., 409.
27. 'What Ne>..,?' in ibid, 166.
28. 'Germany, the Key to the International Situation' (26 November 1931),
ibid,89.
29. 'How Long Can Hitler Stay?' (22 june 1933) in ibid, 423.
30. Ibid.
31. See Theodore Draper, 'The Ghost of Social·Fascism' in Commenlary
(February 1969),29-42.
32. Prolokoll des Vierten Kongresses der Kommullisliscbe" lnternalionale
(l923), 920. Also Theodore Draper, 'The Strange Case of the Comimern' in
Surrey (Summer 1972), Vol. 18, no. 3,121.
33. G. Zinoviev, Die I.ebren der delltschen Ereignisse (l924) and the
comments by Draper in 'The Ghost of Social-Fascism', op. cit., 30.
34. j. V. Stalin, 'On the International Situation' (20 September 1924) in
SocbineniiJ (Moscow 1947) Vol. 6. Reproduced as 'Stalins These vom Sozial-
faschismus' in Hermann Weber, cd., Der Deulsche Kommunismus. Dokumellle
(Kfiln 1964),180-81.
35. See Leon Trotsky, Pyat Let Kominlenza (Moscow 1924-2S), Vols 1-2,
563.
182 Journal of Colltc1I1porary History