Read Stalin's Genocides Online
Authors: Norman M. Naimark
Tags: #Europe, #Modern, #20th Century, #9780691147840, #General, #Other, #Military, #Russia & the Former Soviet Union, #History
18. Jörg Baberowski and Anselm Doering-Manteuffel, “The Quest for Order and the Pursuit of Terror,” in
Beyond Totalitarianism: Stalinism and Nazism Compared
, eds. Michael Geyer and Sheila Fitzpatrick (New York: Cambridge University Press, 152
notes to chapter 7
2009), p. 213; Ronald G. Suny, “Stalin and His Stalinism: Power and Authority in the Soviet Union,” in
Stalinism and Nazism: Dictatorships in Comparison
, eds. Ian Kershaw and Moshe Lewin (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1997), p. 50.
19. Werth, “The Crimes of the Stalin Regime,” p. 15.
20. HIA, f. 89, op. 48, d. 3, l. 14.
21. HIA, f. 89, op. 48, d. 17, l. 31.
22. Cited in Richard Pipes,
Communism: A History
(New York: Modern Library, 2003), p. 63.
23. Jansen and Petrov,
Stalin’s Loyal Executioner
, p. 111.
24. J. Arch Getty and Oleg V. Naumov, eds.,
The Road to
Terror:
Stalin and the Self-Destruction of the Bolsheviks, 1932–
1939
(New Haven: Yale University Press, 1999), pp. 130–131.
25. McLoughlan, “Mass Operations of the NKVD,” p. 128.
Getty and Naumov,
Yezhov
, p. 216. The authors suggest, no doubt correctly, that Stalin “trusted Yezhov’s judgment,” as least in this period.
26. Jansen and Petrov,
Stalin’s Loyal Executioner
, pp. 69–70.
27. Khaustov and Samuel’son,
Stalin, NKVD, i repressii
, pp.
23–24.
28. HIA, f. 89, op. 48, d. 12, ll. 25–26.
29. Oleg Khlevniuk, “The Objectives of the Great Terror,” in
Stalinism
, p. 97.
30. Shearer,
Policing Stalin’s Socialism
, p. 369.
31. Volkogonov,
Stalin: Triumph and Tragedy
, p. 310.
32. Oleg Khlevniuk,
The History of the Gulag: From Collectivization to the Great Terror,
trans. Vadim A. Staklo (New Haven: Yale University Press, 2004), p. 148.
chapter 7. the crimes of stalin and hitler
1. Conquest,
The Harvest of Sorrow
, p. 3.
2. Stephane Courtois, “Introduction: The Crimes of Communism,” in
The Black Book of Communism
, ed. Courtois et al., p. 9.
notes to chapter 7 153
3. Conquest,
Reflections on a Ravaged Century
, p. xii.
4. Danilo Kis,
Homo-Poeticus: Essays and Interviews
(New York: Farrar, Straus, Giroux, 1995), p. 126. Thanks to Holly Case for alerting me to these essays.
5. Richard Evans,
In Hitler’s Shadow: West German Historians’ Attempts to Escape from the Nazi Past
(London: I. B. Tauris, 1989), p. 88.
6. Schabas,
Genocide in International Law
, p. 9.
7. Michael Mann,
The Dark Side of Democracy: Explaining Ethnic Cleansing
(Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2005), p. 17; Jacques Semelin,
Purify and Destroy: The Political Uses of Massacre and Genocide
(London: Hurst, 2007), pp.
316–320.
8. Eric D. Weitz,
A Century of Genocide: Utopias of Race
and Nation
(Princeton: Princeton University Press, 2003), pp.
100–101.
9. Bernd Bonwetsch, “Der GULAG und die Frage des Völker-mords,” in
Moderne Zeiten? Krieg, Revolution und Gewalt im
20. Jahrhundert
, ed. Jörg Baberowski (Göttingen: Vandenhoeck
& Ruprecht, 2006), p. 9.
10. Christian Gerlach and Nicolas Werth, “State Violence—
Violent Societies,” in
Beyond Totalitarianism
, eds. Geyer and Fitzpatrick, p. 138.
11. Paul Hollander, ed.,
From the Gulag to the Killing Fields:
Personal Accounts of Political Violence and Repression in Communist States
(Wilmington, DE: ISI Books, 2006), pp. 20–24.
12. Saul Friedländer’s emphasis on the singular importance of the Nazi perception of the Jewish threat as “active” and ubiquitous helps distinguish their eliminationist policy against the Jews from the policies against other Nazi victims of genocide.
