Main FI Index | Main Newspaper Index

Encyclopedia of Trotskyism | Marxists’ Internet Archive


Fourth International, July-August 1947

 

Leon Trotsky

Is It Possible to Fix a Definite Schedule for a Counter-Revolution or a Revolution?

(September 1923)

 

From Fourth International, July-August 1947, Vol.8 No.7, p.215-217.
Translation by John W. Wright.
TranscribedTranscribed & marked up by Einde O’Callaghan for ETOL.

In 1923 Germany was ripe for the proletarian revolution. The majority of the German working class was hehind the Communist Party. But the Brandler leadership vacillated. There was no strong guiding hand in the Communist International. Zinoviev, the then Chairman of the Comintern, was hesitant. Bukharin, the theoretical leader of the Right Wing in the Russian party, was opposed to the seizure of power in Germany. Stalin, behind the scenes, supported the opponents of the German revolution. Lenin was lying on his sick-bed, which was shortly to prove his death-bed.

It was under these circumstances that Leon Trotsky published his famous article on the need of consciously preparing for the seizure of power when all the circumstances for it were propitious. This article, which we published below, first appeared in Pravda, on September 23, 1923.

With the exception of references to the October Revolution and other obviously historical references, the examples cited in the text refer to contemporary events. Thus, the Bulgarian reactionary coup was staged in the summer of 1923. The reference to Spain covers the coup engineered by the Spanish officer caste under Primo de Rivera, who was later installed as dictator, in the same year 1923. Previous English translations of this article appeared in the Inprecorr, the then organ of the Communist International. This is a new translation prepared by John W. Wright. – Ed.



“Of course it is not possible. Only trains travel on schedule, and even they don’t always arrive on time ...”

Precision of thought is necessary in everything, and in questions of revolutionary strategy more than anywhere else. But since revolutions do not occur so very often, revolutionary concepts and ideas become encrusted with fat, become vague, the questions are raised in outline, in a slip-shod way, and are solved in the same manner.

Mussolini made his “revolution” (that is, his counter-revolution) according to a schedule made publicly known beforehand. He was able to do so successfully because the Socialists failed to make the revolution, when the time for it came. The Bulgarian fascists accomplished their “revolution” through a military conspiracy, all the dates being fixed and the roles assigned. The Spanish officer caste did exactly the same thing. Counter-revolutionary overturns are almost always carried out along this pattern. They are usually synchronized with the moment when the disillusion of the masses in revolution or in democracy has taken the form of apathy and a favorable political situation has thus been created for an organized and technically prepared military coup, the date of which is definitely fixed beforehand. Obviously, it is not possible to artificially create a political situation favorable for a reactionary coup, much less to bring it off at a fixed date. But when the basic elements of such a situation are at hand, then the leading party doea, as we have seen, choose beforehand a favorable moment, synchronizes in accordance its political, organizational, and technical forces, and – if it has not miscalculated – deals the victorious blow.

The bourgeoisie has not always made counter-revolutions. In the past it also had occasion to make revolutions. Did it fix any definite time for them? It would be quite interesting and in many respects instructive to investigate from this standpoint the development of the classic as well as of the epigone bourgeois revolutions (here is a topic for our young Marxist scholars!). But even without such a detailed investigation it is possible to establish the following fundamentals involved in this question:

The propertied and educated bourgeoisie, that is, precisely that section of the “people” which took power, did not make the revolution but waited until it was made. When the movement of the lower layers overflowed and the oId social order or political regime were overthrown, then power dropped almost automatically into the hands of the liberal bourgeoisie. The liberal scholars proclaimed such a revolution as “natural” and ineluctable and they compiled vast platitudes which were passed off as historical laws: revolution and counter-revolution (action and reaction – according to Kareyev [1] of blessed memory) were declared to be the natural products of historical evolution, and consequently beyond the power of men to produce arbitrarily, or arrange according to the calendar, and so forth. These laws have never yet prevented well prepared counter-revolutionary coups from being carried out. By way of compensation the nebulousness of bourgeois-liberal thought finds its way not infrequently into the heads of revolutionists causing great havoc there and leading to injurious practices ...

