Comintern
Template:TOC-right The Comintern, also known as the Third International or the Communist International, existed from 1919 to 1943. The Comintern was the center for helping Communist activities worldwide; it was theoreticall in Moscow only because Russia was the first nation to come under Communist control. In Marxist-Leninist theory, it was inevitable that other nations would become Communist, so the Comintern looked at those national Communist parties as simply being local offices of the International. The extent to which national parties followed this varied by country, but, in the beginning, support was often enthusiastic for the one successful revolution. [1]
In practice, it was under Soviet government control as a way of funding Communist parties in other countries, and to ensure those parties' continued support of Soviet policy. Before Stalin consolidated power, however, that policy had a substantial world revolutionary component.
As Stalin consolidated, it continued operations, to the concern of various nations outside the Soviet Union. Mational parties increasingly condemned Nazi Germany while pushing for internal Communism. In 1935, Germany and Japan, later joined by Italy, signed the Anti-Comintern Pact. This lasted until denounced by Germany with the Molotov-Ribbentrop Pact of 1939.
In the Bolshevik Revolution of 1919, headed by Vladimir Lenin, there were factions focused on the world-revolution model of Leon Trotsky, as opposed to the control-Russia-first model of Josef Stalin. With Stalin's establishing control, the need for the Comintern diminished, and simply was not important to him in the middle of the Second World War.
Background
Karl Marx had supported the "First International", as the International Working Men’s Association, which 1864 but lasting only a few years. It was followed, as the "Second International", by the Labor International launched in 1889, which, to Lenin, was moderate social democratic and not proletarian, so the Third was needed for purity. These movements considered themselves socialist, not communist.
The explicitly Communist Third did not actually form, however, until after the Bolsheviks under Lenin, gained control of Russia in later October 1917.
Conflicts in socialism
In the First World War, temporary alliances between socialists and communists broke the issue of supporting the war, rather than revolution. This did not immediately create the Third International, and, indeed, there were discussions, after the war, of reviving the Second International. One such discussion was the Berne International Conference, described, by a Marxist source, of made up of "right-wing socialists", called social-chauvinists and centrists during the war.[2] They Conference met in the Swiss capital, Bern, on February 3-10, 1919.
Hjalmar Branting, leader of the Swedish Socialists, who had supported the Russian Revolution, proposed a resolution to condemn the Bolshevik taking of power and creating what they called the "dictatorship of the proletariat", preferring democratic means for establishing explained that the dictatorship of the proletariat could not lead to socialism. A resolution proposed by Brantling, opposing the Bolshevik approach and calling for democratic reforms, initially received a large number of votes. A different group argued against the proposal, saying there was not enough information, and the conference compromised on sending a study commission to Russia.
When the Soviet government was asked to admit the commission, it agreed, but countered with a request to send its commissions to countries who had members in the Bern convention. While agreeing to admit the commission, the Soviet government requested the admittance of the Soviet commission, which Lenin called "auditing dignitaries from Berne", to those countries whose representatives were on the Berne commission. Since the Berne group was not a governmental authority, it could not respond to that request. No commission of the Second International ever visited the Soviet Union.
Formation of the Third International
After the success of the Communists in Russia, they created a Communist International (Comintern), also called the Third International.
Leadership
The first president of the Comintern, was Gregory Zinoviev, of the "left" faction, who headed the Comintern from 1919 to 1926. In 1927, he was associated with the Zinoviev Letter allegedly urging British Communists to revolt. He was not popular in the party, and eventually purged by Stalin as a Trotskyite. [3]
The position was then formally abolished, but actual control passed to Nikolai Bukharin, of the "right" faction, who lasted until 1928.
There was no clear leader until 1935, until Georgi Dimitrov, a Bulgarian Communist, became secretary general of the Comintern's Executive Committee.
Early Operations
First Congress
The first formal meeting was held in March 1919, in Moscow, "with 51 delegates present: 35 with decisive votes representing 17 countries; 16 with consultative votes representing 16 countries."[4]; not all delegates were able to attend.
It created an Executive Committee of the Communist International (ECCI), made up of representatives from Russia, Germany, Austria, Hungary, the Balkan Federation, Switzerland and Scandinavia; and a 5-member Bureau elected by the ECCI.
Second Congress
Held fromm July 17 to August 7, 1920, initially in St. Petersburg but meeting in Moscow from July 23 onward. There was still a blockade of Russia, but 37 countries were represented by 218 delegates of whom 169 had decisive votes and 49 consultative votes. [5]
Lenin introduced his Draft Theses on National and Colonial Questions for the Second Congress of the Communist International,[6], in which he proposed a stage of a transitional national federation between independence from colonialism and final communism. Ho Chi Minh described the ideas in this document as his epiphany in politics, reconciling his nationalism with his belief in Communism.
Fifth Congress
Convened in June 1924, the Fifth Comintern Conference had less effect on overall policy than other Congresses, as it was increasingly dominated by the split between Trotsky and the Soviet leadership. [7] There was a demand for "Bolshevization", or Comintern national parties restructured on the lines of the Russian Bolshevik Party, "permitting no fraction, tendencies or groups." [8] Those groups would report both to their national members, but also to the ECCI.
The United Front tactic of cooperation with non-Communists was called, by Zinoviev, "the most debated question in our ranks". Trotsky did not support the idea of cooperation with social democrats.
Approaching the Second World War
The Comintern was quite successful at this latter task, as most of its member parties rapidly switched from denunciations of Nazi Germany to denunciations of the so-called imperialist opponents of Nazi Germany after the , and as rapidly switched to denunciations of Nazi Germany and support for the war effort of the Allies after the German invasion of the Soviet Union in 1941. Communist parties were a significant part of partisan resistance to the Nazis in countries and areas which fell to Nazi advances.
References
- ↑ Alexander Dallin and F. I. Firsov, ed. (2000), Dimitrov and Stalin 1934–1943: Letters from the Soviet Archives, Yale University Press, pp. 2-3
- ↑ Berne International Conference
- ↑ Robert Conquest (1990), Chapter 5, "The Problem of Confession", The Great Terror: a Reassessment, Oxford University Press, pp. 84-104
- ↑ Leon Trotsky (1924), The First Five Years of the Communist International, vol. Volume I, Marxists Internet Archive, Editor's Note 1
- ↑ Trotsky, Editor Note 3
- ↑ V. I. Lenin (June 5, 1920), Draft Theses on National and Colonial Questions For The Second Congress Of The Communist International
- ↑ Sophie Quinn-Judge (2002), Ho Chi Minh: The Missing Years, 1919-1941, University of California Press, ISBN 0520235339, pp. 55-
- ↑ Jane Degras, The Communist International, 1919-1943: Documents, Frank Cass: 1970, Volume II, p. 154, cited in Quinn-Judge, p. 57