Yet this idea of an “active” and “dangerous” target also inevitably draws comparisons to Stalinist genocidal actions against
“kulaks” and other “enemies of the people.” Saul Friedländer,
The Years of Extermination: Nazi Germany and the Jews 1939–
1945
(New York: Harper Collins, 2007), p. xix.
154
notes to conclusions
13.
Deti GULAGa. 1918–1956: Dokumenty
(Moscow: Mezhdunarodnyi fond “Demokratija,” 2002.)
14. Courtois does state that his formulation should not be seen as detracting “from the unique nature of Auschwitz.” “Introduction,” in
The Black Book of Communism
, ed. Courtois et al., p. 9.
15. James J. Sheehan,
Where Have All the Soldiers Gone?
The Transformation of Modern Europe
(New York: Houghton Mifflin, 2008).
conclusions
1. Gerlach and Werth, “State Violence—Violent Societies,”
Beyond Totalitarianism
, p. 176
Index
Akhmatova, Anna, 99–100
dered by, 20, 90, 92; NKVD,
Alliluyeva, Nadezhda, 34
named as head and purging
Alliluyeva, Svetlana, 34, 37
of, 88, 119
American Relief Administration
“Bonapartism,” Stalin’s worries
(ARA), 73–74
regarding, 118
Anderson, Benedict, 3
Bukharin, Nikolai: confession
anti-Polonism, 92
of, 102; metaphor for Stalin’s
Archipelago Gulag, special
rule, 35; in the post-Lenin
settlements as a dimension of,
struggle for power, 47–48;
59–63
pre-trial attacks on, 105; in
Argentina, 28
the Revolution, 43; Stalin’s
Armenian genocide, 8
break with, 55; Stalin’s hatred
of, 49; trial of, 101, 103
Baberowski, Jörg, 44, 109
Baltic countries: forced de-
Cambodia, 28, 109
portations from, 89; “forest
Chechens, 93–97, 135
brethren,” actions against, 25,
China, contribution to the word-
27, 89; laws against genocide
ing of the genocide convention
in, 24–25, 132; legal prosecu-
by, 21
tions for genocide in, insights
Chuev, Feliks, 6
into Soviet genocide provided
Churchill, Winston, 20
by, 25–28; Soviet occupation
Cold War politics, Stalin’s mass
of, 88–89
killings and, 5–8
Baranov, M. I., 114
collectivization: dekulakization
Beria, Lavrentiy: Chechens and
as element of, 55–56, 71 (
see
Ingush, campaigns against,
also
dekulakization); forced
95–96; Katyn massacre or-
industrialization through, 71;
156
index
collectivization (
cont
.)
“Dizzy with Success” (Stalin),
havoc wreaked by, 57–58;
64
political goal of, 54–55;
Djugashvili, Iosif.
See
Stalin,
resistance to in the Ukraine,
Josef
71–73 (
see also
Ukrainian
Djugashvili, Vissarion (Besarion
famine [the Holodomor])
or Beso), 36
Conquest, Robert, 70, 99,
Doctors’ Plot, 33
121–22, 125
Doering-Manteuffel, Anselm,
Courtois, Stephane, 121–22,
109
127
Dzerzhinskii, Feliks, 86
Crimean Tatars, 93, 97, 135
Ellman, Michael, 147n.2
Davies, R. W., 147n.2
Estonia.
See
Baltic countries
“Decree on Land” (November 8,
Estonians, 87
1917), 52
Etchecolatz, Miguel Osvaldo,
Decree on the Rights of the
142n.25
Peoples of Russia (November
Evans, Richard, 122
15, 1917), 81
dekulakization: collectivization
Finns, 87
and, 55–56, 71; genocidal
First Five-Year Plan, 53–54
qualities of, 58–60, 63, 133–
forced deportation: from the
34; initiation and goals of,
Baltic states, 27, 89; in the
55–57; invented group oppos-
Baltic states, legal status as
ing collectivization, aimed at,
genocide, 25; of Chechens and
24; results of, 68–69; second
Ingush, 95–96; of Crimean
civil war prompted by, 57–58;
Tatars, 97; genocidal status
“socially harmful elements,”
of, 13; of the Koreans, 87–88;
as part of campaign against,
of kulaks, 57, 59; Stalin’s
65–68, 134; special settle-
remorseless reaction to the
ments for deportees, 59–63; of
costs of, 32
the Ukrainian peasantry (
see
forced industrialization, 71.
See
Ukrainian famine (the Holo-
also
collectivization
domor)); waves of, 63–65.