But even bourgeois revolutions have by no means invariably developed at every stage in accordance with the “natural” laws of the liberal professors. Whenever petty-bourgeois, plebeian democracy overthrew liberalism, it did so by means of conspiracy and organized uprisings, fixed beforehand for definite dates. This was done by the Jacobins, the extreme left wing in the Great French Revolution. This is perfectly comprehensible. The liberal bourgeoisie (the French in 1789, the Russian in February 1917) can content itself with waiting for the mighty elemental movement and then at the last moment throw its wealth, its education, its connections with the state apparatus into the scales and in this way to seize the helm. Petty-bourgeois democracy, under similar circumstances has to act differently: it possesses neither wealth, nor social influence, nor connections. It finds itself compelled to replace these by a carefully thought-out and minutely prepared plan for a revolutionary overturn. But a plan presupposes a definite orientation in point of time, and therefore also the fixing of dates.

This applies all the more to the proletarian revolution. The Communist Party cannot adopt a waiting attitude in the face of the growing revolutionary movement of the proletariat. To do so is to adopt essentially the point of view of Menshevism: They try to clamp a brake on the revolution so long as it is in process of development; they exploit its successes as soon as it is in any degree victorious, and they strive with might and main to keep it from being completed. The Communist Party cannot seize power by utilizing the revolutionary movement from the sidelines but only by means of a direct and immediate political, organizational and military-technical leadership of the revolutionary masses, both in the period of slow preparation as well as at the decisive moment of the overturn. Precisely for this reason the Communist Party has absolutely no use for the great liberal law according to which the revolutions happen but are not made and therefore cannot be fixed for a specific date. From the standpoint of a spectator this law is correct, but from the standpoint of the leader this is a platitude and a vulgarity.

Let us imagine a country where the political conditions for the proletarian revolution are either completely mature or are obviously and distinctly maturing day by day. In such circumstances what should be the attitude of the Communist Party to the question of uprising and of setting a date for it? If the country is passing through a profound social crisis, when the contradictions are aggravated to the extreme, when the toiling masses are in constant ferment, when the Party is obviously supported by an unquestionable majority of the toilers and, in consequence, by all the most active, class-conscious, and self-sacrificing elements of the proletariat, then the task confronting the Party – its only possible task under the circumstances – is to fix a definite time in the immediate future, a time in the course of which the favorable revolutionary situation cannot abruptly react against us, and then to concentrate every effort on the preparation of the blow, to subordinate the entire policy and organization to the military object in view, so that this blow is dealt with maximum power.

To consider not merely an imaginary country, let us take our own October Revolution as an example. The country was in the throes of a great crisis, internal and international. The state apparatus was paralyzed. The toilers streamed in ever greater numbers to the banners of our Party. From the moment when the Bolsheviks were in the majority in the Petrograd Soviet, and afterwards in the Moscow Soviet, the Party was faced with the question – not of the struggle for power in general but of preparing for the seizure of power according to a definite plan, and at a fixed date. The chosen day, as is well known, was the day upon which the All-Russian Congress of the Soviets was to convene. Some members of our Central Committee were from the first of the opinion that the moment of the actual blow should be synchronized with the political moment of the Soviet Congress. Other members of the Central Committee feared that the bourgeoisie would have time to make its preparations by then and would be able to disperse the Congress; they wanted the blow delivered at an earlier date. The Central Committee fixed the date of the armed uprising for October 15, at the latest. This decision was carried out with a deliberate delay of ten days because the course of agitational and organizational preparations showed that an uprising independent of the Soviet Congress would have sown confusion among considerable layers of the working cIass who connected the idea of the seizure of power with the Soviets, and not with the Party and its secret organizations. On the other hand, it was perfectly clear that the bourgeoisie was already too much demoralized to be able to organize any serious resistance in the space of two or three weeks.

Thus, after the Party had won the majority in the leading Soviets, and had in this way secured the basic political premise for the seizure of power, we were faced with the stark necessity of fixing a calendar date for the decision of the military question. Before we had the majority, the organizational-technical plan was bound of course to be more or less provisional and elastic. For us the gauge of our revolutionary influence was the Soviets which had been created by the Mensheviksand the Social Revolutionists at the beginning of the revolution. And the Soviets, on the other hand, furnished us with a political cover for our conspiratorial work and afterwards the Soviets served as the organs of power after it had been actually seized.

What would our strategy have been if there had been no Soviets? In that case, we obviously should have had to turn to other gauges of our revolutionary influence: The trade unions, the strikes, the street demonstrations, democratic elections of all kinds, and so forth. Although the Soviets are the most accurate gauge of the actual activity of the masses during a revolutionary epoch, still without the existence of the Sovieta we would have been fully able to ascertain the precise moment at which the actual majority of the working class and of the toilers as a whoIe was on our side. Naturally at this moment we should have had to issue the slogan of the formation of Soviets to the masses. But by doing so, we would have already transferred the whoIe question to the plane of military clashes, and consequently before we issued the slogan of forming Soviets we should have had a thoroughly worked-out plan for an armed uprising at a fixed date.

