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Kronstadt rebellion

The Kronstadt rebellion (Russian: Кронштадтское восстание, tr. Kronshtadtskoye vosstaniye) was a 1921 insurrection of Soviet sailors and civilians against the Bolshevik government in the Russian SFSR port city of Kronstadt. Located on Kotlin Island in the Gulf of Finland, Kronstadt defended the former capital city, Petrograd, as the base of the Baltic Fleet. For sixteen days in March 1921, rebels in Kronstadt's naval fortress rose in opposition to the Soviet government they had helped to consolidate. Led by Stepan Petrichenko, it was the last major revolt against the Bolshevik regime on Russian territory during the Russian Civil War.[1]

Kronstadt rebellion
Part of the left-wing uprisings against the Bolsheviks during the Russian Civil War

Loyalist soldiers of the Red Army attack the island fortress of Kronstadt on the ice of the Gulf of Finland
DateMarch 1–18, 1921
Location60°00′45″N 29°44′01″E / 60.01250°N 29.73361°E / 60.01250; 29.73361Coordinates: 60°00′45″N 29°44′01″E / 60.01250°N 29.73361°E / 60.01250; 29.73361
Result
  • Bolshevik victory
  • Uprising suppressed
Belligerents
Baltic Fleet  Russia
Commanders and leaders
Stepan Petrichenko Vladimir Lenin
Leon Trotsky
Mikhail Tukhachevsky
Strength
First assault: 11,000
Second assault: 17,961
First assault: 10,073
Second assault: 25,000–30,000
Casualties and losses
Around 1,000 killed in battle and 1,200–2,168 executed Second assault: 527–1,412; a much higher number if the first assault is included.

Disappointed in the direction of the Bolshevik government, the rebels—whom Leon Trotsky himself had praised earlier as "adornment and pride of the revolution"—demanded a series of reforms: reduction in Bolshevik power, newly elected soviet councils to include socialist and anarchist groups, economic freedom for peasants and workers, dissolution of the bureaucratic governmental organs created during the civil war, and the restoration of civil rights for the working class.[2]

Convinced of the popularity of the reforms they were fighting for (which they partially tried to implement during the revolt), the Kronstadt seamen waited in vain for the support of the population in the rest of the country and rejected aid from emigrants. Although the council of officers advocated a more offensive strategy, the rebels maintained a passive attitude as they waited for the government to take the first step in negotiations. By contrast, the authorities took an uncompromising stance, presenting an ultimatum demanding unconditional surrender on March 5. Once this period expired, the Bolsheviks raided the island several times and suppressed the revolt on March 18 after killing several thousand people.

Supporters saw the rebels as revolutionary martyrs while the authorities saw the rebels as "agents of the Entente and counter-revolution". The Bolshevik response to the revolt caused great controversy and was responsible for the disillusionment of several supporters of the Bolshevik regime, such as Emma Goldman. While the revolt was suppressed and the rebels' political demands were not met, it served to accelerate the implementation of the New Economic Policy (NEP), which replaced "war communism".[3][4][5] According to Lenin, the crisis was the most critical the Bolsheviks had yet faced, "undoubtedly more dangerous than Denikin, Yudenich, and Kolchak combined".[6]

Background

 
Prior to 1917, Kronstadt sailors revolted in 1905 (depicted) and 1906

As the Russian Civil War wound down in late 1920, the Bolsheviks presided over a nation in ruin. Their communist Red Army had defeated Pyotr Wrangel's anti-communist White Army, and was militarily equipped to suppress outstanding peasant insurrections, but faced mass disillusionment from unbearable living conditions—famine, disease, cold, and weariness—induced by the years of war and exacerbated by Bolshevik war communism policies. Peasants had started to resent government requisition policy, with seizures of their already meager harvest being coupled with cutbacks on bread rations and a fuel shortage.[7]

Despite military victory and stabilized foreign relations, Russia faced a serious social and economic crisis.[8] As foreign troops began to withdraw, Bolshevik leaders continued to sustain tight control of the economy through the policy of war communism.[9] Discontent grew among the Russian populace, particularly the peasantry, who felt disadvantaged by government grain requisitioning (prodrazvyorstka, the forced seizure of large portions of the peasants' grain crop used to feed urban dwellers). In resistance of these policies, peasants began refusing to till their farms. In February 1921, the Cheka reported 155 peasant uprisings across Russia. The workers in Petrograd were also involved in a series of strikes, caused by the reduction of bread rations by one third over a ten-day period.[10][11] With this information and already stoked discontent, the revolt at the Kronstadt naval base began as a protest over the plight of the country.[10] Agricultural and industrial production had been drastically reduced and the transport system was disorganized.[11]

The arrival of winter and the maintenance[12] of "war communism" and various deprivations by Bolshevik authorities led to increased tensions in the countryside[13] (as in the Tambov Uprising) and in the cities, especially Moscow and Petrograd—where strikes and demonstrations took place[10]—in early 1921.[14] Due to the maintenance and reinforcement of "war communism", living conditions worsened even more after the fighting ended.[15]

Preface

 

Protests followed a January 1921 announcement in which the government reduced bread rations by one third for inhabitants of all cities.[16] While this decision was forced, between heavy snow and fuel shortages preventing stored food transport in Siberia and the Caucasus,[15] this justification did not prevent popular discontent.[17] In mid-February, workers began to rally in Moscow; such demonstrations were preceded by workers' meetings in factories and workshops. The workers demanded the end of "war communism" and a return to free labor. Government envoys could not alleviate the situation.[18] Soon the revolts could only be suppressed by armed troops.[19]

When the situation seemed to calm down in Moscow, protests broke out in Petrograd,[20] where about 60% of large factories closed in February due to lack of fuel[21] and food supplies had virtually disappeared.[22] As in Moscow, demonstrations and demands were preceded by meetings in factories and workshops.[23] Faced with a shortage of government food rations and despite a ban on trade, workers organized expeditions to fetch supplies in rural areas near cities. They grew further discontent when the authorities tried to eliminate such activities.[24] In late February, a meeting at the small Trubochny factory decided to increase rations and immediately distribute winter clothes and shoes that were reportedly reserved for Bolsheviks.[25] Workers called a protest the following day.[25] The local Bolshevik-controlled Soviet sent cadets to disperse the protesters.[26] Grigori Zinoviev established a "Defense Committee" with special powers to end the protests; similar structures were created in the various districts of the city in the form of troikas.[27] The provincial Bolsheviks mobilized to deal with the crisis.[24]

New demonstrations followed from by Trubochny workers and this time spread throughout the city, in part because of rumors about repression in the previous demonstration.[28] Faced with growing protests, the local Bolshevik-controlled Soviet closed factories with high concentration of rebels, which further intensified the movement.[29] Soon the economic demands also became political in nature, which was of most concern to the Bolsheviks.[30] To definitively end the protests, the authorities flooded the city with Red Army troops, tried to close even more rebel-affiliated factories, and proclaimed martial law.[31] There was a hurry to gain control of the fortress before the thawing of the frozen bay, which would have made it impregnable for the land army.[32] The Bolsheviks started a detention campaign, executed by Cheka, resulting in thousands of arrests: thousands of students and intellectuals, about 500 workers and union leaders, and a few anarchists, revolutionary socialists, and key leaders of the Mensheviks.[33] Authorities urged workers to return to work to prevent spillage of blood. They granted certain concessions:[34] permission to go to the countryside to bring food to cities, relaxation of controls against speculation, permission to buy coal to alleviate fuel shortages, announcement of an end to grain confiscations, and increased rations of workers and soldiers, even at the expense of depleting scarce food reserves.[35] Such measures convinced the workers of Petrograd to return to work at the start of March.[36]

Bolshevik authoritarianism and lack of freedoms and reforms led to increased discontent among their own followers and reinforced the opposition. In their eagerness and effort to secure Soviet power, the Bolsheviks predictably caused the growth of their own opposition.[37] The centralism and bureaucracy of "war communism" added to the existing logistical difficulties.[37] With the end of the civil war, opposition groups emerged within the Bolshevik party itself.[37] One of the more left-wing, syndicalism-aligned opposition groups, the Workers' Opposition, aimed at the party leadership.[37] Another party wing, the Group of Democratic Centralism, advocated for the decentralization of power to be handled by workers councils.[38]

Fleet composition

Since 1917, anarchist sympathies held a strong influence on Kronstadt.[39] The inhabitants of the island favored the local soviet autonomy won in the revolution, and considered central government interference undesirable and unnecessary.[40] Displaying a radical support for the Soviets, Kronstadt had taken part in important revolutionary period events such as the July Days,[34] October Revolution, the assassination of the Provisional Government ministers,[34] the Constituent Assembly dissolution, and the civil war. More than forty thousand sailors from the Soviet Baltic Fleet participated in the fighting against the White Army between 1918 and 1920.[41] Despite participating in major conflicts alongside the Bolsheviks and being among the most active troops in government service, sailors from the outset were wary of the possibility of centralization of power and bureaucratization.[42]

The composition of the naval base, however, had changed during the civil war.[43] While many of its former sailors had been sent to various other parts of the country during the conflict and had been replaced by Ukrainian peasants less favorable to the Bolshevik government,[44] most[45] of the sailors present in Kronstadt during the revolt—about three quarters—were veterans of 1917.[46] At the beginning of 1921, the island had a population of about 50,000 civilians and 26,000 sailors and soldiers. It had been the main base of the Baltic Fleet since the evacuation of Tallinn and Helsinki after the signing of the Treaty of Brest-Litovsk.[47] Until the revolt, the naval base still considered itself in favor of the Bolsheviks and several party affiliates.[47]

The Baltic Fleet had been shrinking since the summer of 1917, when it had eight battleships, nine cruisers, more than fifty destroyers, about forty submarines, and hundreds of auxiliary vessels. In 1920, only two battleships, sixteen destroyers, six submarines, and a minesweeper fleet remained from the original fleet.[48][49] Now unable to heat their ships, the sailors were further angered [49] by the fuel shortage[50] and there were fears that even more ships would be lost owing to flaws that made them especially vulnerable in winter.[51] Island supply was also poor,[50] partly due to the highly centralized control system. Many units had not yet received their new uniforms in 1919.[51] Rations decreased in quantity and quality, and towards the end of 1920 the fleet suffered an outbreak of scurvy. Protests demanding improvements in soldier food rations went ignored and agitators were arrested.[50]

The organization of the fleet had changed dramatically since 1917. The Tsentrobalt central committee took control after the October Revolution and progressively centralized its organization. This process accelerated in January 1919 with Trotsky's visit to Kronstadt following a disastrous naval attack on Tallinn.[52] A government-appointed Revolutionary Military Committee now controlled the fleet and the naval committees were abolished.[52] Attempts to form a new body of Bolshevik naval officers to replace the few tsarists still running the fleet failed.[52] Fyodor Raskolnikov's appointment as commander in chief in June 1920, aimed at increasing the fleet's ability to act and ending tensions, resulted in failure and the sailors met it with hostility.[53] Attempts at reform and increasing discipline led to a change in fleet personnel and produced great dissatisfaction among local party members.[54] Attempts to centralize control displeased most local communists.[55] Raskolnikov also clashed with Zinoviev, as both wished to control political activity in the fleet.[54] Zinoviev attempted to present himself as a defender of the old Soviet democracy and accused Trotsky and his commissioners of being responsible for introducing centralized overreach into the organization of the fleet.[56] Raskolnikov tried to get rid of the strong opposition by expelling[57] a quarter of the fleet's members at the end of October 1920, but failed.[58]

Growing discontent and opposition

By January 1921, Raskolnikov had lost real control[59] of fleet management because of his disputes with Zinoviev and held his position only formally.[60] The sailors revolted in Kronstadt, officially deposing Raskolnikov from office.[61] On February 15, 1921, an opposition group within the Bolshevik party itself passed a critical resolution at a party conference with Bolshevik delegates from the Baltic Fleet.[62] This resolution harshly criticized the fleet's administrative policy, accusing it of removing power from the masses and most active officials, and becoming a purely bureaucratic body.[63] It demanded the democratization of party structures and warned that if there were no changes there could be a rebellion.[44]

Troop morale was low, with sailors discouraged by inactivity, supply and ammunition shortages, the administrative crisis, and the impossibility of leaving the service.[64] The temporary increase in sailors' licenses following the end of fighting with anti-Soviet forces has also undermined the mood of the fleet: protests in cities and the crisis in the countryside over government seizures and a ban on trade personally affected the sailors who temporarily returned to their homes. The sailors had discovered the country's grave situation after months or years of fighting for the government, which triggered a strong sense of disillusionment.[65] The number of desertions increased abruptly during the winter of 1920–1921.[50]

Petropavlovsk resolution

 
The resolution taken by the Kronstadt seamen, containing demands such as the election of free soviets and freedom of speech and press

News of the protests in Petrograd, coupled with disquieting rumors[66] of a harsh crackdown on these demonstrations, increased tensions among fleet members.[67] In late February, in response to the events in Petrograd,[66] the crews of the ships Petropavlovsk and Sevastopol held an emergency meeting and sent a delegation to the city to investigate and inform Kronstadt about the protests.[68] Upon returning two days later,[69] the delegation informed the crews about the strikes and protests in Petrograd and the government repression. The sailors decided to support the protesters of the capital[70] by passing a resolution with fifteen demands that would be sent to the government.[71]

  1. In view of the fact that the present Soviets do not express the will of the workers and peasants, immediately to hold new elections by secret ballot, the pre-election campaign to have full freedom of agitation among the workers and peasants;
  2. To establish freedom of speech and press for workers and peasants, for Anarchists and left Socialist parties;
  3. To secure freedom of assembly for labor unions and peasant organizations;
  4. To call a nonpartisan Conference of the workers, Red Army soldiers and sailors of Petrograd, Kronstadt, and of Petrograd Province, no later than March 10, 1921;
  5. To liberate all political prisoners of Socialist parties, as well as all workers, peasants, soldiers, and sailors imprisoned in connection with the labor and peasant movements;
  6. To elect a Commission to review the cases of those held in prisons and concentration camps;
  7. To abolish all politotdeli (political bureaus) because no party should be given special privileges in the propagation of its ideas or receive the financial support of the Government for such purposes. Instead there should be established educational and cultural commissions, locally elected and financed by the Government;
  8. To abolish immediately all zagryaditelniye otryadi (Bolshevik units armed to suppress traffic and confiscate foodstuffs);
  9. To equalize the rations of all who work, with the exception of those employed in trades detrimental to health;
  10. To abolish the Bolshevik fighting detachments in all branches of the Army, as well as the Bolshevik guards kept on duty in mills and factories. Should such guards or military detachments be found necessary, they are to be appointed in the Army from the ranks, and in the factories according to the judgment of the workers;
  11. To give the peasants full freedom of action in regard to their land, and also the right to keep cattle, on condition that the peasants manage with their own means; that is, without employing hired labor;
  12. To request all branches of the Army, as well as our comrades the military kursanti, to concur in our resolutions;
  13. To demand that the press give the fullest publicity to our resolutions;
  14. To appoint a Traveling Commission of Control;
  15. To permit free kustarnoye (individual small scale) production by one's own efforts.[72]