See
foreign threats: claims of, histo-
also
collectivization
rians’ acceptance of, 129–30;
Deti GULAGa,
127
fears of war and infiltration
Dikii, Aleksei, 49
as ostensible reasons for geno-
Dimitrov, Georgi, 107
cidal actions, 53–54, 82–84,
index 157
95, 120, 136–37; political use
Holocaust, the); Nazi, “work-
of, 53–54
ing toward the Führer” in,
110; Nazi operation against
Geladze, Ekaterina (Keke), 36
the Poles, 91
genocide: categories of victims,
Goldman, Wendy, 68
question of, 3–5, 16–17,
Gorky, Maxim, 59
21–24, 27–29, 132; conven-
Great October Revolution,
tion against (
see
U.N. Conven-
42–43, 51–52
tion on the Prevention and
Great Terror, the: atmosphere
Punishment of the Crime of
and life during, 99–100; end
Genocide); definitional/legal
of, 88; as genocide, 109, 136;
characteristics of, 10, 25–28;
the nationalities, impact on,
examples of (
see
dekulakiza-
84–85, 86–87, 118–19; over-
tion; Great Terror, the; na-
zealousness by local officials,
tionalities; Ukrainian famine
110–11; preparations for the
(the Holodomor); Lemkin’s
show trials, 103–6; reasons
definition of, 15–17; lives lost
for and effects of, 116–20;
in mass killings of the Stalin
secrecy and publicity, mixture
regime, 131–32; need to face,
of in extraordinary processes,
8; scholarly abstention from
111–12; the show trials,
using the word, 124; schol-
18–19, 100–2; Stalin and
arly dangers confronted in
Yezhof in charge of, 106–9;
the study of Soviet, 13–14;
torture in, 112–16
Stalin’s crimes and the Holo-
Gregory, Paul, 67
caust, question of equivalence
Grigorenko, Piotr, 56
of, 2, 121–23, 125–30, 137;
Gulag, the.
See
Archipelago
Stalin’s mass murders as, 1–2,
Gulag
123–24; Stalin’s mass mur-
ders as, inhibitions to making
Hagenloh, Paul, 146–47n.22
the argument for, 2–8; torture
Hedeler, Wladislaw, 101
and, 114
Himmler, Heinrich, 128
“Georgian Affair,” 80
Hitler, Adolf, 2, 5, 91, 120, 122,
Germans: Stalin’s ambivalence
129–30, 137
regarding, 149n.6; as target
Hollander, Paul, 125–28
of Soviet campaign against
Holocaust, the: Stalin’s crimes
nationalities, 81–82, 84–87
and, comparing claims to
Germany: the Holocaust (
see
genocide of, 2, 121–23,
158
index
Holocaust, the (
cont
.)
Khlevnink, Oleg, 118, 120
125–30, 137; as a uniquely
Khrushchev, Nikita, 96–97, 107,
horrible event, 2, 125
130
Holodomor, the.
See
Ukrainian
Kiernan, Ben, 28
famine (the Holodomor)
Kirov, Sergei, 34
Hoover, Herbert, 73–74
Kis, Danilo, 122
Kliuchevsky, Vasilii, 66
Ingush, 93, 95–97, 135
Koba (Stalin’s first underground
International Court of Justice, 9
pseudonym), 38, 41
International Criminal Tribunal
Koreans: forced deportation of,
for Rwanda (ICTR), 10
87–88; as target of Soviet
International Criminal Tribunal
campaign against nationali-
for the former Yugoslavia
ties, 81–82, 87–88
(ICTY), 9–10
korenizatsiia,
80–81, 98
Iranians, 87
Krstic´, Radoslav, 9
Krupskaia, Nadezhda, 46
Jews: the Holocaust (
see
Holo-
Kuibyshev, Valerian, 103
caust, the); Stalin’s campaign
kulaks: as imagined social
against Soviet, 32–33
enemy, 24, 55–57; Soviet
Joint Distribution Service, 32–33
genocide against (
see
deku-
Jonassohn, Kurt, 76–77
lakization)
Kulchytsky, Stanislav, 147n.2
Kaganovich, Lazar: on the early
Kun, Miklos, 9
Stalin, 40; preparations for
Kuromiya, Hiroaki, 9, 147n.2
show trials, participation in,
103; railways, enemy agents’
Latvia.
See
Baltic countries
actions against, 83; Stalin’s
Lemkin, Raphael, 15–17, 20,
pressure, unflinching response
23, 132
to, 31; as subordinate of Sta-
Lenin, Vladimir Il’ich: Bukharin
lin, 47; the Ukrainian famine,
and, 105; characterization
actions regarding, 74, 79
of, 144n.14; death of and the
Kamenev, Lev, 46–47, 100, 103