logo
#

Latest news with #KPRF

Glory to Stalin and the whitewashing of history
Glory to Stalin and the whitewashing of history

Japan Times

time03-08-2025

  • Politics
  • Japan Times

Glory to Stalin and the whitewashing of history

Earlier last month, at its 19th Reporting and Election Congress, the Communist Party of the Russian Federation (KPRF) invalidated Nikita Khrushchev's bombshell 1956 address to the highest-ranking Soviet communists — known as his 'secret speech' — in which he denounced Josef Stalin's cult of personality. At a time when 'NATO militarism is increasing its aggression against Russia,' according to the KPRF narrative, Stalin — who had nearly a million of his own citizens executed and sent countless more to the Gulag labor camps — should be admired, even emulated, not decried. By contrast, the KPRF resolution accuses Khrushchev of subjecting the 'results of 30 years Stalin's leadership' to 'wholesale denigration' for the sake of 'cheap popularity.' In fact, the KPRF claims, Khrushchev faced an 'objective shortage of materials discrediting the name and work of Stalin,' and a 'targeted effort' to replace original documents with 'fakes' in state archives has been 'reliably established.' These are mind-boggling assertions. The cruelty and lawlessness of the Gulag system are not matters of historical debate. We know, for example, that in just the first two years of Stalin's Great Purge, well over 1.5 million people were arrested and more than 680,000 of them were killed. Moreover, when the archives were opened up in the late 1980s, during Mikhail Gorbachev's glasnost, it was reliably confirmed that they included original records of even more terrible crimes, which Khrushchev had thought better of exposing. But, to hear the KPRF tell it, Stalin was a 'demanding and fair leader,' and a model of 'integrity,' who 'saved our people from enslavement and death.' Compounding the absurdity of the KPRF's resolution is the fact that the party, which was formed in 1993, is not a successor to the Communist Party of the Soviet Union, which was disbanded in 1991. It has no authority to invalidate official actions taken by Khrushchev or any other Soviet leader. A ranking member of parliament pointed this out to the KPRF, though not as any kind of defense of Khrushchev; the ruling United Russia party merely wants to remain at the forefront of the re-Stalinization campaign that is under way. The process of cleaning up Stalin's image began shortly after Vladimir Putin came to power 25 years ago. Teaching materials, such as the high-school textbook 'The Modern History of Russia: 1945-2006,' justified Stalin's 'strong hand' as necessary to enable a 'besieged' country to survive and develop. 'The formation of a rigid militarized political system' was a means of 'solving extraordinary problems in extraordinary circumstances.' The textbooks issued in 2023 — a year after Russia's full-scale invasion of Ukraine — went much further, describing Stalin as a venerable and triumphant figure. (A co-author of the books, Vladimir Medinsky, was also Putin's lead negotiator in peace talks on Ukraine.) At least 105 of the 120 monuments to Stalin seen across Russia today were erected under Putin's leadership. The newest addition, located inside Moscow's Taganskaya subway station, is a white plaster copy of the marble bas-relief that was removed in 1966 as part of the de-Stalinization process. As Putin's regime uses schoolbooks and statues to burnish Stalin's image in the popular memory, the insidious effects of re-Stalinization are becoming increasingly apparent. The suppression of dissent regarding the Ukraine war is a notable one, as is a wave of deaths among Russia's elite, the latest being the suicide of Russia's transport minister and former governor of the Kursk region, Roman Starovoyt. Starovoyt had just been fired for his failure to prevent incursions into Russian territory by Ukrainian troops last year. His superiors had determined that, under his watch, the border had been insufficiently fortified and Starovoyt knew that he had no recourse. He could not defend himself or even resign quietly. Under Putin, as under Stalin, if the supreme power finds you guilty, you are — and you are expected to bear whatever punishment is imposed upon you. In such a context, suicide becomes an act of defiance. And, in fact, some Stalin-era officials chose this path. Vissarion Lominadze, once the head of the Republic of Georgia's Communist Party, shot himself in the chest in 1935, in order to avoid arrest for deviation from the party line. When the Old Bolshevik trade unionist Mikhail Tomsky shot himself in his dacha in 1936, he left a note denying participation in an anti-Soviet conspiracy, but he was convicted posthumously (and eventually cleared.) Sergo Ordzhonikidze's suicide was a different kind of protest. In 1937, at the height of the Great Purge, the old Bolshevik and Soviet statesman ended his life in despair, following the brutal persecution of his brother Papulia, who was arrested on unspecific charges while working as the boss of the Transcaucasian Railway. Such high-level suicides enraged Stalin, who viewed them as acts of dishonesty and manipulation. When it came to the widely respected Ordzhonikidze, Stalin did not even want to admit the truth about his death. The official story — which Khrushchev refuted in his 'secret speech' — was that Ordzhonikidze died of heart failure. Putin was apparently similarly furious about Starovoyt's final act of disobedience: He ordered his Kremlin aides to recall the wreath they had sent to the funeral, as per protocol. Nonetheless, many government officials attended the ceremony. One wonders whether this amounted to a quiet bureaucratic protest against the impossible demands and arbitrary punishments that are being imposed on those tasked with carrying out Putin's decrees, at a time when the slightest whiff of corruption, incompetence or confusion can be treated as treason. There was a sort of urban legend during the Stalin era: When a train was forced to stop because the track had been destroyed, Stalin ordered that some of his entourage be shot, so that their bodies could be used as rails. As Starovoyt's death shows, the officials surrounding Putin are not much safer. Nina L. Khrushcheva, professor of international affairs at The New School, is the co-author (with Jeffrey Tayler) of "In Putin's Footsteps: Searching for the Soul of an Empire Across Russia's Eleven Time Zones" (St. Martin's Press, 2019). © Project Syndicate, 2025