Among the main rebel demands were new, free elections (as stipulated by the constitution) for the Soviets,[44] the right to freedom of expression, and total freedom of action and trade.[73] According to the resolution's proponents, the elections would result in the defeat of the Bolsheviks and the "triumph of the October Revolution".[44] The Bolsheviks, who had once planned a much more ambitious economic program beyond the sailors' demands,[74] could not tolerate the affront that these political demands represented to their power—they questioned the legitimacy of the Bolsheviks as representatives of the working classes.[75] The old demands that Lenin had defended in 1917 were now considered counterrevolutionary and dangerous to the Soviet government controlled by the Bolsheviks.[76]

The following day, March 1, about fifteen thousand people [77] attended a large assembly convened by the local soviet[78] in Anchor Square.[79] The authorities tried to appease the spirit of the crowd by sending Mikhail Kalinin, chairman of the All-Russian Central Executive Committee as a speaker,[80] while Zinoviev did not dare to go to the island.[81] But the attitude of the present crowd, which demanded free elections for the soviets, freedom of speech and the press for leftist anarchists and socialists, and all workers and peasants, freedom of assembly, suppression of political sections in the army, was soon apparent. Equal rations save for those who did the heavier work—rather than the Bolsheviks who enjoyed the best rations—economic freedom and freedom of organization for the workers and peasants, and political amnesty.[82] Those present overwhelmingly endorsed the resolution previously adopted by the Kronstadt seamen.[83] Most of the communists present in the crowd also supported the resolution.[84] The protests of the Bolshevik leaders were rejected, but Kalinin was able to return safely to Petrograd.[85]

 
Stepan Petrichenko, anarchist sailor who chaired the Provisional Revolutionary Committee during the Kronstadt revolt

Although the rebels did not expect a military confrontation with the government, tensions in Kronstadt grew after the arrest and disappearance of a delegation sent by the naval base to Petrograd to investigate the situation of strikes and protests in the city.[85] Some of the base's communists began to arm themselves while others abandoned it.[86]

On March 2, the delegates of warships, military units, and unions met to prepare for reelection of the local soviet.[87] About 300 delegates joined in to renew the soviet as decided at the previous day's assembly.[88] The leading Bolshevik representatives tried to dissuade the delegates through threats, but were unsuccessful.[89] Three of them, the president of the local soviet and the commissars of the Kuzmin fleet and the Kronstadt platoon, were arrested by the rebels.[90] The break with the government came about as a rumor spread through the assembly that the government planned to crack down on the assembly and send government troops to the naval base.[91] Immediately a Provisional Revolutionary Committee (PRC) was elected,[92][93] formed by the five members of the collegiate presidency of the assembly, to manage the island until the election of a new local soviet.[94] The committee enlarged to 15 members two days later.[95] The assembly of delegates became the island's parliament, and met twice on March 4 and 11.[96]

Part of the Kronstadt Bolsheviks hastily left the island. A group of them, led by the fortress commissioner, tried to crush the revolt but, lacking support, eventually ran away.[97] During the early hours of March 2, the town, fleet boats and island fortifications were already in the hands of the PRC, which met with no resistance.[98] The rebels arrested 326 Bolsheviks,[99] about a fifth of the local communists, the rest of whom were left free. In contrast, the Bolshevik authorities executed forty-five sailors in Oranienbaum and took relatives of the rebels hostage.[100] None of the rebel-held Bolsheviks suffered abuse, torture or executions.[101] The prisoners received the same rations as the rest of the islanders and lost only their boots and shelters, which were handed over to the soldiers on duty at the fortifications.[102]

The government accused opponents of being French-led counterrevolutionaries and claimed that the Kronstadt rebels were commanded by General Alexander Kozlovsky [ru], the former Tsarist officer then responsible for base artillery,[103] although it was in the hands of the Revolutionary Committee.[104] As of March 2, the entire province of Petrograd was subject to martial law and the Defense Committee chaired by Zinoviev had obtained special powers to suppress the protests.[105] There was a hurry to gain control of the fortress before the thawing of the frozen bay, which would have made it impregnable for the land army.[32] Trotsky presented alleged French press articles announcing the revolt two weeks before its outbreak as proof that the rebellion was a plan devised by the emigre and the forces of the Entente. Lenin used the same tactic to accuse the rebels a few days later at the 10th Party Congress.[106]

Despite the intransigence of the government and the willingness of the authorities to crush the revolt by force, many communists supported the sailors' demanded reforms by the sailors and preferred a negotiated resolution to end the conflict.[104] In reality, the initial attitude of the Petrograd government was not as uncompromising as it seemed; Kalinin himself assumed that the demands were acceptable and should undergo only a few changes, while the local Petrograd Soviet tried to appeal to the sailors by saying that they had been misled by certain counterrevolutionary agents.[107] Moscow's attitude, however, from the outset was far harsher than that of the Petrograd leaders.[107]

Critics of the government, including some communists, accused it of betraying the ideals of the 1917 revolution and implementing a violent, corrupt and bureaucratic regime.[108] In part, the various opposition groups within the party itself—the Left Communists, Democratic Centralists and the Workers Opposition—agreed with such criticisms, even though their leaders did not support the revolt,[109] but members of the latter two groups would still help to suppress the revolt.[110]

Reaction in Petrograd

 
The Bolshevik Party's 10th Congress (delegates pictured) overlapped with the Kronstadt rebellion

The authorities falsely accused the revolt of being a counterrevolutionary plan.[20] The rebels did not expect attacks from the authorities nor did they launch attacks against the continent—rejecting Kozlovsky's advice[111]—nor did the island's communists denounce any kind of collusion by the rebels in the early moments of the revolt. They even attended the delegate assembly on March 2.[112] Initially, the rebels sought to show a conciliatory stance with the government, believing that it could comply with Kronstadt's demands. Kalinin, who spoke at the assembly, would have been a valuable hostage for the rebels yet returned to Petrograd without issue.[113]

Neither the rebels nor the government expected the Kronstadt protests to trigger a rebellion.[113] Many of the local members of the Bolshevik party did not see in the rebels and their demands the supposedly counterrevolutionary character denounced by the Moscow leaders.[114] Local communists even published a manifesto in the island's new journal.[113]

Some of the government troops sent to suppress the revolt, upon learning that the island's rule by commissioners had been eliminated, instead defected to the rebellion.[114] The government had serious problems with the regular troops sent to suppress the uprising, and resorted to using cadets and Cheka agents.[115] The high-ranking Bolshevik leaders responsible for the operation had to return from the 10th Party Congress in Moscow.[114]

The rebels' claim of a "third revolution" to uphold ideals of 1917 and limit the Bolshevik government's power risked undermining and dividing popular support for the Bolshevik party.[116] To maintain credulity, the Bolsheviks made the revolt appear counterrevolutionary, explaining their uncompromising military campaign and stance.[116] The Bolsheviks tried to present themselves as the sole legitimate defenders of working class interests.[117]

Opposition activities

The various groups of emigres and government opponents were too divided to make a joint-effort for the rebels.[118] Kadetes, Mensheviks, and revolutionary socialists maintained their differences and did not collaborate to support the rebellion.[119] Victor Chernov and the revolutionary socialists attempted to launch a fundraising campaign to help the sailors,[120] but the PRC refused aid,[121] convinced that the revolt would spread throughout the country, with no need for foreign aid.[122] The Mensheviks, for their part, were sympathetic to the rebel demands but not to the revolt itself.[123] The Paris-based Russian Union of Industry and Commerce secured support from the French Foreign Ministry to supply the island and begin fundraising for the rebels.[124] Wrangel, whom the French continued to supply, promised his Constantinople troops to Kozlovsky and began an unsuccessful campaign to gain the support of the powers.[125] No power agreed to provide military support to the rebels, and only France tried to facilitate the arrival of food on the island.[126] Aid from the Finnish "kadetes" did not arrive in time. Even as anti-Bolsheviks called on the Russian Red Cross's assistance, no help came to the island during the two-week rebellion.[119]

The National Center separately plotted a Kronstadt uprising in which the "kadetes", with Wrangel's troops, would turn the city into a new center of anti-Bolshevik resistance, but the rebellion occurred independent of this plan.[127] The Kronstadt rebels had little contact with the emigrants during the revolt, although some rebels joined Wrangel's forces after the insurrection failed.[128]

Rebel activities

 
 
Zinoviev, chair of the Petrograd council, and Trotsky, chair of the Revolutionary War Council, became enemies of Kronstadt after dropping an accusative leaflet over the city

The rebels justified the uprising as an attack on Bolshevik "commissiocracy". According to them, the Bolsheviks had betrayed the principles of the October Revolution, making the Soviet government a bureaucratic autocracy[129] sustained by Cheka terror.[130] According to the rebels, a "third revolution" should restore power to the freely elected Soviet councils, eliminate union bureaucracy, and begin the implantation of a new socialism that would serve as an example for the whole world.[131] The citizens of Kronstadt, however, did not want the holding of a new constituent assembly[132] or the return of representative democracy,[133] but the return of power to the free workers councils.[131] Fearful of justifying the Bolshevik's accusations, the rebellion leaders took care to refrain from attacking revolutionary symbols and reject assistance that might relate them in any way to the emigrants or counterrevolutionary forces.[134] The rebels demanded reform rather than the demise of the Bolshevik party to eliminate its strong authoritarian and bureaucratic tendency that had grown during the civil war, an opinion held by oppositional currents within the party itself.[135] The rebels maintained that the party had sacrificed its democratic, egalitarian ideals to remain in power.[135] The Kronstadt seamen remained faithful to the ideals of 1917, defending workers' council independence from political party control, free and unrestricted participation for all leftist tendencies, guaranteed worker civil rights, and direct elections by workers in place of government/party appointments.[136]

Several leftist tendencies participated in the revolt.[137] The anarchist rebels demanded, in addition to individual freedoms, the self-determination of workers. The Bolsheviks feared that mass spontaneous social movement could fall into the hands of reaction.[138] For Lenin, Kronstadt's demands displayed a "semi-anarchist" and "petty-bourgeois" character but, as the concerns of the peasantry and workers reflected, they posed a far greater threat to their government than the White armies.[139] Bolshevik leaders thought that rebel ideals resembled the Russian populism. The Bolsheviks had long criticized the populists, who in their opinion were reactionary and unrealistic in rejecting the idea of a centralized, industrialized state.[139] Such an idea, as popular as it was,[140] according to Lenin, should lead to the disintegration of the country into thousands of separate communes, ending centralized Bolshevik power but, over time, could result in a new, centralist, right-wing regime and thus needed to be suppressed.[141]

Influenced by various socialist and anarchist groups, but free from their control and initiatives, the rebels made several demands from all these groups in a vague and unclear program that represented much more a popular protest against misery and oppression than it did a coherent government program. With speeches emphasizing land collectivization, freedom, popular will and participation, and the defense of a decentralized state, the rebels' ideas were comparable with anarchism.[142] Besides the anarchists, the Maximalists were the closest political group to support these positions. Their program was similar to the revolutionary slogans of 1917, which remained popular during the time of the uprising: "all land for the peasants", "all factories for the workers", "all bread and all products for the workers", and "all power to the soviets but not the parties".[143] Disillusioned with the political parties, unions in the uprising advocated for free unions to give economic power back to workers.[144] The sailors, like the revolutionary socialists, defended peasantry interests and showed little interest in matters of large industry, though they rejected the idea of holding a new constituent assembly, one of the pillars of the revolutionary socialist program.[145]

The rebels implemented a series of administrative changes during the uprising. Changes to the rationing system led to all citizens receiving equal rations, save for children and the sick, who received special rations.[146] Schools closed and a curfew was set.[147] Departments and commissariats were abolished, replaced by union delegates' boards, and revolutionary troikas were formed to implement the PRC measures in all factories, institutions, and military units.[148]

On the afternoon of March 2, Kronstadt delegates crossed the frozen sea to Oranienbaum to disseminate the Petropavlovsk resolution.[149] There they received unanimous support from the 1st Naval Air Squadron.[149] That night, the Kronstadt PRC sent a 250-man detachment to Oranienbaum but was driven back by machine gun fire. Three delegates that the Oranienbam air squadron had sent to Kronstadt were arrested by Cheka as they returned to the city.[149] The commissioner of Oranienbaum, aware of the facts and fearing the upheaval of his other units, requested Zinoviev's urgent help, armed the local party members, and increased their rations to secure their loyalty.[150] During the early morning hours, an armored cadet and three light artillery batteries arrived in Petrograd, surrounded the barracks of the rebel unit, and arrested the insurgents. After extensive interrogation, 45 of them were shot.[151]

Despite this setback,[151] the rebels continued their passive stance and rejected the advice of the "military experts"—a euphemism used to designate the tsarist officers employed by the Soviets under the surveillance of the commissars—to attack various points of the continent rather than staying on the island.[152] The ice around the base was not broken, the warships were not released and the defenses of Petrograd's entrances were not strengthened. Kozlovsky complained about the hostility of the sailors towards the officers, judging the timing of the insurrection as untimely.[153] The rebels were convinced that the Bolshevik authorities would yield and negotiate the stated demands.[154]

In the few mainland places supporting the rebels, the Bolsheviks promptly suppressed revolt. In the capital, a delegation from the naval base was arrested trying to convince an icebreaker's crew to join the rebellion. Most island delegates sent to the continent were arrested. Unable to spread the revolt and rejecting Soviet authorities demands to end the rebellion, the rebels adopted a defensive strategy of administrative reforms on the island and waiting for the spring thaw, which would increase their natural defenses against being detained.[155]

On March 4, as delegates returned from the mainland reporting that the Bolsheviks had suppressed the real character of the revolt and instead were spreading news of a white uprising in the naval base, the assembly approved the extension of the PRC and the delivery of weapons to citizens to maintain security in the city and free up soldiers and sailors for the defense of the island.[156]

At a tumultuous meeting of the Petrograd Soviet, despite resistance from rebel representatives, an approved resolution called for the end of the rebellion and the return of power to the local Kronstadt Soviet.[157] Arriving late from Siberia via Moscow, Trotsky immediately issued an ultimatum demanding unconditional and immediate rebel surrender.[158] Zinoviev's Petrograd Defense Committee airdropped a leaflet over Kronstadt accusing the rebellion of being orchestrated by the White Army, ordering their surrender, and threatening that those who resisted would be "shot like partridges". Petrograd also ordered the arrest of the rebels' relatives as hostages, a strategy formerly used by Trotsky during the civil war to secure the loyalty of the Red Army's ex-tsarist officers, and demanded the release of Bolshevik officers detained in Kronstadt. Thus, to the rebel sailors, Trotsky and Zinoviev embodied the Bolshevik malevolence they were protesting. The rebels responded that their prisoners had full liberties and would not be released while Petrograd held families hostage.[159] The hostage tactic also contributed to the failure of the sole attempt at mediation, as Kronstadt and Petrograd disagreed over the composition of a commission that could be sent to observe and mediate Kronstadt's conditions.[160]

