Paul
Goble
Staunton, March 12 – It is an
article of faith for Vladimir Putin and many Russians as well that, despite
what he and they are sometimes willing to concede were Joseph Stalin’s excesses,
the Soviet dictator was absolutely necessary in building up a strong Soviet
Union that was then capable of defeating Nazi Germany.
But a new book just published in
Moscow challenges that assumption, and thus undermines both the Kremlin’s
historical narrative and the assumption increasingly widespread in Russia and elsewhere
that that country cannot be run by anyone but a dictator, an assumption that
leads those who think that to excuse Putin’s “excesses,” viewing them as
necessary as well.
Oleg V. Khlevniuk , a senior researcher at the State
Archive of the Russian Federation in Moscow, has written many scholarly
books about Stalin’s times, but his new
one, “Stalin. The Life of One Leader” (in Russian; Moscow: Corpus, 450 pages),
has been published by a commercial house and is intended for the widest
possible audience.
In
an interview with Petr Fedorov of “Vozdukh,” Khlevnyuk explains that he wrote
the book to show that “Stalin was not necessary,” that there were alternatives,
and that many of them would have been far preferable for Russia if not for its
ruling elites who always benefit from the notion that things could not be
otherwise (vozduh.afisha.ru/books/byl-li-stalin-neobhodim-ya-dokazyvayu-chto-net/).
Elites use this notion to convince
Russians that whatever is and whatever they do must be accepted because “it is
always possible to say: ‘Well, you know, in our country, nothing else could
have occurred.” As a historian, Khlevniuk says, he finds this “conception
meaningless,” especially since Stalin like other leaders sometimes acted one
way and sometimes ago.
The core argument of his book, the
historian says, is that Stalin was not necessary and that he did far more harm
than a different leader with different policies would have done. His terror, for example, was “absolutely
senseless even from the point of view of the system.” Indeed, “it weakened it
in the end.”
The task of any biographer,
Khlevniuk says, is to try to reconstruct the times in which its subject lived
and to get inside the logic of his actions. “Why did he do what he did? What
were his calculations?” In short, what role did his personality and subjective
approach play in the course of events.
Even though some Russians now deny
it, Stalin was directly implicated in the killings of the Great Terror. He kept
all the orders to kill that he signed. But, and this is relevant now, he killed
by giving orders “from his office,” as one of Khlevniuk’s colleagues has said.
He did not pull the trigger. That disconnect allows some to lie to themselves
and others about his role.
The historian points to three
sources of the extraordinary popularity of Stalin at the present time. The
first is the ignorance of the population about the history of the country and
the propensity of many to think that some past time was better than the
present. The second is that Stalin’s times are not ancient history: there are
still many people who grew up then and choose to remember their childhoods in
rosy colors.
And third, Khlevniuk argues, the
image of Stalin among Russians today as a positive figure or at least as one
for whom there was no substitute has been actively promoted by the current
Russian government for its own purposes. Pro-Stalin books have thus “undeservedly
received enormous support” and attracted a large audience.
The archival historian says that he
very much hopes that his book will change the minds of the vast majority of
people who are neither passionate supporters of Stalin or passionate opponents
but rather view him the way the current Kremlin leaders want them to because
that is the path of least resistance.
From his perspective, Khlevniuk
says, what is especially horrifying is that many of the pro-Stalin books and
articles are largely or completely falsified and that their conclusions are
nonetheless finding their way into academic studies and thus gaining a
respectability they do not deserve. “This is a catastrophe,” he argues.
Sometimes people think that
Stalinism in Russia can be dispelled as Nazism was in Germany, but that is
impossible, Khlevniuk says. Hitler lost a war, but the Stalinist regime “ended
as a result of its own contradictions,” and it did so “immediately after the
death of Stalin.”
Indeed, “as soon as Stalin died,
within a week, his regime was no more” because “his own supporters destroyed it
because they understood that it was impossible to life that way any longer. The
system simply wasn’t capable of working,” yet another lesson to all who say that
everything is inevitable and that personalities don’t matter.
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