Communist Party of Vietnam treasures ties with Russian counterpart: Top leader
Communist Party of Vietnam treasures ties with Russian counterpart: Top leader

The Star

time11-05-2025

  • Business
  • The Star

Communist Party of Vietnam treasures ties with Russian counterpart: Top leader

General Secretary of the CPV Central Committee To Lam (R) and Chairman of the KPRF Central Committee Gennady Zyuganov. -- Photo: VNA MOSCOW/HANOI (Vietnam News/ANN): The Communist Party of Vietnam (CPV) always attaches importance to its traditional friendship with the Communist Party of the Russian Federation (KPRF), General Secretary of the CPV Central Committee To Lam told Chairman of the KPRF Central Committee Gennady Zyuganov at their meeting in Moscow on May 11. Lam praised the KPRF's recent significant achievements, noting its continued role as one of the leading political parties in Russia that shape key policies guiding Russia through challenges and toward strong development. He expressed his confidence that with its prestige and experience, the KPRF would further solidify its firm position in Russia's socio-political life and global communist and workers' movements. The General Secretary highlighted the importance of the CPV-KPRF relationship in the Vietnam-Russia relations, considering it as a political foundation to further promote cooperation in all spheres, particularly as Vietnam prepares to enter a new era - the era of the nation's rise. The CPV-KPRF relationship also plays an important role in strengthening and developing the international communist and workers' movement. Zyuganov, for his part, congratulated Vietnam on its impressive socio-economic achievements in recent years, believing that under the CPV leadership led by General Secretary Lam, Vietnam will continue to thrive and grow stronger in the time ahead. He expressed his delight at the positive progress in the relationship between the KPRF and the CPV, notably the agreement on expanding and deepening relations signed in January 2024 in Moscow, which has further bolstered the traditional friendship and solid cooperation between the two Parties and the people of Russia and Vietnam. Both sides agreed to actively realise the cooperation agreement, focusing on facilitating the exchange of delegations by high-ranking leaders between the two Parties and the sharing of information about each Party's activities, promoting ties between mass organisations, especially the Youth Unions to ensure that the younger generations inherit and carry forward the long-standing bilateral friendship. They vowed to support the activities of the Russia–Vietnam Friendship Association, foster inter-parliamentary cooperation, and strengthen collaboration between ministries, agencies, and localities, while coordinating stances at multilateral political party forums. On this occasion, Lam invited Zyuganov and KPRF leaders to pay an official visit to Vietnam. - Vietnam News/ANN

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store