On March 7, the extended deadline expired for accepting Trotsky ultimatum. During the wait, the government bolstered its forces and prepared an attack plan with Red Army commanders, cadets, and Cheka units.[160] Mikhail Tukhachevsky, then a prominent young officer, took command of the 7th Army and the rest of the Petrograd troops. The 7th Army, composed mainly of peasants, was demotivated from having already defended the former capital throughout the civil war, sympathetic for the rebel demands, and reluctant to fight their comrades. Tukhachevsky had to rely on the cadets, Cheka and Bolshevik units to head the attack on the rebel island.[161]

Kronstadt, meanwhile, reinforced its defenses with 2,000 civilian recruits atop the 13,000-man garrison. The city itself had a thick wall and across the island's forts and ships were 135 cannons and 68 machine guns. The 15 forts had turrets and thick armor. Artillery on Kronstadt's main warships, Petropavlovsk and Sevastopol, outclassed that of the most powerful mainland fort but was frozen in disadvantageous position.[162] The base also had eight docked warships, amid other gunboats and tugboats, all rendered inaccessible by ice. Kronstadt had excellent defenses between this weaponry and the protection of vast distances of open ice. With the nearest forts far away, this frightening trek across the ice, unprotected from the island's firepower greatly unnerved the Bolshevik troops.[163]

The Kronstadt rebels also had their difficulties, lacking the ammunition, winter clothing, food reserves, and fuel to fend off a prolonged siege.[163]

Attack on Kronstadt

 
 
Kronstadt
 
Petrograd
 
Sestroretsk
 
Lisy Nos
 
Oranienbaum
class=notpageimage|
St. Petersburg
 
 
 
 
Red Army commander and prominent officers of the final attack, clockwise from top left: Tukhachevsky, Fedko, Dybenko, Putna

Bolshevik military operations against the island began the morning of March 7.[164] Some 60,000 troops took part in the attack.[165] Artillery strikes from Sestroretsk and Lisy Nos to the north sought to weaken the island's defenses and enable an infantry attack, which followed the next day before dawn. Amid a blinding snowstorm, Tukhachevsky's units attacked from the north and south with cadets at the forefront, followed by select Red Army units and Cheka machine gunners, who had orders to shoot defectors. Scores of Red Army soldiers drowned as the ice beneath them was blown out by explosions. Others defected or refused to advance. The few troops who reached the island were forced to withdraw. Artillery attacks resumed when the storm subsided. In the afternoon, Bolshevik aircraft began bombarding the island, but to little effect. The Bolsheviks made premature, triumphalist statements of their imminent victory, but their forces had suffered hundreds of casualties and defections due to insufficient preparation, low morale, and the danger of their unprotected approach by ice.[166]

A series of minor skirmishes against Kronstadt took place in the days following the failed opening salvo. While the Bolsheviks prepared additional troops with less emotional investment (cadet regiments, Communist Youth, Cheka forces, and non-Russians), Zinoviev made concessions to the people of Petrograd to keep the peace.[167] Trotsky's closed session report to the 10th Party Congress led over a quarter of congressional delegates to volunteer, mainly to boost soldier morale, which was difficult in light of the Bolshevik strategy of sending minor, futile attempts at overtaking the island.[168] On March 10, planes bombed Kronstadt and coastal batteries fired at the island at night in preparation for a southeast attack on the island the next morning, which failed and resulted in a large number of government casualties. Fog prevented operations for the rest of the day. Bolshevik officers, refusing to wait for reinforcement and mindful that their ice bridge would soon melt, continued to bomb the coast on March 12, causing little damage.[169] Small troop assaults the next two days were driven back with scores of casualties.[170] After March 14, air and artillery attacks continued but the troops waited for a larger push. Several small precursors of mutiny and work stoppage outside Kronstadt were contained during this time.[171]

In the period awaiting a unified attack, the mood shifted. News from Moscow's 10th Congress announced the end of War Communism. In particular, Bolshevik peasant soldiers were pleased by the cornerstone policy change, from forced requisition of all peasant surplus produce to a tax in kind, which freed the peasant post-tax to use or sell as they wished.[172] In the same period, by mid-March, the rebels' high spirits grew dim with the realization that their cause had not spread and, with supplies dwindling, that no help was forthcoming.[173] Kronstadt's sailors felt this feeling of betrayal long after the city fell.[174]

Final attack

 
 
Bolshevik artillery on the shore of Gulf of Finland and damage to the Petropavlovsk during the assault

On March 16, as Kronstadt accepted a proposal for Russian Red Cross emergency food and medicine, Tukhachevsky's reinforced army of 50,000 prepared to take the island and its 15,000 rebels.[175] Compared with prior attempts, the attackers enjoyed better numbers, morale, and leaders,[176] including prominent Bolshevik officers Ivan Fedko, Pavel Dybenko, and Vitovt Putna.[177] Tukhachevsky's plan consisted of a six-column[180] approach from the north, south, and east preceded by intense artillery bombing, which began in the early afternoon.[176] Both the Sevastopol and Petropavlovsk suffered casualties from direct hits. The effects were more psychological, on rebel morale, than physical. The bombing ended by night and, like prior attacks, the rebels anticipated foot soldiers, who arrived before dawn.[178] Most of the Bolshevik troops concentrated south of the island to attack from the south and east, while a smaller contingent of cadets gathered to the north.[181]

Blanketed by darkness and fog, the northern soldiers silently advanced in two columns towards the island's forts. Despite their camouflage and caution, one column was discovered by spotlight cutting through barbed wire. The rebels unsuccessfully tried to persuade their attackers not to fight, but the Bolshevik cadets carried on, charging and retreating with many deaths until they captured the first two forts. Dawn of March 17 broke the fog and cover of night. Exposed, the two sides fought with heavy casualties, mainly by machine gun and grenades. By the afternoon, the Bolsheviks had taken several forts and the cadets had reached Kronstadt's northeast wall. The final northern forts fell by 1 a.m.[182]

The larger southern group timed its assault to follow the northern group's lead by an hour. Three columns with machine guns and light artillery approached Kronstadt's harbour while a fourth column approached the island's vulnerable Petrograd Gate. Darkness and fog hid the shock troops from rebel searchlights, who were then able to overpower the rebels in the south of the city, but were then met by the other forts' machine guns and artillery.[179] Caught in the open, rebel reinforcements forced the Bolsheviks to retreat. More than half of the 79th Infantry Brigade had died, including delegates from the 10th Party Congress.[183]

The column attacking Petrograd Gate from the east, however, was successful. One group breached the city walls north of the gate, followed by another group's march through the gate itself. Their losses had been great outside the city walls but inside they found a "veritable hell" with bullets seemingly from every window and roof. Fighting proceeded through the streets.[183] Liberated Bolshevik prisoners joined the assault. Women supplied and nursed the defense. A late-afternoon rebel counterattack nearly drove the Bolsheviks from the city when a regiment of Petrograd volunteers arrived as Bolshevik backup. In the early evening, Oranienbaum artillery entered and ravaged the city. Later that evening, the northern cadets captured the Kronstadt headquarters, taking prisoners, and met the southern forces in the center of town. As forts fell, the battle was mostly over by midnight.[184] The government held most structures by noon on March 18 and defeated the last resistance in the afternoon. The Bolsheviks had won.[185]

Both sides suffered casualties on par with the civil war's deadliest battles. The American consulate at Vyborg estimated 10,000 Bolsheviks dead, wounded, or missing, including 15 Congress delegates. Finland asked Russia to remove the bodies on the ice, fearing a public health hazard after the thaw. There are no reliable reports for rebel deaths, but one report estimated 600 dead, 1,000 wounded, and 2,500 imprisoned, though more were killed in vengeance as the battle subsided.[186] Trotsky and his commander-in-chief, Sergey Kamenev, had approved chemical warfare by gas shells and balloons against Kronstadt if the resistance continued.[187]

Faced with the prospect of summary executions, about 8,000 Kronstadt refugees (mostly soldiers)[188] crossed into Finland within a day of Kronstadt's fall, about half of the rebel forces. Petrichenko and members of the Kronstadt Revolutionary Committee were among the first to flee, with 800 arriving before the end of the assault.[189] The sailors' final acts were to sabotage Kronstadt's defenses, removing parts of weapons and equipment. The battleship crews, upon discovering their leaders' desertion, disobeyed their command to destroy the ships and instead arrested their officers and surrendered to the Bolsheviks.[190]

Aftermath

 
Petrichenko and other Kronstadt rebels in Finnish exile

Dybenko, a Bolshevik officer in the Kronstadt assault, was given full power to purge dissent as the Kronstadt Fort's new commander. In place of the Kronstadt Soviet, a troika of Kronstadt's former Bolshevik Party leaders assisted him. The battleships and city square were renamed and both unreliable sailors and the Bolshevik infantry alike were dispersed throughout the country.[191]

There were no public trials. Of the 2,000 prisoners, 13 were tried in private as the rebellion's leaders and tried in the press as a counterrevolutionary conspiracy. None belonged to the Kronstadt Revolutionary Committee, of which four members were known to be in Bolshevik custody, or the "military specialists" who advised the rebel military.[192] In practice, despite the government's continued insistence that White Army generals were behind the Kronstadt rebellion, former tsarist officers were far more prominent among the Bolsheviks than the rebels.[176] The 13 were sentenced to execution two days after the fall of Kronstadt. Hundreds of rebel prisoners were killed in Kronstadt and when Petrograd jails were full, hundreds more rebels were removed and shot. The rest moved to Cheka mainland prisons and forced labor camps, where many died of hunger or disease.[188]

 
Captured Kronstadt sailors summarily executed.

Those who escaped to Finland were put in refugee camps, where life was bleak and isolating. The Red Cross provided food and clothing and some worked in public works. Finland wanted the refugees to settle in other countries while Bolsheviks sought their repatriation, promising amnesty. Instead, those who returned were arrested and sent to prison camps.[193] Most of the émigrés had left Finland within several years.[194] Petrichenko, chair of the Kronstadt Revolutionary Committee, remained respected among the Finnish refugees. He later joined pro-Soviet groups. During World War II, he was repatriated and died soon after in a prison camp.[195]

None of the Kronstadt rebellion's demands were met.[196] The Bolsheviks did not restore freedom of speech and assembly. They did not release socialist and anarchist political prisoners. Rival left-wing groups were suppressed rather than brought into coalition governance. The Bolsheviks did not adopt worker council autonomy ("free soviets") and did not entertain direct, democratic soldier election of military officials. Old directors and specialists continued to run the factories instead of the workers. State farms remained in place. Wage labor remained unchanged.[197] Avrich described the aftermath as such: "As in all failed revolts in authoritarian regimes, the rebels realized the opposite of their aims: harsher dictatorship, less popular self-government."[198]

Lenin announced two conclusions from Kronstadt: political rank closure within the party, and economic ingratiation for the peasantry.[197] Lenin used Kronstadt to consolidate the Bolsheviks' power and dictatorial rule.[199] Dissidents were expelled from the party.[200] Oppositional leftist parties, once harassed but tolerated, were repressed—jailed or exiled—by the end of the year in the name of single party unity.[198] The Bolsheviks tightened soldier discipline and scuttled plans for a peasant and worker army. Lenin wanted to scrap the Baltic Fleet as having an unreliable crew but, per Trotsky, they were instead reorganized and populated with loyal leadership.[196]

During the 10th Party Congress, concurrent with the rebellion, Kronstadt symbolized the swelling peasant unrest towards the party's unpopular War Communism policy and the need for reform, but Kronstadt had no influence on Lenin's plans to replace War Communism with the New Economic Policy (NEP), which was drafted for the Congress's agenda in advance of even the rebel's demands. Rather the rebellion accelerated its adoption.[201] Prior to the rebellion, Lenin recognized a trend of peasant dissatisfaction and feared general revolt during the country's transition, and so conceded that a conciliatory, peasant-focused domestic economic program was more immediately urgent than his ambitions for Western proletariat revolution.[202] The New Economic Policy replaced forced food requisition with a tax in kind, letting peasants spend their surplus as they pleased. This defused peasant discontent with War Communism[203] and freed the Bolsheviks to consolidate power.[196]

Legacy

 
Monument to the Victims of Revolutions, containing an eternal flame, in Kronstadt's Anchor Square, with the Naval Cathedral in the background

The Kronstadt rebellion was the major last Russian buntarstvo—the rural, traditional, spontaneous, preindustrial uprisings.[1] It clarified an authoritarian streak in the Bolshevik approach in which emergency Civil War-era measures never expired.[204] Though the rebellion did not appear decisive or influential at the time, it later symbolized a fork in Russian history that turned away from libertarian socialism and towards bureaucratic repression and what would become Stalinist totalitarianism, the Moscow Trials, and the Great Purge.[205] The revolution turned on each of the major Bolshevik leaders involved in Kronstadt: Tukhachevsky, Zinoviev, and Dybenko died in the Great Purge, Trotsky was killed by the Soviet secret police, Raskolnikov killed himself, and many of the congressional delegates who signed up for Kronstadt died in prisons.[206]

In his analysis of the rebellion, historian Paul Avrich wrote that the rebels had scant chance of success, even if the ice melted to their favor and aid had arrived.[207] Kronstadt was unprepared, ill-timed, and outmatched against a government that had just won a civil war of greater magnitude.[208] Petrichenko, chair of the Kronstadt Revolutionary Committee, shared this retrospective criticism.[209] Assistance from the White Army's General Wrangel would have taken months to mobilize.[210] Avrich summed up the whole context in the Introduction if his book Kronstadt 1921:

Soviet Russia in 1921 was not the Leviathan of recent decades. It was a young and insecure state, faced with a rebellious population at home and implacable enemies abroad who longed to see the Bolsheviks ousted from power. More important still, Kronstadt was in Russian territory; what confronted the Bolsheviks was a mutiny in their own navy at its most strategic outpost, guarding the western approaches to Petrograd. Kronstadt, they feared, might ignite the Russian mainland or become the springboard for another anti-Soviet invasion. There was mounting evidence that Russian emigres were trying to assist the insurrection and to turn it to their own advantage. Not that the activities of the Whites can excuse any atrocities which the Bolsheviks committed against the sailors. But they do make the government's sense of urgency to crush the revolt more understandable. In a few weeks the ice in the Finnish Gulf would melt, and supplies and reinforcements could then be shipped in from the West, converting the fortress into a base for a new intervention. Apart from the propaganda involved, Lenin and Trotsky appear to have been genuinely anxious over this possibility.[211]