Once the majority of the toilers is on our side or at least the majority in the decisive centers and provinces, the formation of Soviets would be sure to follow our summons. The more backward cities and provinces would emulate the leading centers with more or less delay. We should then be faced with the political task of convening the Soviet Congress, and with the military task of ensuring the transfer of power to this Congress. Quite obviously three are only two aspects of one and the same problem.

Let us now imagine that our Central Committee, in the above-described situation, that in in the absence of Soviets, had met for a decisive session in the period when the masses had already begun to move spontaneously to our side but had not yet insured us a clear and overwhelming majority. How should we then have laid out our plan of action? Would we schedule an uprising?

The answer to this may be adduced from the above. We should have said to ourselves: At the present moment we still do not possesa a clear and undisputed majority; but the swing among the masses is so great that the decisive and militant majority necessary for us is merely a matter of the next few weeks. Let us assume it will take approximately a month to win over the majority of the workers in Petrograd, in Moscow and in the Donetz basin; let us set ourselves this task and concentrate the necessary forces in these centers. As soon as the majority has been gained – and we shall ascertain in action if this be the case after a month has elapsed – we shall summon the toilers to form Soviets. For this Petrograd, Moscow and the Donetz basin would not require more man a week or two; it may be calculated with certainty that the remaining cities and provinces will follow the example of the main centers within the next two or three weeks. Thus the creation of a network of Soviets would require about a month. After Soviets have been formed in the important provinces, in which we have of course the majority, we shall convene an all-Russian Soviet Congress. We shall require an additional two weeks to assemble the Congress. We have, therefore, two and a half months at our disposal before the Congress. In the course of this time the seizure of power must not only be prepared, but actually accomplished. We should accordingly place before our military organization a program allowing it two months, at most two and a half, for the preparation of the uprising in Petrograd, in Moscow, on the railways, and so on. I use here the conditional tense (we should have decided, or should have done this and that), because in reality, although our operations were by no means unskillful, still they were by no means so systematic, not because we were in any way disturbed by “historic laws” but because we were carrying out the proletarian uprising for the first time.

But are not miscalculations likely to occur by this method? Seizure of power means war, and in war there can be defeats as well as victories. But the systematic course here described is the best and most direct road to the goal, that is, it enhances the chances of victory to the maximum. Thus, for instance, should it have turned out, a month after the decisive Central Committee session in our above adduced example that we had not yet the majority of the toilers on our side, then we would, of course, not have issued the slogan calling for the formation of Soviets, for in this case the slogan would have miscarried (in our example we assume that the Social Revolutionists and the Mensheviks are against the Soviets). And had the reverse been the case, and we had found a decisive and militant majority on our side within two weeks, then this would have abridged our plan and moved up the decisive moment of the uprising. The very same thing applies to the second and third stages of our plan: The formation of Soviets and to the convocation of the Soviet Congress. We should not have issued the slogan of the Soviet Congress until we had secured, as I have said, the actual formation of Soviets in the most important centers. In this way the realization of each successive stage in our plan ia prepared and aecured by the fulfillment of antecedent stages.The work of military preparation proceeds parallel with all the other work according to a rigid schedule. Therewith the Party retains throughout absolute control of ita military apparatus. To be sure, there is always a great deal that is entirely unforeseen, unexpected and spontaneous in the revolution; and we must of course make allowances for the occurrence of all these “accidents” and adjust ourselves to them; but we can do this with the greater success and certainty if our conspiratorial plan is thoroughly worked out.

Revolution possesses a mighty power of improvisation, but it never improvises anything good for fatalists, bystanders, and fools. Victory comes from the correct poIitical evaluation, from correct organization and from the will to deal the decisive blow.


Footnote

1. A Russian liberal under Czarism.

 
Top of page


Main FI Index | Main Newspaper Index

Encyclopedia of Trotskyism | Marxists’ Internet Archive

This work is in the Public Domain under the Creative Commons Common Deed. You can freely copy, distribute and display this work; as well as make derivative and commercial works. Please credit the Encyclopedia of Trotskyism On-Line as your source, include the url to this work, and note any of the transcribers, editors & proofreaders above.

Last updated on 16.2.2009