Feb. 25, 1956—In an address that shredded the hopes
placed in the Soviet Union by believers around the world, Nikita Khrushchev (pictured) disclosed to the 20th Congress of the
Communist Party that the nation’s former leader, Joseph Stalin, had subjected opponents of his rule to “moral and
physical annihilation.”
The night before the speech, Khrushchev faced down
high-level Soviet leaders who did not want any news of this kind to come out.
They rightly feared that some would ask why they had not acted to stop the
terror.
Khrushchev may have wondered the same thing about his own role.
His decade as First Party Secretary would be characterized by a hypomania
marked by what one psychoanalyst described in a 1960 CIA assessment as
exuberance coupled with feeling “covertly ... guilty about aggression towards
others, incapable of being alone ... corruptible and lacking a systematic
approach in cognitive style.” He improvised a great deal of the speech, even
appearing overwrought at times, maybe remembering his own role in carrying out
Stalin’s tyranny. (As Moscow leader in the 1930s, Khrushchev ordered the
shooting of more than 55,000 officials, according to Simon Sebag Montefiore’s Stalin: The Court of the Red Tsar.)
During Stalin’s nearly three decades as Soviet dictator, it was suicide to criticize or even joke about him. Nearly three years after his death, nobody still dared to breathe a word about his crimes. Nor, even now did Khrushchev address Stalin’s brutality against the Soviet people at large, let alone other nations undermined and absorbed within the Soviet empire. (Moreover, the first Soviet leader, V.I. Lenin, was upheld as a shining example of everything Stalin had destroyed, with his own crimes not detailed until Alexander Solzhenitsyn’s The Gulag Archipelago in the 1970s.)
So when Khrushchev now got around to denouncing
Stalin, it was in the context of what mattered most to his immediate listeners,
for having “ignored the norms of party life and trampled on the Leninist
principle of collective party leadership.” Tumult broke out in the hall when Khrushchev
laid out, in categorical detail, a particular example of this: “of the 139 members and candidates of the
party's Central Committee who were elected at the 17th congress, 98 persons,
that is, 70 percent, were arrested and shot (mostly in 1937-38).”
Like so much about the Iron Curtain, these
shattering revelations were made behind closed doors and initially unbeknownst to most Soviet
citizens, leading it to be dubbed “The Secret Speech.” But even as it was being delivered (estimates I’ve seen vary
as to its length, ranging from four to eight hours), Khrushchev’s
belated denunciation of his predecessor’s “cult of personality” had an
immediate impact.
The delegates present uniformly listened in shocked,
numb silence. The editor of Pravda, concerned that he might have a heart
attack, gulped down five nitroglycerin pills, while the head of the Polish
Communist Party, being treated in the U.S.S.R. for pneumonia, did suffer a fatal heart attack right
after reading it. Still other delegates are believed to have killed themselves
afterwards.
In terms of Communist believers beyond the walls of
the Kremlin, the effects were not as visceral but ultimately more important for
the propaganda war that the U.S.S.R. was waging against the United States and
its allies in the Free World. The speech was read once only to party members throughout
the Soviet Union in factories, farms, offices and universities.
Polish printers, having obtained the full text meant
for distribution to Central European communist allies, printed thousands more
than the authorized number. One of these copies came into the hands of Israeli
intelligence, who, in the early spring, gave it to the CIA, which in turn leaked
it to The New York Times and the
British Kremlinologist (and eventual Khrushchev biographer), Edward Crankshaw.
After the Times printed it in early
June, the speech became fodder for the Voice of America and the U.S.
Information Agency in their campaign against “Red Colonialism.”
In Poland and Hungary especially, the speech
catalyzed resentment against Soviet puppet regimes, and though this unrest was
smothered in the former and brutally crushed by Soviet troops in the latter,
ordinary citizens now knew the extent of the crimes of their Communist
overlords.
For longtime American apologists of the Soviet regime, the speech put them face to face with what they had long tried to avoid. As Harvey Klebr, John Hayes, and Kyrill Anderson
write in The Soviet World of American Communism:
“For more than 20 years, both the mainstream press
and scholarly books had carried hundreds of stories, refugee accounts, and
exposes of the nature and horrors of Stalin's regime. Yet although the
insistence of American Communists that the news was a revelation was literally
false, it was psychologically true. Since the beginning of the movement,
American Communists had worn special glasses that allowed them to see only what
Moscow saw and that rendered all else invisible. But when Moscow finally opened
its own eyes, when Khrushchev pointed to the bodies of Stalin's victims
littering the Soviet landscape, American Communists saw those bodies as well.
And this vision offered a shattering revelation.”
Like Mikhail Gorbachev three decades later, Khrushchev
mistakenly believed that the Soviet Union could be reformed from within. The
revelations about Stalin were meant to energize a rank and file still suffering
from the impact of Stalinist terror. As painful as his knowledge of his
complicity was, he felt, light had to be shed on this shadowy past. "All
of us were involved in this,” he recalled in his memoir. “And we have to tell
the truth about everything."
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