Soviet international diplomacy concurrent with the rebellion, such as the Anglo-Soviet Trade Agreement and Treaty of Riga negotiations, continued unabated.[210] The greater threat to Bolsheviks was a wider revolt[208] and the rebels' only potential for success, as went the unheeded advice of the rebels' military specialists, was in an immediate mainland offensive before the government could respond. In this way, the Kronstadt rebels repeated the same fatal hesitation of the Paris Commune rebels 50 years prior.[212] Seventy years later, a 1994 Russian government report rehabilitated the memory of the rebels and denounced the Bolshevik suppression of the rebellion. Its commissioner, Aleksandr Yakovlev, wrote that Kronstadt showed Bolshevik terror as Lenin's legacy, beginning what Stalin would continue.[213] As of 2008, their rehabilitation has not been updated in the Kronstadt Fortress Museum.[214]

In popular American intellectual usage, the term "Kronstadt" became a stand-in for an event that triggered one's disenchantment with Soviet Communism, as in the phrase, "I had my Kronstadt when ...". For some intellectuals, this was the Kronstadt rebellion itself but for others it was the Holodomor, Moscow Trials, East German uprising, intervention in Hungary, Khrushchev's Secret Speech, Prague Spring, or the dissolution of the Soviet Union.[215][216][217][218] The Kronstadt events are idealized in early Soviet period historiography as an example of "legitimate" popular expression.[219]

See also

Naval mutinies:

Notes

  1. ^ a b Guttridge, Leonard F. (2006). Mutiny: A History of Naval Insurrection. Naval Institute Press. p. 174. ISBN 978-1-59114-348-2.
  2. ^ Kronstadt Rebellion, Kronstädter Aufstand In: Dictionary of Marxism, http://www.inkrit.de/e_inkritpedia/e_maincode/doku.php?id=k:kronstaedter_aufstand
  3. ^ Chamberlin 1987, p. 445.
  4. ^ Steve Phillips (2000). Lenin and the Russian Revolution. Heinemann. p. 56. ISBN 978-0-435-32719-4. from the original on 2020-04-30. Retrieved 2016-03-18.
  5. ^ The New Cambridge Modern History. Vol. xii. CUP Archive. p. 448. GGKEY:Q5W2KNWHCQB. from the original on 2020-04-30. Retrieved 2016-03-18.
  6. ^ Hosking, Geoffrey (2006). Rulers and Victims: The Russians in the Soviet Union. Harvard University Press. p. 91. ISBN 9780674021785.
  7. ^ Chamberlin 1987, pp. 430–432.
  8. ^ Avrich 1970, p. 5.
  9. ^ Chamberlin 1987, p. 430.
  10. ^ a b c Daniels 1951, p. 241.
  11. ^ a b Avrich 1970, p. 8.
  12. ^ Chamberlin 1987, p. 431.
  13. ^ Avrich 1970, p. 25.
  14. ^ Avrich 1970, pp. 35–37.
  15. ^ a b Chamberlin 1987, p. 432.
  16. ^ Avrich 1970, p. 35; Chamberlin 1987, p. 432, 440.
  17. ^ Avrich 1970, p. 35.
  18. ^ Avrich 1970, pp. 35–36.
  19. ^ Avrich 1970, p. 36.
  20. ^ a b Schapiro 1965, p. 296.
  21. ^ Chamberlin 1987, p. 432; Schapiro 1965, p. 296.
  22. ^ Avrich 1970, pp. 36–37.
  23. ^ Avrich 1970, p. 37.
  24. ^ a b Schapiro 1965, p. 297.
  25. ^ a b Avrich 1970, pp. 37–38.
  26. ^ Avrich 1970, p. 38.
  27. ^ Avrich 1970, p. 39.
  28. ^ Avrich 1970, pp. 38–39.
  29. ^ Avrich 1970, p. 41.
  30. ^ Avrich 1970, pp. 42–44.
  31. ^ Chamberlin 1987, p. 440; Figes 1997, p. 760.
  32. ^ a b Figes 1997, p. 763.
  33. ^ Avrich 1970, pp. 47–48.
  34. ^ a b c Schapiro 1965, p. 298.
  35. ^ Avrich 1970, p. 49.
  36. ^ Avrich 1970, pp. 49–50.
  37. ^ a b c d Daniels 1951, p. 252.
  38. ^ Avrich 1970, pp. 33–34.
  39. ^ Chamberlin 1987, p. 440; Daniels 1951, p. 242; Schapiro 1965, p. 299.
  40. ^ Avrich 1970, pp. 58–59.
  41. ^ Avrich 1970, p. 62.
  42. ^ Avrich 1970, pp. 62–63.
  43. ^ Daniels 1951, p. 242; Schapiro 1965, p. 296.
  44. ^ a b c d Daniels 1951, p. 242.
  45. ^ Getzler 2002, p. 207.
  46. ^ Getzler 2002, p. 226; Mawdsley 1978, p. 509.
  47. ^ a b Getzler 2002, p. 205.
  48. ^ Mawdsley, Evan (1973). "The Baltic Fleet and the Kronstadt Mutiny". Soviet Studies. 24 (4): 506–521. doi:10.1080/09668137308410887. ISSN 0038-5859. JSTOR 150800.
  49. ^ a b Mawdsley 1978, p. 506.
  50. ^ a b c d Avrich 1970, p. 68.
  51. ^ a b Mawdsley 1978, p. 507.
  52. ^ a b c Mawdsley 1978, p. 511.
  53. ^ Getzler 2002, p. 210; Mawdsley 1978, p. 514.
  54. ^ a b Mawdsley 1978, p. 515.
  55. ^ Mawdsley 1978, p. 516.
  56. ^ Schapiro 1965, p. 299.
  57. ^ Getzler 2002, p. 205; Schapiro 1965, p. 300.
  58. ^ Mawdsley 1978, p. 517.
  59. ^ Getzler 2002, p. 212.
  60. ^ Mawdsley 1978, p. 518.
  61. ^ Mawdsley 1978, p. 521.
  62. ^ Avrich 1970, pp. 70–71; Daniels 1951, p. 242.
  63. ^ Avrich 1970, p. 71; Daniels 1951, p. 242; Mawdsley 1978, p. 518.
  64. ^ Mawdsley 1978, p. 519.
  65. ^ Avrich 1970, pp. 67–68.
  66. ^ a b Chamberlin 1987, p. 440.
  67. ^ Avrich 1970, p. 71; Schapiro 1965, p. 301.
  68. ^ Avrich 1970, pp. 71–72; Getzler 2002, p. 212.
  69. ^ Getzler 2002, p. 213.
  70. ^ Avrich 1970, p. 72.
  71. ^ Avrich 1970, pp. 72–74.
  72. ^ Berkman, Alexander (1922). "The Kronstadt Rebellion". pp. 10–11.
  73. ^ Avrich 1970, pp. 73–74; Schapiro 1965, p. 301.
  74. ^ Schapiro 1965, p. 307.
  75. ^ Avrich 1970, p. 75.
  76. ^ Avrich 1970, pp. 75–76.
  77. ^ Chamberlin 1987, p. 440; Schapiro 1965, p. 303.
  78. ^ Schapiro 1965, p. 302.
  79. ^ Avrich 1970, p. 76; Daniels 1951, p. 243; Getzler 2002, p. 215.
  80. ^ Avrich 1970, pp. 76–77; Daniels 1951, p. 243; Getzler 2002, p. 215; Schapiro 1965, p. 302.
  81. ^ Avrich 1970, p. 76.
  82. ^ Chamberlin 1987, p. 441; Daniels 1951, p. 243.
  83. ^ Avrich 1970, pp. 78–79; Getzler 2002, p. 216; Schapiro 1965, p. 302.
  84. ^ Schapiro 1965, p. 303.
  85. ^ a b Avrich 1970, pp. 78–79; Daniels 1951, p. 243.
  86. ^ Daniels 1951, p. 243.
  87. ^ Avrich 1970, p. 80; Daniels 1951, p. 243; Getzler 2002, p. 216.
  88. ^ Avrich 1970, pp. 80–81.
  89. ^ Avrich 1970, pp. 80–81; Daniels 1951, p. 243.
  90. ^ Avrich 1970, pp. 83–84; Getzler 2002, p. 217.
  91. ^ Avrich 1970, pp. 85–86; Daniels 1951, p. 244.
  92. ^ Chamberlin 1987, p. 442; Schapiro 1965, p. 303.
  93. ^ "The Truth about Kronstadt: A Translation and Discussion of the Authors". www-personal.umich.edu. from the original on 10 January 2017. Retrieved 6 May 2018.
  94. ^ Avrich 1970, p. 85.
  95. ^ Daniels 1951, p. 244; Getzler 2002, pp. 217, 227.
  96. ^ Getzler 2002, pp. 217, 227.
  97. ^ Avrich 1970, p. 86.
  98. ^ Avrich 1970, pp. 86–87.
  99. ^ Getzler 2002, p. 240.
  100. ^ Avrich 1970, pp. 186–187.
  101. ^ Avrich 1970, p. 187; Chamberlin 1987, p. 442.
  102. ^ Getzler 2002, p. 241.
  103. ^ Avrich 1970, pp. 95–96; Daniels 1951, p. 244; Schapiro 1965, p. 303.
  104. ^ a b Daniels 1951, p. 244.
  105. ^ Avrich 1970, p. 96; Figes 1997, p. 760.
  106. ^ Avrich 1970, p. 96.
  107. ^ a b Daniels 1951, p. 245.
  108. ^ Daniels 1951, p. 249.
  109. ^ Daniels 1951, p. 250.
  110. ^ Avrich 1970, pp. 182–183; Schapiro 1965, p. 305.
  111. ^ Avrich 1970, pp. 101–102.
  112. ^ Daniels 1951, pp. 246–247.
  113. ^ a b c Daniels 1951, p. 247.
  114. ^ a b c Daniels 1951, p. 248.
  115. ^ Chamberlin 1987, p. 443; Daniels 1951, p. 248.
  116. ^ a b Daniels 1951, p. 253.
  117. ^ Daniels 1951, p. 254.
  118. ^ Avrich 1970, pp. 114–115.
  119. ^ a b Avrich 1970, p. 123.
  120. ^ Avrich 1970, pp. 123–125.
  121. ^ Getzler 2002, p. 237; Schapiro 1965, p. 304.
  122. ^ Avrich 1970, p. 125.
  123. ^ Avrich 1970, pp. 125–126; Schapiro 1965, p. 299.
  124. ^ Avrich 1970, p. 116.
  125. ^ Avrich 1970, pp. 116–118.
  126. ^ Avrich 1970, p. 119.
  127. ^ Avrich 1970, pp. 126–127.
  128. ^ Avrich 1970, pp. 127–128.
  129. ^ Chamberlin 1987, p. 442.
  130. ^ Avrich 1970, pp. 164–165; Getzler 2002, p. 234.
  131. ^ a b Getzler 2002, p. 234.
  132. ^ Avrich 1970, p. 181; Chamberlin 1987, p. 441.
  133. ^ Avrich 1970, pp. 162–163.
  134. ^ Getzler 2002, p. 235.
  135. ^ a b Avrich 1970, p. 182.
  136. ^ Avrich 1970, pp. 161–162.
  137. ^ Avrich 1970, pp. 170–171.
  138. ^ Avrich 1970, pp. 190–191.
  139. ^ a b Avrich 1970, pp. 191–192.
  140. ^ Chamberlin 1987, p. 441.
  141. ^ Avrich 1970, p. 192.
  142. ^ Avrich 1970, p. 171.
  143. ^ Avrich 1970, pp. 171–172.
  144. ^ Getzler 2002, p. 238.
  145. ^ Avrich 1970, p. 168.
  146. ^ Avrich 1970, pp. 157–158.
  147. ^ Avrich 1970, p. 158.
  148. ^ Avrich 1970, p. 158; Getzler 2002, p. 240.
  149. ^ a b c Avrich 1970, p. 137.
  150. ^ Avrich 1970, pp. 137–138.
  151. ^ a b Avrich 1970, p. 138.
  152. ^ Avrich 1970, pp. 138–139; Chamberlin 1987, p. 442; Getzler 2002, p. 242; Schapiro 1965, p. 303.
  153. ^ Avrich 1970, p. 139.
  154. ^ Getzler 2002, p. 242.
  155. ^ Avrich 1970, pp. 139–141.
  156. ^ Getzler 2002, p. 227.
  157. ^ Avrich 1970, p. 143.
  158. ^ Avrich 1970, p. 144; Chamberlin 1987, p. 443.
  159. ^ Avrich 1970, pp. 145–147.
  160. ^ a b Avrich 1970, p. 148.
  161. ^ Avrich 1970, p. 149.
  162. ^ Avrich 1970, p. 150.
  163. ^ a b Avrich 1970, p. 151.
  164. ^ Chamberlin 1987, p. 443; Figes 1997, p. 763; Schapiro 1965, p. 304.
  165. ^ Figes 1997, p. 767.
  166. ^ Avrich 1970, pp. 152–155.
  167. ^ Avrich 1970, pp. 193–194.
  168. ^ Avrich 1970, pp. 194–196.
  169. ^ Avrich 1970, p. 196.
  170. ^ Avrich 1970, pp. 196–197.
  171. ^ Avrich 1970, p. 197.
  172. ^ Avrich 1970, p. 198; Chamberlin 1987, p. 445.
  173. ^ Avrich 1970, pp. 198–200.
  174. ^ Avrich 1970, p. 200.
  175. ^ Avrich 1970, p. 202.
  176. ^ a b c Avrich 1970, p. 203.
  177. ^ Avrich 1970, pp. 202–203.
  178. ^ a b Avrich 1970, p. 204.
  179. ^ a b Avrich 1970, p. 206.
  180. ^ Two columns from the north,[178] four from the south[179]
  181. ^ Avrich 1970, pp. 202–204.
  182. ^ Avrich 1970, pp. 204–206.
  183. ^ a b Avrich 1970, p. 207.
  184. ^ Avrich 1970, p. 208.
  185. ^ Avrich 1970, p. 210.
  186. ^ Avrich 1970, pp. 210–211.
  187. ^ Avrich 1970, pp. 211–212.
  188. ^ a b Avrich 1970, p. 215.
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References

  • Avrich, Paul (1970). Kronstadt, 1921. Princeton, N.J.: Princeton University Press. ISBN 0-691-08721-0. OCLC 67322.
  • Chamberlin, William Henry (1987) [1935]. "The Crisis of War Communism: Kronstadt and NEP". The Russian Revolution, Volume II: 1918–1921: From the Civil War to the Consolidation of Power. Princeton, N.J.: Princeton University Press. pp. 430–450. doi:10.1515/9781400858705-024. ISBN 0-691-05493-2. OCLC 1124141. Project MUSE chapter/1621439.
  • Daniels, Robert V. (December 1951). "The Kronstadt Revolt of 1921: A Study in the Dynamics of Revolution". American Slavic and East European Review. 10 (4): 241–254. doi:10.2307/2492031. ISSN 1049-7544. JSTOR 2492031.
  • Figes, Orlando (1997). A People's Tragedy: A History of the Russian Revolution. New York: Viking. ISBN 978-0-670-85916-0. OCLC 36496487.
  • Getzler, Israel (2002) [1982]. Kronstadt 1917–1921: The Fate of a Soviet Democracy. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-0-521-89442-5. OCLC 248926485.
  • Mawdsley, Evan (1978). The Russian Revolution and the Baltic Fleet: War and Politics, February 1917–April 1918. Studies in Russian and East European History. Macmillan. ISBN 978-1-349-03761-2.
  • Schapiro, Leonard (1965). The Origin of the Communist Autocracy Political Opposition in the Soviet State; First Phase 1917–1922. Cambridge, Massachusetts: Harvard University Press. ISBN 978-0-674-64451-9. OCLC 1068959664.

External links

  • The Kronstadt Izvestia, archive of the newspaper published by the rebels
  • Kronstadt Archive, at marxists.org
  • The New York Times archives about suppression of the rebellion, March 11, 1921.
  • The Truth about Kronstadt, 1921, published by the Socialist Revolutionary newspaper Volia Rossii.
  • Alexander Berkman, The Kronstadt Rebellion, 1922.
  • Emma Goldman, "Leon Trotsky Protests too Much", 1938, a response to Trotsky's "Hue and Cry over Kronstadt".
  • Ida Mett, The Kronstadt Commune, 1938.
  • Voline The Unknown Revolution. Book Three. Struggle for the Real Social Revolution, 1947.
  • , Anarchist FAQ
  • John Clare, "The Kronstadt Mutiny", Notes on Orlando Figes, A People's Tragedy (1996)".
  • A Kramer, Kronstadt: Trotsky was right!, 2003.
  • Abbie Bakan, Kronstadt and the Russian Revolution, 2003.
  • Kronstadt 1921 Bolshevism vs. Counterrevolution, Spartacist, English edition No.59, 2006 (International Communist League (Fourth Internationalist))
  • (in Russian)
  • The Kronstadt Uprising: A View from within the Revolt, CrimethInc., 2021.

kronstadt, rebellion, this, article, about, rebellion, russian, sailors, against, bolshevik, government, 1921, rebellions, russian, sailors, 1904, 1917, kronstadt, mutinies, punk, band, kronstadt, uprising, band, russian, Кронштадтское, восстание, kronshtadtsk. This article is about rebellion of Russian sailors against the Bolshevik government in 1921 For the rebellions of Russian sailors in 1904 and 1917 see Kronstadt mutinies For the punk band see Kronstadt Uprising band The Kronstadt rebellion Russian Kronshtadtskoe vosstanie tr Kronshtadtskoye vosstaniye was a 1921 insurrection of Soviet sailors and civilians against the Bolshevik government in the Russian SFSR port city of Kronstadt Located on Kotlin Island in the Gulf of Finland Kronstadt defended the former capital city Petrograd as the base of the Baltic Fleet For sixteen days in March 1921 rebels in Kronstadt s naval fortress rose in opposition to the Soviet government they had helped to consolidate Led by Stepan Petrichenko it was the last major revolt against the Bolshevik regime on Russian territory during the Russian Civil War 1 Kronstadt rebellionPart of the left wing uprisings against the Bolsheviks during the Russian Civil WarLoyalist soldiers of the Red Army attack the island fortress of Kronstadt on the ice of the Gulf of FinlandDateMarch 1 18 1921LocationKronstadt Kotlin Island Russia60 00 45 N 29 44 01 E 60 01250 N 29 73361 E 60 01250 29 73361 Coordinates 60 00 45 N 29 44 01 E 60 01250 N 29 73361 E 60 01250 29 73361ResultBolshevik victory Uprising suppressedBelligerentsBaltic Fleet RussiaCommanders and leadersStepan PetrichenkoVladimir Lenin Leon TrotskyMikhail TukhachevskyStrengthFirst assault 11 000Second assault 17 961First assault 10 073Second assault 25 000 30 000Casualties and lossesAround 1 000 killed in battle and 1 200 2 168 executedSecond assault 527 1 412 a much higher number if the first assault is included Disappointed in the direction of the Bolshevik government the rebels whom Leon Trotsky himself had praised earlier as adornment and pride of the revolution demanded a series of reforms reduction in Bolshevik power newly elected soviet councils to include socialist and anarchist groups economic freedom for peasants and workers dissolution of the bureaucratic governmental organs created during the civil war and the restoration of civil rights for the working class 2 Convinced of the popularity of the reforms they were fighting for which they partially tried to implement during the revolt the Kronstadt seamen waited in vain for the support of the population in the rest of the country and rejected aid from emigrants Although the council of officers advocated a more offensive strategy the rebels maintained a passive attitude as they waited for the government to take the first step in negotiations By contrast the authorities took an uncompromising stance presenting an ultimatum demanding unconditional surrender on March 5 Once this period expired the Bolsheviks raided the island several times and suppressed the revolt on March 18 after killing several thousand people Supporters saw the rebels as revolutionary martyrs while the authorities saw the rebels as agents of the Entente and counter revolution The Bolshevik response to the revolt caused great controversy and was responsible for the disillusionment of several supporters of the Bolshevik regime such as Emma Goldman While the revolt was suppressed and the rebels political demands were not met it served to accelerate the implementation of the New Economic Policy NEP which replaced war communism 3 4 5 According to Lenin the crisis was the most critical the Bolsheviks had yet faced undoubtedly more dangerous than Denikin Yudenich and Kolchak combined 6 Contents 1 Background 2 Preface 2 1 Fleet composition 2 2 Growing discontent and opposition 3 Petropavlovsk resolution 4 Reaction in Petrograd 4 1 Opposition activities 4 2 Rebel activities 5 Attack on Kronstadt 5 1 Final attack 6 Aftermath 7 Legacy 8 See also 9 Notes 10 References 11 External linksBackground Edit Prior to 1917 Kronstadt sailors revolted in 1905 depicted and 1906 As the Russian Civil War wound down in late 1920 the Bolsheviks presided over a nation in ruin Their communist Red Army had defeated Pyotr Wrangel s anti communist White Army and was militarily equipped to suppress outstanding peasant insurrections but faced mass disillusionment from unbearable living conditions famine disease cold and weariness induced by the years of war and exacerbated by Bolshevik war communism policies Peasants had started to resent government requisition policy with seizures of their already meager harvest being coupled with cutbacks on bread rations and a fuel shortage 7 Despite military victory and stabilized foreign relations Russia faced a serious social and economic crisis 8 As foreign troops began to withdraw Bolshevik leaders continued to sustain tight control of the economy through the policy of war communism 9 Discontent grew among the Russian populace particularly the peasantry who felt disadvantaged by government grain requisitioning prodrazvyorstka the forced seizure of large portions of the peasants grain crop used to feed urban dwellers In resistance of these policies peasants began refusing to till their farms In February 1921 the Cheka reported 155 peasant uprisings across Russia The workers in Petrograd were also involved in a series of strikes caused by the reduction of bread rations by one third over a ten day period 10 11 With this information and already stoked discontent the revolt at the Kronstadt naval base began as a protest over the plight of the country 10 Agricultural and industrial production had been drastically reduced and the transport system was disorganized 11 The arrival of winter and the maintenance 12 of war communism and various deprivations by Bolshevik authorities led to increased tensions in the countryside 13 as in the Tambov Uprising and in the cities especially Moscow and Petrograd where strikes and demonstrations took place 10 in early 1921 14 Due to the maintenance and reinforcement of war communism living conditions worsened even more after the fighting ended 15 Preface Edit The crew of the Petropavlovsk during the Baltic Fleet riot of March 1917 Protests followed a January 1921 announcement in which the government reduced bread rations by one third for inhabitants of all cities 16 While this decision was forced between heavy snow and fuel shortages preventing stored food transport in Siberia and the Caucasus 15 this justification did not prevent popular discontent 17 In mid February workers began to rally in Moscow such demonstrations were preceded by workers meetings in factories and workshops The workers demanded the end of war communism and a return to free labor Government envoys could not alleviate the situation 18 Soon the revolts could only be suppressed by armed troops 19 When the situation seemed to calm down in Moscow protests broke out in Petrograd 20 where about 60 of large factories closed in February due to lack of fuel 21 and food supplies had virtually disappeared 22 As in Moscow demonstrations and demands were preceded by meetings in factories and workshops 23 Faced with a shortage of government food rations and despite a ban on trade workers organized expeditions to fetch supplies in rural areas near cities They grew further discontent when the authorities tried to eliminate such activities 24 In late February a meeting at the small Trubochny factory decided to increase rations and immediately distribute winter clothes and shoes that were reportedly reserved for Bolsheviks 25 Workers called a protest the following day 25 The local Bolshevik controlled Soviet sent cadets to disperse the protesters 26 Grigori Zinoviev established a Defense Committee with special powers to end the protests similar structures were created in the various districts of the city in the form of troikas 27 The provincial Bolsheviks mobilized to deal with the crisis 24 New demonstrations followed from by Trubochny workers and this time spread throughout the city in part because of rumors about repression in the previous demonstration 28 Faced with growing protests the local Bolshevik controlled Soviet closed factories with high concentration of rebels which further intensified the movement 29 Soon the economic demands also became political in nature which was of most concern to the Bolsheviks 30 To definitively end the protests the authorities flooded the city with Red Army troops tried to close even more rebel affiliated factories and proclaimed martial law 31 There was a hurry to gain control of the fortress before the thawing of the frozen bay which would have made it impregnable for the land army 32 The Bolsheviks started a detention campaign executed by Cheka resulting in thousands of arrests thousands of students and intellectuals about 500 workers and union leaders and a few anarchists revolutionary socialists and key leaders of the Mensheviks 33 Authorities urged workers to return to work to prevent spillage of blood They granted certain concessions 34 permission to go to the countryside to bring food to cities relaxation of controls against speculation permission to buy coal to alleviate fuel shortages announcement of an end to grain confiscations and increased rations of workers and soldiers even at the expense of depleting scarce food reserves 35 Such measures convinced the workers of Petrograd to return to work at the start of March 36 Bolshevik authoritarianism and lack of freedoms and reforms led to increased discontent among their own followers and reinforced the opposition In their eagerness and effort to secure Soviet power the Bolsheviks predictably caused the growth of their own opposition 37 The centralism and bureaucracy of war communism added to the existing logistical difficulties 37 With the end of the civil war opposition groups emerged within the Bolshevik party itself 37 One of the more left wing syndicalism aligned opposition groups the Workers Opposition aimed at the party leadership 37 Another party wing the Group of Democratic Centralism advocated for the decentralization of power to be handled by workers councils 38 Fleet composition Edit Since 1917 anarchist sympathies held a strong influence on Kronstadt 39 The inhabitants of the island favored the local soviet autonomy won in the revolution and considered central government interference undesirable and unnecessary 40 Displaying a radical support for the Soviets Kronstadt had taken part in important revolutionary period events such as the July Days 34 October Revolution the assassination of the Provisional Government ministers 34 the Constituent Assembly dissolution and the civil war More than forty thousand sailors from the Soviet Baltic Fleet participated in the fighting against the White Army between 1918 and 1920 41 Despite participating in major conflicts alongside the Bolsheviks and being among the most active troops in government service sailors from the outset were wary of the possibility of centralization of power and bureaucratization 42 The composition of the naval base however had changed during the civil war 43 While many of its former sailors had been sent to various other parts of the country during the conflict and had been replaced by Ukrainian peasants less favorable to the Bolshevik government 44 most 45 of the sailors present in Kronstadt during the revolt about three quarters were veterans of 1917 46 At the beginning of 1921 the island had a population of about 50 000 civilians and 26 000 sailors and soldiers It had been the main base of the Baltic Fleet since the evacuation of Tallinn and Helsinki after the signing of the Treaty of Brest Litovsk 47 Until the revolt the naval base still considered itself in favor of the Bolsheviks and several party affiliates 47 The Baltic Fleet had been shrinking since the summer of 1917 when it had eight battleships nine cruisers more than fifty destroyers about forty submarines and hundreds of auxiliary vessels In 1920 only two battleships sixteen destroyers six submarines and a minesweeper fleet remained from the original fleet 48 49 Now unable to heat their ships the sailors were further angered 49 by the fuel shortage 50 and there were fears that even more ships would be lost owing to flaws that made them especially vulnerable in winter 51 Island supply was also poor 50 partly due to the highly centralized control system Many units had not yet received their new uniforms in 1919 51 Rations decreased in quantity and quality and towards the end of 1920 the fleet suffered an outbreak of scurvy Protests demanding improvements in soldier food rations went ignored and agitators were arrested 50 The organization of the fleet had changed dramatically since 1917 The Tsentrobalt central committee took control after the October Revolution and progressively centralized its organization This process accelerated in January 1919 with Trotsky s visit to Kronstadt following a disastrous naval attack on Tallinn 52 A government appointed Revolutionary Military Committee now controlled the fleet and the naval committees were abolished 52 Attempts to form a new body of Bolshevik naval officers to replace the few tsarists still running the fleet failed 52 Fyodor Raskolnikov s appointment as commander in chief in June 1920 aimed at increasing the fleet s ability to act and ending tensions resulted in failure and the sailors met it with hostility 53 Attempts at reform and increasing discipline led to a change in fleet personnel and produced great dissatisfaction among local party members 54 Attempts to centralize control displeased most local communists 55 Raskolnikov also clashed with Zinoviev as both wished to control political activity in the fleet 54 Zinoviev attempted to present himself as a defender of the old Soviet democracy and accused Trotsky and his commissioners of being responsible for introducing centralized overreach into the organization of the fleet 56 Raskolnikov tried to get rid of the strong opposition by expelling 57 a quarter of the fleet s members at the end of October 1920 but failed 58 Growing discontent and opposition Edit By January 1921 Raskolnikov had lost real control 59 of fleet management because of his disputes with Zinoviev and held his position only formally 60 The sailors revolted in Kronstadt officially deposing Raskolnikov from office 61 On February 15 1921 an opposition group within the Bolshevik party itself passed a critical resolution at a party conference with Bolshevik delegates from the Baltic Fleet 62 This resolution harshly criticized the fleet s administrative policy accusing it of removing power from the masses and most active officials and becoming a purely bureaucratic body 63 It demanded the democratization of party structures and warned that if there were no changes there could be a rebellion 44 Troop morale was low with sailors discouraged by inactivity supply and ammunition shortages the administrative crisis and the impossibility of leaving the service 64 The temporary increase in sailors licenses following the end of fighting with anti Soviet forces has also undermined the mood of the fleet protests in cities and the crisis in the countryside over government seizures and a ban on trade personally affected the sailors who temporarily returned to their homes The sailors had discovered the country s grave situation after months or years of fighting for the government which triggered a strong sense of disillusionment 65 The number of desertions increased abruptly during the winter of 1920 1921 50 Petropavlovsk resolution Edit The resolution taken by the Kronstadt seamen containing demands such as the election of free soviets and freedom of speech and press News of the protests in Petrograd coupled with disquieting rumors 66 of a harsh crackdown on these demonstrations increased tensions among fleet members 67 In late February in response to the events in Petrograd 66 the crews of the ships Petropavlovsk and Sevastopol held an emergency meeting and sent a delegation to the city to investigate and inform Kronstadt about the protests 68 Upon returning two days later 69 the delegation informed the crews about the strikes and protests in Petrograd and the government repression The sailors decided to support the protesters of the capital 70 by passing a resolution with fifteen demands that would be sent to the government 71 In view of the fact that the present Soviets do not express the will of the workers and peasants immediately to hold new elections by secret ballot the pre election campaign to have full freedom of agitation among the workers and peasants To establish freedom of speech and press for workers and peasants for Anarchists and left Socialist parties To secure freedom of assembly for labor unions and peasant organizations To call a nonpartisan Conference of the workers Red Army soldiers and sailors of Petrograd Kronstadt and of Petrograd Province no later than March 10 1921 To liberate all political prisoners of Socialist parties as well as all workers peasants soldiers and sailors imprisoned in connection with the labor and peasant movements To elect a Commission to review the cases of those held in prisons and concentration camps To abolish all politotdeli political bureaus because no party should be given special privileges in the propagation of its ideas or receive the financial support of the Government for such purposes Instead there should be established educational and cultural commissions locally elected and financed by the Government To abolish immediately all zagryaditelniye otryadi Bolshevik units armed to suppress traffic and confiscate foodstuffs To equalize the rations of all who work with the exception of those employed in trades detrimental to health To abolish the Bolshevik fighting detachments in all branches of the Army as well as the Bolshevik guards kept on duty in mills and factories Should such guards or military detachments be found necessary they are to be appointed in the Army from the ranks and in the factories according to the judgment of the workers To give the peasants full freedom of action in regard to their land and also the right to keep cattle on condition that the peasants manage with their own means that is without employing hired labor To request all branches of the Army as well as our comrades the military kursanti to concur in our resolutions To demand that the press give the fullest publicity to our resolutions To appoint a Traveling Commission of Control To permit free kustarnoye individual small scale production by one s own efforts 72 Among the main rebel demands were new free elections as stipulated by the constitution for the Soviets 44 the right to freedom of expression and total freedom of action and trade 73 According to the resolution s proponents the elections would result in the defeat of the Bolsheviks and the triumph of the October Revolution 44 The Bolsheviks who had once planned a much more ambitious economic program beyond the sailors demands 74 could not tolerate the affront that these political demands represented to their power they questioned the legitimacy of the Bolsheviks as representatives of the working classes 75 The old demands that Lenin had defended in 1917 were now considered counterrevolutionary and dangerous to the Soviet government controlled by the Bolsheviks 76 The following day March 1 about fifteen thousand people 77 attended a large assembly convened by the local soviet 78 in Anchor Square 79 The authorities tried to appease the spirit of the crowd by sending Mikhail Kalinin chairman of the All Russian Central Executive Committee as a speaker 80 while Zinoviev did not dare to go to the island 81 But the attitude of the present crowd which demanded free elections for the soviets freedom of speech and the press for leftist anarchists and socialists and all workers and peasants freedom of assembly suppression of political sections in the army was soon apparent Equal rations save for those who did the heavier work rather than the Bolsheviks who enjoyed the best rations economic freedom and freedom of organization for the workers and peasants and political amnesty 82 Those present overwhelmingly endorsed the resolution previously adopted by the Kronstadt seamen 83 Most of the communists present in the crowd also supported the resolution 84 The protests of the Bolshevik leaders were rejected but Kalinin was able to return safely to Petrograd 85 Stepan Petrichenko anarchist sailor who chaired the Provisional Revolutionary Committee during the Kronstadt revolt Although the rebels did not expect a military confrontation with the government tensions in Kronstadt grew after the arrest and disappearance of a delegation sent by the naval base to Petrograd to investigate the situation of strikes and protests in the city 85 Some of the base s communists began to arm themselves while others abandoned it 86 On March 2 the delegates of warships military units and unions met to prepare for reelection of the local soviet 87 About 300 delegates joined in to renew the soviet as decided at the previous day s assembly 88 The leading Bolshevik representatives tried to dissuade the delegates through threats but were unsuccessful 89 Three of them the president of the local soviet and the commissars of the Kuzmin fleet and the Kronstadt platoon were arrested by the rebels 90 The break with the government came about as a rumor spread through the assembly that the government planned to crack down on the assembly and send government troops to the naval base 91 Immediately a Provisional Revolutionary Committee PRC was elected 92 93 formed by the five members of the collegiate presidency of the assembly to manage the island until the election of a new local soviet 94 The committee enlarged to 15 members two days later 95 The assembly of delegates became the island s parliament and met twice on March 4 and 11 96 Part of the Kronstadt Bolsheviks hastily left the island A group of them led by the fortress commissioner tried to crush the revolt but lacking support eventually ran away 97 During the early hours of March 2 the town fleet boats and island fortifications were already in the hands of the PRC which met with no resistance 98 The rebels arrested 326 Bolsheviks 99 about a fifth of the local communists the rest of whom were left free In contrast the Bolshevik authorities executed forty five sailors in Oranienbaum and took relatives of the rebels hostage 100 None of the rebel held Bolsheviks suffered abuse torture or executions 101 The prisoners received the same rations as the rest of the islanders and lost only their boots and shelters which were handed over to the soldiers on duty at the fortifications 102 The government accused opponents of being French led counterrevolutionaries and claimed that the Kronstadt rebels were commanded by General Alexander Kozlovsky ru the former Tsarist officer then responsible for base artillery 103 although it was in the hands of the Revolutionary Committee 104 As of March 2 the entire province of Petrograd was subject to martial law and the Defense Committee chaired by Zinoviev had obtained special powers to suppress the protests 105 There was a hurry to gain control of the fortress before the thawing of the frozen bay which would have made it impregnable for the land army 32 Trotsky presented alleged French press articles announcing the revolt two weeks before its outbreak as proof that the rebellion was a plan devised by the emigre and the forces of the Entente Lenin used the same tactic to accuse the rebels a few days later at the 10th Party Congress 106 Despite the intransigence of the government and the willingness of the authorities to crush the revolt by force many communists supported the sailors demanded reforms by the sailors and preferred a negotiated resolution to end the conflict 104 In reality the initial attitude of the Petrograd government was not as uncompromising as it seemed Kalinin himself assumed that the demands were acceptable and should undergo only a few changes while the local Petrograd Soviet tried to appeal to the sailors by saying that they had been misled by certain counterrevolutionary agents 107 Moscow s attitude however from the outset was far harsher than that of the Petrograd leaders 107 Critics of the government including some communists accused it of betraying the ideals of the 1917 revolution and implementing a violent corrupt and bureaucratic regime 108 In part the various opposition groups within the party itself the Left Communists Democratic Centralists and the Workers Opposition agreed with such criticisms even though their leaders did not support the revolt 109 but members of the latter two groups would still help to suppress the revolt 110 Reaction in Petrograd Edit The Bolshevik Party s 10th Congress delegates pictured overlapped with the Kronstadt rebellion The authorities falsely accused the revolt of being a counterrevolutionary plan 20 The rebels did not expect attacks from the authorities nor did they launch attacks against the continent rejecting Kozlovsky s advice 111 nor did the island s communists denounce any kind of collusion by the rebels in the early moments of the revolt They even attended the delegate assembly on March 2 112 Initially the rebels sought to show a conciliatory stance with the government believing that it could comply with Kronstadt s demands Kalinin who spoke at the assembly would have been a valuable hostage for the rebels yet returned to Petrograd without issue 113 Neither the rebels nor the government expected the Kronstadt protests to trigger a rebellion 113 Many of the local members of the Bolshevik party did not see in the rebels and their demands the supposedly counterrevolutionary character denounced by the Moscow leaders 114 Local communists even published a manifesto in the island s new journal 113 Some of the government troops sent to suppress the revolt upon learning that the island s rule by commissioners had been eliminated instead defected to the rebellion 114 The government had serious problems with the regular troops sent to suppress the uprising and resorted to using cadets and Cheka agents 115 The high ranking Bolshevik leaders responsible for the operation had to return from the 10th Party Congress in Moscow 114 The rebels claim of a third revolution to uphold ideals of 1917 and limit the Bolshevik government s power risked undermining and dividing popular support for the Bolshevik party 116 To maintain credulity the Bolsheviks made the revolt appear counterrevolutionary explaining their uncompromising military campaign and stance 116 The Bolsheviks tried to present themselves as the sole legitimate defenders of working class interests 117 Opposition activities Edit The various groups of emigres and government opponents were too divided to make a joint effort for the rebels 118 Kadetes Mensheviks and revolutionary socialists maintained their differences and did not collaborate to support the rebellion 119 Victor Chernov and the revolutionary socialists attempted to launch a fundraising campaign to help the sailors 120 but the PRC refused aid 121 convinced that the revolt would spread throughout the country with no need for foreign aid 122 The Mensheviks for their part were sympathetic to the rebel demands but not to the revolt itself 123 The Paris based Russian Union of Industry and Commerce secured support from the French Foreign Ministry to supply the island and begin fundraising for the rebels 124 Wrangel whom the French continued to supply promised his Constantinople troops to Kozlovsky and began an unsuccessful campaign to gain the support of the powers 125 No power agreed to provide military support to the rebels and only France tried to facilitate the arrival of food on the island 126 Aid from the Finnish kadetes did not arrive in time Even as anti Bolsheviks called on the Russian Red Cross s assistance no help came to the island during the two week rebellion 119 The National Center separately plotted a Kronstadt uprising in which the kadetes with Wrangel s troops would turn the city into a new center of anti Bolshevik resistance but the rebellion occurred independent of this plan 127 The Kronstadt rebels had little contact with the emigrants during the revolt although some rebels joined Wrangel s forces after the insurrection failed 128 Rebel activities Edit Zinoviev chair of the Petrograd council and Trotsky chair of the Revolutionary War Council became enemies of Kronstadt after dropping an accusative leaflet over the city The rebels justified the uprising as an attack on Bolshevik commissiocracy According to them the Bolsheviks had betrayed the principles of the October Revolution making the Soviet government a bureaucratic autocracy 129 sustained by Cheka terror 130 According to the rebels a third revolution should restore power to the freely elected Soviet councils eliminate union bureaucracy and begin the implantation of a new socialism that would serve as an example for the whole world 131 The citizens of Kronstadt however did not want the holding of a new constituent assembly 132 or the return of representative democracy 133 but the return of power to the free workers councils 131 Fearful of justifying the Bolshevik s accusations the rebellion leaders took care to refrain from attacking revolutionary symbols and reject assistance that might relate them in any way to the emigrants or counterrevolutionary forces 134 The rebels demanded reform rather than the demise of the Bolshevik party to eliminate its strong authoritarian and bureaucratic tendency that had grown during the civil war an opinion held by oppositional currents within the party itself 135 The rebels maintained that the party had sacrificed its democratic egalitarian ideals to remain in power 135 The Kronstadt seamen remained faithful to the ideals of 1917 defending workers council independence from political party control free and unrestricted participation for all leftist tendencies guaranteed worker civil rights and direct elections by workers in place of government party appointments 136 Several leftist tendencies participated in the revolt 137 The anarchist rebels demanded in addition to individual freedoms the self determination of workers The Bolsheviks feared that mass spontaneous social movement could fall into the hands of reaction 138 For Lenin Kronstadt s demands displayed a semi anarchist and petty bourgeois character but as the concerns of the peasantry and workers reflected they posed a far greater threat to their government than the White armies 139 Bolshevik leaders thought that rebel ideals resembled the Russian populism The Bolsheviks had long criticized the populists who in their opinion were reactionary and unrealistic in rejecting the idea of a centralized industrialized state 139 Such an idea as popular as it was 140 according to Lenin should lead to the disintegration of the country into thousands of separate communes ending centralized Bolshevik power but over time could result in a new centralist right wing regime and thus needed to be suppressed 141 Influenced by various socialist and anarchist groups but free from their control and initiatives the rebels made several demands from all these groups in a vague and unclear program that represented much more a popular protest against misery and oppression than it did a coherent government program With speeches emphasizing land collectivization freedom popular will and participation and the defense of a decentralized state the rebels ideas were comparable with anarchism 142 Besides the anarchists the Maximalists were the closest political group to support these positions Their program was similar to the revolutionary slogans of 1917 which remained popular during the time of the uprising all land for the peasants all factories for the workers all bread and all products for the workers and all power to the soviets but not the parties 143 Disillusioned with the political parties unions in the uprising advocated for free unions to give economic power back to workers 144 The sailors like the revolutionary socialists defended peasantry interests and showed little interest in matters of large industry though they rejected the idea of holding a new constituent assembly one of the pillars of the revolutionary socialist program 145 The rebels implemented a series of administrative changes during the uprising Changes to the rationing system led to all citizens receiving equal rations save for children and the sick who received special rations 146 Schools closed and a curfew was set 147 Departments and commissariats were abolished replaced by union delegates boards and revolutionary troikas were formed to implement the PRC measures in all factories institutions and military units 148 On the afternoon of March 2 Kronstadt delegates crossed the frozen sea to Oranienbaum to disseminate the Petropavlovsk resolution 149 There they received unanimous support from the 1st Naval Air Squadron 149 That night the Kronstadt PRC sent a 250 man detachment to Oranienbaum but was driven back by machine gun fire Three delegates that the Oranienbam air squadron had sent to Kronstadt were arrested by Cheka as they returned to the city 149 The commissioner of Oranienbaum aware of the facts and fearing the upheaval of his other units requested Zinoviev s urgent help armed the local party members and increased their rations to secure their loyalty 150 During the early morning hours an armored cadet and three light artillery batteries arrived in Petrograd surrounded the barracks of the rebel unit and arrested the insurgents After extensive interrogation 45 of them were shot 151 Despite this setback 151 the rebels continued their passive stance and rejected the advice of the military experts a euphemism used to designate the tsarist officers employed by the Soviets under the surveillance of the commissars to attack various points of the continent rather than staying on the island 152 The ice around the base was not broken the warships were not released and the defenses of Petrograd s entrances were not strengthened Kozlovsky complained about the hostility of the sailors towards the officers judging the timing of the insurrection as untimely 153 The rebels were convinced that the Bolshevik authorities would yield and negotiate the stated demands 154 In the few mainland places supporting the rebels the Bolsheviks promptly suppressed revolt In the capital a delegation from the naval base was arrested trying to convince an icebreaker s crew to join the rebellion Most island delegates sent to the continent were arrested Unable to spread the revolt and rejecting Soviet authorities demands to end the rebellion the rebels adopted a defensive strategy of administrative reforms on the island and waiting for the spring thaw which would increase their natural defenses against being detained 155 On March 4 as delegates returned from the mainland reporting that the Bolsheviks had suppressed the real character of the revolt and instead were spreading news of a white uprising in the naval base the assembly approved the extension of the PRC and the delivery of weapons to citizens to maintain security in the city and free up soldiers and sailors for the defense of the island 156 At a tumultuous meeting of the Petrograd Soviet despite resistance from rebel representatives an approved resolution called for the end of the rebellion and the return of power to the local Kronstadt Soviet 157 Arriving late from Siberia via Moscow Trotsky immediately issued an ultimatum demanding unconditional and immediate rebel surrender 158 Zinoviev s Petrograd Defense Committee airdropped a leaflet over Kronstadt accusing the rebellion of being orchestrated by the White Army ordering their surrender and threatening that those who resisted would be shot like partridges Petrograd also ordered the arrest of the rebels relatives as hostages a strategy formerly used by Trotsky during the civil war to secure the loyalty of the Red Army s ex tsarist officers and demanded the release of Bolshevik officers detained in Kronstadt Thus to the rebel sailors Trotsky and Zinoviev embodied the Bolshevik malevolence they were protesting The rebels responded that their prisoners had full liberties and would not be released while Petrograd held families hostage 159 The hostage tactic also contributed to the failure of the sole attempt at mediation as Kronstadt and Petrograd disagreed over the composition of a commission that could be sent to observe and mediate Kronstadt s conditions 160 On March 7 the extended deadline expired for accepting Trotsky ultimatum During the wait the government bolstered its forces and prepared an attack plan with Red Army commanders cadets and Cheka units 160 Mikhail Tukhachevsky then a prominent young officer took command of the 7th Army and the rest of the Petrograd troops The 7th Army composed mainly of peasants was demotivated from having already defended the former capital throughout the civil war sympathetic for the rebel demands and reluctant to fight their comrades Tukhachevsky had to rely on the cadets Cheka and Bolshevik units to head the attack on the rebel island 161 Kronstadt meanwhile reinforced its defenses with 2 000 civilian recruits atop the 13 000 man garrison The city itself had a thick wall and across the island s forts and ships were 135 cannons and 68 machine guns The 15 forts had turrets and thick armor Artillery on Kronstadt s main warships Petropavlovsk and Sevastopol outclassed that of the most powerful mainland fort but was frozen in disadvantageous position 162 The base also had eight docked warships amid other gunboats and tugboats all rendered inaccessible by ice Kronstadt had excellent defenses between this weaponry and the protection of vast distances of open ice With the nearest forts far away this frightening trek across the ice unprotected from the island s firepower greatly unnerved the Bolshevik troops 163 The Kronstadt rebels also had their difficulties lacking the ammunition winter clothing food reserves and fuel to fend off a prolonged siege 163 Attack on Kronstadt Edit Kronstadt Petrograd Sestroretsk Lisy Nos Oranienbaumclass notpageimage St Petersburg Red Army commander and prominent officers of the final attack clockwise from top left Tukhachevsky Fedko Dybenko Putna Bolshevik military operations against the island began the morning of March 7 164 Some 60 000 troops took part in the attack 165 Artillery strikes from Sestroretsk and Lisy Nos to the north sought to weaken the island s defenses and enable an infantry attack which followed the next day before dawn Amid a blinding snowstorm Tukhachevsky s units attacked from the north and south with cadets at the forefront followed by select Red Army units and Cheka machine gunners who had orders to shoot defectors Scores of Red Army soldiers drowned as the ice beneath them was blown out by explosions Others defected or refused to advance The few troops who reached the island were forced to withdraw Artillery attacks resumed when the storm subsided In the afternoon Bolshevik aircraft began bombarding the island but to little effect The Bolsheviks made premature triumphalist statements of their imminent victory but their forces had suffered hundreds of casualties and defections due to insufficient preparation low morale and the danger of their unprotected approach by ice 166 A series of minor skirmishes against Kronstadt took place in the days following the failed opening salvo While the Bolsheviks prepared additional troops with less emotional investment cadet regiments Communist Youth Cheka forces and non Russians Zinoviev made concessions to the people of Petrograd to keep the peace 167 Trotsky s closed session report to the 10th Party Congress led over a quarter of congressional delegates to volunteer mainly to boost soldier morale which was difficult in light of the Bolshevik strategy of sending minor futile attempts at overtaking the island 168 On March 10 planes bombed Kronstadt and coastal batteries fired at the island at night in preparation for a southeast attack on the island the next morning which failed and resulted in a large number of government casualties Fog prevented operations for the rest of the day Bolshevik officers refusing to wait for reinforcement and mindful that their ice bridge would soon melt continued to bomb the coast on March 12 causing little damage 169 Small troop assaults the next two days were driven back with scores of casualties 170 After March 14 air and artillery attacks continued but the troops waited for a larger push Several small precursors of mutiny and work stoppage outside Kronstadt were contained during this time 171 In the period awaiting a unified attack the mood shifted News from Moscow s 10th Congress announced the end of War Communism In particular Bolshevik peasant soldiers were pleased by the cornerstone policy change from forced requisition of all peasant surplus produce to a tax in kind which freed the peasant post tax to use or sell as they wished 172 In the same period by mid March the rebels high spirits grew dim with the realization that their cause had not spread and with supplies dwindling that no help was forthcoming 173 Kronstadt s sailors felt this feeling of betrayal long after the city fell 174 Final attack Edit Bolshevik artillery on the shore of Gulf of Finland and damage to the Petropavlovsk during the assault On March 16 as Kronstadt accepted a proposal for Russian Red Cross emergency food and medicine Tukhachevsky s reinforced army of 50 000 prepared to take the island and its 15 000 rebels 175 Compared with prior attempts the attackers enjoyed better numbers morale and leaders 176 including prominent Bolshevik officers Ivan Fedko Pavel Dybenko and Vitovt Putna 177 Tukhachevsky s plan consisted of a six column 180 approach from the north south and east preceded by intense artillery bombing which began in the early afternoon 176 Both the Sevastopol and Petropavlovsk suffered casualties from direct hits The effects were more psychological on rebel morale than physical The bombing ended by night and like prior attacks the rebels anticipated foot soldiers who arrived before dawn 178 Most of the Bolshevik troops concentrated south of the island to attack from the south and east while a smaller contingent of cadets gathered to the north 181 Blanketed by darkness and fog the northern soldiers silently advanced in two columns towards the island s forts Despite their camouflage and caution one column was discovered by spotlight cutting through barbed wire The rebels unsuccessfully tried to persuade their attackers not to fight but the Bolshevik cadets carried on charging and retreating with many deaths until they captured the first two forts Dawn of March 17 broke the fog and cover of night Exposed the two sides fought with heavy casualties mainly by machine gun and grenades By the afternoon the Bolsheviks had taken several forts and the cadets had reached Kronstadt s northeast wall The final northern forts fell by 1 a m 182 The larger southern group timed its assault to follow the northern group s lead by an hour Three columns with machine guns and light artillery approached Kronstadt s harbour while a fourth column approached the island s vulnerable Petrograd Gate Darkness and fog hid the shock troops from rebel searchlights who were then able to overpower the rebels in the south of the city but were then met by the other forts machine guns and artillery 179 Caught in the open rebel reinforcements forced the Bolsheviks to retreat More than half of the 79th Infantry Brigade had died including delegates from the 10th Party Congress 183 The column attacking Petrograd Gate from the east however was successful One group breached the city walls north of the gate followed by another group s march through the gate itself Their losses had been great outside the city walls but inside they found a veritable hell with bullets seemingly from every window and roof Fighting proceeded through the streets 183 Liberated Bolshevik prisoners joined the assault Women supplied and nursed the defense A late afternoon rebel counterattack nearly drove the Bolsheviks from the city when a regiment of Petrograd volunteers arrived as Bolshevik backup In the early evening Oranienbaum artillery entered and ravaged the city Later that evening the northern cadets captured the Kronstadt headquarters taking prisoners and met the southern forces in the center of town As forts fell the battle was mostly over by midnight 184 The government held most structures by noon on March 18 and defeated the last resistance in the afternoon The Bolsheviks had won 185 Both sides suffered casualties on par with the civil war s deadliest battles The American consulate at Vyborg estimated 10 000 Bolsheviks dead wounded or missing including 15 Congress delegates Finland asked Russia to remove the bodies on the ice fearing a public health hazard after the thaw There are no reliable reports for rebel deaths but one report estimated 600 dead 1 000 wounded and 2 500 imprisoned though more were killed in vengeance as the battle subsided 186 Trotsky and his commander in chief Sergey Kamenev had approved chemical warfare by gas shells and balloons against Kronstadt if the resistance continued 187 Faced with the prospect of summary executions about 8 000 Kronstadt refugees mostly soldiers 188 crossed into Finland within a day of Kronstadt s fall about half of the rebel forces Petrichenko and members of the Kronstadt Revolutionary Committee were among the first to flee with 800 arriving before the end of the assault 189 The sailors final acts were to sabotage Kronstadt s defenses removing parts of weapons and equipment The battleship crews upon discovering their leaders desertion disobeyed their command to destroy the ships and instead arrested their officers and surrendered to the Bolsheviks 190 Aftermath Edit Petrichenko and other Kronstadt rebels in Finnish exile Dybenko a Bolshevik officer in the Kronstadt assault was given full power to purge dissent as the Kronstadt Fort s new commander In place of the Kronstadt Soviet a troika of Kronstadt s former Bolshevik Party leaders assisted him The battleships and city square were renamed and both unreliable sailors and the Bolshevik infantry alike were dispersed throughout the country 191 There were no public trials Of the 2 000 prisoners 13 were tried in private as the rebellion s leaders and tried in the press as a counterrevolutionary conspiracy None belonged to the Kronstadt Revolutionary Committee of which four members were known to be in Bolshevik custody or the military specialists who advised the rebel military 192 In practice despite the government s continued insistence that White Army generals were behind the Kronstadt rebellion former tsarist officers were far more prominent among the Bolsheviks than the rebels 176 The 13 were sentenced to execution two days after the fall of Kronstadt Hundreds of rebel prisoners were killed in Kronstadt and when Petrograd jails were full hundreds more rebels were removed and shot The rest moved to Cheka mainland prisons and forced labor camps where many died of hunger or disease 188 Captured Kronstadt sailors summarily executed Those who escaped to Finland were put in refugee camps where life was bleak and isolating The Red Cross provided food and clothing and some worked in public works Finland wanted the refugees to settle in other countries while Bolsheviks sought their repatriation promising amnesty Instead those who returned were arrested and sent to prison camps 193 Most of the emigres had left Finland within several years 194 Petrichenko chair of the Kronstadt Revolutionary Committee remained respected among the Finnish refugees He later joined pro Soviet groups During World War II he was repatriated and died soon after in a prison camp 195 None of the Kronstadt rebellion s demands were met 196 The Bolsheviks did not restore freedom of speech and assembly They did not release socialist and anarchist political prisoners Rival left wing groups were suppressed rather than brought into coalition governance The Bolsheviks did not adopt worker council autonomy free soviets and did not entertain direct democratic soldier election of military officials Old directors and specialists continued to run the factories instead of the workers State farms remained in place Wage labor remained unchanged 197 Avrich described the aftermath as such As in all failed revolts in authoritarian regimes the rebels realized the opposite of their aims harsher dictatorship less popular self government 198 Lenin announced two conclusions from Kronstadt political rank closure within the party and economic ingratiation for the peasantry 197 Lenin used Kronstadt to consolidate the Bolsheviks power and dictatorial rule 199 Dissidents were expelled from the party 200 Oppositional leftist parties once harassed but tolerated were repressed jailed or exiled by the end of the year in the name of single party unity 198 The Bolsheviks tightened soldier discipline and scuttled plans for a peasant and worker army Lenin wanted to scrap the Baltic Fleet as having an unreliable crew but per Trotsky they were instead reorganized and populated with loyal leadership 196 During the 10th Party Congress concurrent with the rebellion Kronstadt symbolized the swelling peasant unrest towards the party s unpopular War Communism policy and the need for reform but Kronstadt had no influence on Lenin s plans to replace War Communism with the New Economic Policy NEP which was drafted for the Congress s agenda in advance of even the rebel s demands Rather the rebellion accelerated its adoption 201 Prior to the rebellion Lenin recognized a trend of peasant dissatisfaction and feared general revolt during the country s transition and so conceded that a conciliatory peasant focused domestic economic program was more immediately urgent than his ambitions for Western proletariat revolution 202 The New Economic Policy replaced forced food requisition with a tax in kind letting peasants spend their surplus as they pleased This defused peasant discontent with War Communism 203 and freed the Bolsheviks to consolidate power 196 Legacy Edit Monument to the Victims of Revolutions containing an eternal flame in Kronstadt s Anchor Square with the Naval Cathedral in the background The Kronstadt rebellion was the major last Russian buntarstvo the rural traditional spontaneous preindustrial uprisings 1 It clarified an authoritarian streak in the Bolshevik approach in which emergency Civil War era measures never expired 204 Though the rebellion did not appear decisive or influential at the time it later symbolized a fork in Russian history that turned away from libertarian socialism and towards bureaucratic repression and what would become Stalinist totalitarianism the Moscow Trials and the Great Purge 205 The revolution turned on each of the major Bolshevik leaders involved in Kronstadt Tukhachevsky Zinoviev and Dybenko died in the Great Purge Trotsky was killed by the Soviet secret police Raskolnikov killed himself and many of the congressional delegates who signed up for Kronstadt died in prisons 206 In his analysis of the rebellion historian Paul Avrich wrote that the rebels had scant chance of success even if the ice melted to their favor and aid had arrived 207 Kronstadt was unprepared ill timed and outmatched against a government that had just won a civil war of greater magnitude 208 Petrichenko chair of the Kronstadt Revolutionary Committee shared this retrospective criticism 209 Assistance from the White Army s General Wrangel would have taken months to mobilize 210 Avrich summed up the whole context in the Introduction if his book Kronstadt 1921 Soviet Russia in 1921 was not the Leviathan of recent decades It was a young and insecure state faced with a rebellious population at home and implacable enemies abroad who longed to see the Bolsheviks ousted from power More important still Kronstadt was in Russian territory what confronted the Bolsheviks was a mutiny in their own navy at its most strategic outpost guarding the western approaches to Petrograd Kronstadt they feared might ignite the Russian mainland or become the springboard for another anti Soviet invasion There was mounting evidence that Russian emigres were trying to assist the insurrection and to turn it to their own advantage Not that the activities of the Whites can excuse any atrocities which the Bolsheviks committed against the sailors But they do make the government s sense of urgency to crush the revolt more understandable In a few weeks the ice in the Finnish Gulf would melt and supplies and reinforcements could then be shipped in from the West converting the fortress into a base for a new intervention Apart from the propaganda involved Lenin and Trotsky appear to have been genuinely anxious over this possibility 211 Soviet international diplomacy concurrent with the rebellion such as the Anglo Soviet Trade Agreement and Treaty of Riga negotiations continued unabated 210 The greater threat to Bolsheviks was a wider revolt 208 and the rebels only potential for success as went the unheeded advice of the rebels military specialists was in an immediate mainland offensive before the government could respond In this way the Kronstadt rebels repeated the same fatal hesitation of the Paris Commune rebels 50 years prior 212 Seventy years later a 1994 Russian government report rehabilitated the memory of the rebels and denounced the Bolshevik suppression of the rebellion Its commissioner Aleksandr Yakovlev wrote that Kronstadt showed Bolshevik terror as Lenin s legacy beginning what Stalin would continue 213 As of 2008 their rehabilitation has not been updated in the Kronstadt Fortress Museum 214 In popular American intellectual usage the term Kronstadt became a stand in for an event that triggered one s disenchantment with Soviet Communism as in the phrase I had my Kronstadt when For some intellectuals this was the Kronstadt rebellion itself but for others it was the Holodomor Moscow Trials East German uprising intervention in Hungary Khrushchev s Secret Speech Prague Spring or the dissolution of the Soviet Union 215 216 217 218 The Kronstadt events are idealized in early Soviet period historiography as an example of legitimate popular expression 219 See also EditBattleship Potemkin Makhnovshchina Hungarian Revolution of 1956 Left wing uprisings against the Bolsheviks Prague Spring Russian anarchism Soviet Republic of Naissaar Tambov Rebellion Naval mutinies Chilean naval mutiny of 1931 Invergordon Mutiny Kiel mutiny Mutiny in the Indies Revolt of the Lash Royal Indian Navy mutiny Spithead and Nore mutiniesNotes Edit a b Guttridge Leonard F 2006 Mutiny A History of Naval Insurrection Naval Institute Press p 174 ISBN 978 1 59114 348 2 Kronstadt Rebellion Kronstadter Aufstand In Dictionary of Marxism http www inkrit de e inkritpedia e maincode doku php id k kronstaedter aufstand Chamberlin 1987 p 445 Steve Phillips 2000 Lenin and the Russian Revolution Heinemann p 56 ISBN 978 0 435 32719 4 Archived from the original on 2020 04 30 Retrieved 2016 03 18 The New Cambridge Modern History Vol xii CUP Archive p 448 GGKEY Q5W2KNWHCQB Archived from the original on 2020 04 30 Retrieved 2016 03 18 Hosking Geoffrey 2006 Rulers and Victims The Russians in the Soviet Union Harvard University Press p 91 ISBN 9780674021785 Chamberlin 1987 pp 430 432 Avrich 1970 p 5 Chamberlin 1987 p 430 a b c Daniels 1951 p 241 a b Avrich 1970 p 8 Chamberlin 1987 p 431 Avrich 1970 p 25 Avrich 1970 pp 35 37 a b Chamberlin 1987 p 432 Avrich 1970 p 35 Chamberlin 1987 p 432 440 Avrich 1970 p 35 Avrich 1970 pp 35 36 Avrich 1970 p 36 a b Schapiro 1965 p 296 Chamberlin 1987 p 432 Schapiro 1965 p 296 Avrich 1970 pp 36 37 Avrich 1970 p 37 a b Schapiro 1965 p 297 a b Avrich 1970 pp 37 38 Avrich 1970 p 38 Avrich 1970 p 39 Avrich 1970 pp 38 39 Avrich 1970 p 41 Avrich 1970 pp 42 44 Chamberlin 1987 p 440 Figes 1997 p 760 a b Figes 1997 p 763 Avrich 1970 pp 47 48 a b c Schapiro 1965 p 298 Avrich 1970 p 49 Avrich 1970 pp 49 50 a b c d Daniels 1951 p 252 Avrich 1970 pp 33 34 Chamberlin 1987 p 440 Daniels 1951 p 242 Schapiro 1965 p 299 Avrich 1970 pp 58 59 Avrich 1970 p 62 Avrich 1970 pp 62 63 Daniels 1951 p 242 Schapiro 1965 p 296 a b c d Daniels 1951 p 242 Getzler 2002 p 207 Getzler 2002 p 226 Mawdsley 1978 p 509 a b Getzler 2002 p 205 Mawdsley Evan 1973 The Baltic Fleet and the Kronstadt Mutiny Soviet Studies 24 4 506 521 doi 10 1080 09668137308410887 ISSN 0038 5859 JSTOR 150800 a b Mawdsley 1978 p 506 a b c d Avrich 1970 p 68 a b Mawdsley 1978 p 507 a b c Mawdsley 1978 p 511 Getzler 2002 p 210 Mawdsley 1978 p 514 a b Mawdsley 1978 p 515 Mawdsley 1978 p 516 Schapiro 1965 p 299 Getzler 2002 p 205 Schapiro 1965 p 300 Mawdsley 1978 p 517 Getzler 2002 p 212 Mawdsley 1978 p 518 Mawdsley 1978 p 521 Avrich 1970 pp 70 71 Daniels 1951 p 242 Avrich 1970 p 71 Daniels 1951 p 242 Mawdsley 1978 p 518 Mawdsley 1978 p 519 Avrich 1970 pp 67 68 a b Chamberlin 1987 p 440 Avrich 1970 p 71 Schapiro 1965 p 301 Avrich 1970 pp 71 72 Getzler 2002 p 212 Getzler 2002 p 213 Avrich 1970 p 72 Avrich 1970 pp 72 74 Berkman Alexander 1922 The Kronstadt Rebellion pp 10 11 Avrich 1970 pp 73 74 Schapiro 1965 p 301 Schapiro 1965 p 307 Avrich 1970 p 75 Avrich 1970 pp 75 76 Chamberlin 1987 p 440 Schapiro 1965 p 303 Schapiro 1965 p 302 Avrich 1970 p 76 Daniels 1951 p 243 Getzler 2002 p 215 Avrich 1970 pp 76 77 Daniels 1951 p 243 Getzler 2002 p 215 Schapiro 1965 p 302 Avrich 1970 p 76 Chamberlin 1987 p 441 Daniels 1951 p 243 Avrich 1970 pp 78 79 Getzler 2002 p 216 Schapiro 1965 p 302 Schapiro 1965 p 303 a b Avrich 1970 pp 78 79 Daniels 1951 p 243 Daniels 1951 p 243 Avrich 1970 p 80 Daniels 1951 p 243 Getzler 2002 p 216 Avrich 1970 pp 80 81 Avrich 1970 pp 80 81 Daniels 1951 p 243 Avrich 1970 pp 83 84 Getzler 2002 p 217 Avrich 1970 pp 85 86 Daniels 1951 p 244 Chamberlin 1987 p 442 Schapiro 1965 p 303 The Truth about Kronstadt A Translation and Discussion of the Authors www personal umich edu Archived from the original on 10 January 2017 Retrieved 6 May 2018 Avrich 1970 p 85 Daniels 1951 p 244 Getzler 2002 pp 217 227 Getzler 2002 pp 217 227 Avrich 1970 p 86 Avrich 1970 pp 86 87 Getzler 2002 p 240 Avrich 1970 pp 186 187 Avrich 1970 p 187 Chamberlin 1987 p 442 Getzler 2002 p 241 Avrich 1970 pp 95 96 Daniels 1951 p 244 Schapiro 1965 p 303 a b Daniels 1951 p 244 Avrich 1970 p 96 Figes 1997 p 760 Avrich 1970 p 96 a b Daniels 1951 p 245 Daniels 1951 p 249 Daniels 1951 p 250 Avrich 1970 pp 182 183 Schapiro 1965 p 305 Avrich 1970 pp 101 102 Daniels 1951 pp 246 247 a b c Daniels 1951 p 247 a b c Daniels 1951 p 248 Chamberlin 1987 p 443 Daniels 1951 p 248 a b Daniels 1951 p 253 Daniels 1951 p 254 Avrich 1970 pp 114 115 a b Avrich 1970 p 123 Avrich 1970 pp 123 125 Getzler 2002 p 237 Schapiro 1965 p 304 Avrich 1970 p 125 Avrich 1970 pp 125 126 Schapiro 1965 p 299 Avrich 1970 p 116 Avrich 1970 pp 116 118 Avrich 1970 p 119 Avrich 1970 pp 126 127 Avrich 1970 pp 127 128 Chamberlin 1987 p 442 Avrich 1970 pp 164 165 Getzler 2002 p 234 a b Getzler 2002 p 234 Avrich 1970 p 181 Chamberlin 1987 p 441 Avrich 1970 pp 162 163 Getzler 2002 p 235 a b Avrich 1970 p 182 Avrich 1970 pp 161 162 Avrich 1970 pp 170 171 Avrich 1970 pp 190 191 a b Avrich 1970 pp 191 192 Chamberlin 1987 p 441 Avrich 1970 p 192 Avrich 1970 p 171 Avrich 1970 pp 171 172 Getzler 2002 p 238 Avrich 1970 p 168 Avrich 1970 pp 157 158 Avrich 1970 p 158 Avrich 1970 p 158 Getzler 2002 p 240 a b c Avrich 1970 p 137 Avrich 1970 pp 137 138 a b Avrich 1970 p 138 Avrich 1970 pp 138 139 Chamberlin 1987 p 442 Getzler 2002 p 242 Schapiro 1965 p 303 Avrich 1970 p 139 Getzler 2002 p 242 Avrich 1970 pp 139 141 Getzler 2002 p 227 Avrich 1970 p 143 Avrich 1970 p 144 Chamberlin 1987 p 443 Avrich 1970 pp 145 147 a b Avrich 1970 p 148 Avrich 1970 p 149 Avrich 1970 p 150 a b Avrich 1970 p 151 Chamberlin 1987 p 443 Figes 1997 p 763 Schapiro 1965 p 304 Figes 1997 p 767 Avrich 1970 pp 152 155 Avrich 1970 pp 193 194 Avrich 1970 pp 194 196 Avrich 1970 p 196 Avrich 1970 pp 196 197 Avrich 1970 p 197 Avrich 1970 p 198 Chamberlin 1987 p 445 Avrich 1970 pp 198 200 Avrich 1970 p 200 Avrich 1970 p 202 a b c Avrich 1970 p 203 Avrich 1970 pp 202 203 a b Avrich 1970 p 204 a b Avrich 1970 p 206 Two columns from the north 178 four from the south 179 Avrich 1970 pp 202 204 Avrich 1970 pp 204 206 a b Avrich 1970 p 207 Avrich 1970 p 208 Avrich 1970 p 210 Avrich 1970 pp 210 211 Avrich 1970 pp 211 212 a b Avrich 1970 p 215 Avrich 1970 p 209 Avrich 1970 pp 209 210 Avrich 1970 pp 213 214 Avrich 1970 p 214 Avrich 1970 pp 215 216 Novotny V t 2012 Opening the Door Immigration and Integration in the European Union Wilfried Martens Centre for European Studies p 421 ISBN 978 2 930632 11 7 Avrich 1970 pp 216 217 a b c Avrich 1970 p 225 a b Avrich 1970 pp 225 226 a b Avrich 1970 pp 226 227 Avrich 1970 pp 225 227 Avrich 1970 p 227 Avrich 1970 pp 220 222 Avrich 1970 pp 218 221 222 Avrich 1970 pp 220 224 Avrich 1970 p 229 Avrich 1970 p 228 Avrich 1970 pp 231 232 Avrich 1970 p 220 a b Avrich 1970 p 218 Avrich 1970 p 216 a b Avrich 1970 p 219 Quoted in Introduction p 4 5 of Kronstadt 1921 Avrich 1970 pp 219 220 Remnick David February 14 1994 The Exile Returns The New Yorker Vol 69 no 50 pp 64 83 Archived from the original on October 24 2020 Retrieved January 7 2021 Richardson Dan 2008 The Rough Guide to St Petersburg Rough Guides Limited p 283 ISBN 978 1 84836 326 7 Shechner Mark 2003 Up Society s Ass Copper Rereading Philip Roth University of Wisconsin Press p 237 ISBN 978 0 299 19354 6 Lourie Richard 2019 Sakharov A Biography Plunkett Lake Press p 26 Archived from the original on 2021 01 19 Retrieved 2021 01 07 Kimmage Michael 2009 The Conservative Turn Lionel Trilling Whittaker Chambers and the lessons of anti communism Harvard University Press p 79 ISBN 978 0 674 05412 7 Archived from the original on 2021 01 19 Retrieved 2021 01 18 Ostermann Christian F Byrne Malcolm eds 2001 Uprising in East Germany 1953 The Cold War the German Question and the First Major Upheaval behind the Iron Curtain Central European University Press doi 10 7829 j ctv280b6bh ISBN 978 963 9241 17 6 JSTOR 10 7829 j ctv280b6bh S2CID 246342371 Corney Frederick 2018 Telling October Memory and the Making of the Bolshevik Revolution Cornell University Press p 251 ISBN 978 1 5017 2703 0 References EditAvrich Paul 1970 Kronstadt 1921 Princeton N J Princeton University Press ISBN 0 691 08721 0 OCLC 67322 Chamberlin William Henry 1987 1935 The Crisis of War Communism Kronstadt and NEP The Russian Revolution Volume II 1918 1921 From the Civil War to the Consolidation of Power Princeton N J Princeton University Press pp 430 450 doi 10 1515 9781400858705 024 ISBN 0 691 05493 2 OCLC 1124141 Project MUSE chapter 1621439 Daniels Robert V December 1951 The Kronstadt Revolt of 1921 A Study in the Dynamics of Revolution American Slavic and East European Review 10 4 241 254 doi 10 2307 2492031 ISSN 1049 7544 JSTOR 2492031 Figes Orlando 1997 A People s Tragedy A History of the Russian Revolution New York Viking ISBN 978 0 670 85916 0 OCLC 36496487 Getzler Israel 2002 1982 Kronstadt 1917 1921 The Fate of a Soviet Democracy Cambridge Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 89442 5 OCLC 248926485 Mawdsley Evan 1978 The Russian Revolution and the Baltic Fleet War and Politics February 1917 April 1918 Studies in Russian and East European History Macmillan ISBN 978 1 349 03761 2 Schapiro Leonard 1965 The Origin of the Communist Autocracy Political Opposition in the Soviet State First Phase 1917 1922 Cambridge Massachusetts Harvard University Press ISBN 978 0 674 64451 9 OCLC 1068959664 External links EditThe Kronstadt Izvestia archive of the newspaper published by the rebels Kronstadt Archive at marxists org The New York Times archives about suppression of the rebellion March 11 1921 The Truth about Kronstadt 1921 published by the Socialist Revolutionary newspaper Volia Rossii Alexander Berkman The Kronstadt Rebellion 1922 Emma Goldman Leon Trotsky Protests too Much 1938 a response to Trotsky s Hue and Cry over Kronstadt Ida Mett The Kronstadt Commune 1938 Voline The Unknown Revolution Book Three Struggle for the Real Social Revolution 1947 Kronstadt Rebellion Anarchist FAQ John Clare The Kronstadt Mutiny Notes on Orlando Figes A People s Tragedy 1996 A Kramer Kronstadt Trotsky was right 2003 Abbie Bakan Kronstadt and the Russian Revolution 2003 Kronstadt 1921 Bolshevism vs Counterrevolution Spartacist English edition No 59 2006 International Communist League Fourth Internationalist Kronstadt 1921 in Russian The Kronstadt Uprising A View from within the Revolt CrimethInc 2021 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Kronstadt rebellion amp oldid 1133901651, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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