Military Revolutionary Committee

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Facsimile of the Milrevcom proclamation of the disbanding of the Russian Provisional Government

Military Revolutionary Committee also known as the Milrevcom (Russian: Военно-революционный комитет, военревком, ВРК) was the name for military organs under the soviets during the period of the Russian Revolution and Russian Civil War. The most notable ones were those of Petrograd Soviet, of Moscow Soviet, and at Stavka.

These committees were in charge of preparation and carrying out the revolution. After the revolution they were in charge of the control of the military, however during the Civil War they carried out governmental functions in some turbulent areas of Russia.

The Petrograd Military Revolutionary Committee was created on 16 October 1917.[1]

This is the same organisation translated as the Revolutionary Military Committee in Lenin's collected works.

Contents

[edit] Petrograd Milrevcom

[edit] Inception

The MRC was in actual fact started by Trotsky to support Lenin who had ordered the revolution in 1917 because the Provisional government was so weak. Trotsky however gets little of the blame for it.

On 24 October, the Petrograd MRC made an announcement:

Citizens:

The counter-revolution has raised its criminal head. The Kornilovites are mobilising their forces in order to crush the All Russian Congress of Soviets and to wreck the Constituent Assembly At the same time the pogrom -makers may attempt to cause trouble and slaughter in the streets of Petrograd.

The Petrograd Soviet of Workers' and Soldiers' Deputies takes upon itself the defence of revolutionary order against attempts at counter-revolution and pogroms.[2]

The Military Revolutionary Committee proclamation of the disbanding of the Russian Provisional Government, titled "To the citizens of Russia" (facsimile shown opposite) was signed by the Revolutionary Military Committee of the Petrograd Soviet of Workers' and Soldiers Deputies and dated "10am, October 25, 1917". It reads:

The Provisional Government has been deposed. State power has passed into the hands of the organ of the Petrograd Soviet of Workers' and Soldiers' Deputies - the Revolutionary Military Committee, which heads the Petrograd proletariat and the garrison.

The cause for which the people have fought, namely, the immediate offer of a democratic peace, the abolition of landed proprietorship, workers' control over production, and the establishment of Soviet power - this cause has been secured.

Long live the revolution of workers, soldiers and peasants!

 
To the citizens of Russia[3]

In Lessons of October, Leon Trotsky, who was one of the leaders of the Russian October Revolution and considered second only to Lenin, argues that the Petrograd Soviet essentially entered a state of armed insurrection before October 25: "From the moment when we, as the Petrograd Soviet, invalidated Kerensky's order transferring two-thirds of the garrison to the front, we had actually entered a state of armed insurrection... the outcome of the insurrection of October 25 was at least three-quarters settled, if not more, the moment that we opposed the transfer of the Petrograd garrison; created the Military Revolutionary Committee (October 16)...".[4] Kerensky's order was issued not long after the Bolsheviks gained a majority in the Petrograd Soviet and Trotsky was elected Chairman (the latter took place on September 26, 1917 Old Style. The Soviet took the view that Kerensky was attempting to remove the revolutionary leaning troops who were following the directions of the soviet, and replace them with ones who would not oppose his orders.

[edit] Milrevcom as the first proletarian government

On the second anniversary of the October Revolution, a friend of Trotsky, Adolf Ioffe, wrote an article on the Military Revolutionary Committee of the Petrograd Soviet for the Communist International titled “The First Proletarian Government.” [5] The MRC was created approximately two weeks before the Bolsheviks seized power in response to the decision of the Provisional Government under Kerensky to transfer military units that were suspected of being too strongly under the influence of Bolsheviks or other radical parties. [6]

Initially, the MRC had 66 identified members. Of these members, 48 were Bolsheviks, fourteen were Left Socialist Revolutionaries, and four were Anarchists. In contrast to the Bolsheviks, the Left Socialist Revolutionaries abided by their own official ideology of Radical Populism, and the Anarchists, from the Federation of Anarchist Groups, had Anarcho-Syndicalist tendencies.

The Left Socialist Revolutionaries broke off from the more moderate Socialist Revolutionary party in the fall of 1917 and allied with the Bolsheviks. They were considered to be the party of the peasantry and their main agenda was the redistribution of property from the landlords and their estates. [7]

A bureau composed of three Bolsheviks, Nikolai Podvoisky, Vladimir Antonov-Ovseenko, and A.D. Sadovsky, and two Left Socialist Revolutionaries, Pavel Lazimir and G.N. Sukhar’kov, headed the MRC. Lazimir, at age 18, was the Chairman at first, but during the subsequent insurrection, this role became Podvoisky’s, with his fellow Bolshevik Antonov-Ovseenko serving as Secretary. [8]

The MRC was made up of its headquarters and corps of commissars who reported directly to the headquarters. The commissars were mostly Bolsheviks who were formerly political prisoners of the Provisional Government. Between October 21- 24, 1917, they successfully deposed the standing commissars of the Central Executive Committee of the First Congress of Soviets, who were mostly Mensheviks and Socialist Revolutionaries, and thereby ensured that the military would be under their command. On October 24-25, 1917, the Bolsheviks, through the MRC, were able to assume power.

The headquarters of the MRC was located on the third floor of the Smolny Young Ladies’ College. Originally, it had seven departments: defense, supplies, communications, information bureau, workers’ militia, reporting section, and commandant’s office. On October 20, 1917, the department of revolutionary air services was added, and on October 24, 1917, a motor transport allocation section was added. The immediate tasks the MRC faced after seizing power from the Provisional Government were curbing resistance, taking control of essential utilities and government offices, preventing pogroms and looting, and above all, defeating a coup attempt by military cadets and fighting the Cossacks who were sent by Kerensky to retake Petrograd. However, shortly after the insurrection, the MRC found itself dealing with mostly civil administration duties. [9]

[edit] Functions

By October 28, 1917, the MRC appointed 185 commissars to various civil agencies. The most urgent problem facing the MRC was providing food to the population of Petrograd. After the October insurrection, levels of grain stock in Petrograd were so low that they were insufficient to supply the city with the daily ration of half a pound of bread for even one day. The MRC imposed even stricter food controls and sent “flying food-supply squads” to the other provinces, followed by stiff penalties against possible speculation on the new incoming provisions. [10]

The MRC also took it upon itself to censor the press. In 1917, Petrograd had over 150 newspapers and other periodicals, and 450 journals. [11] In keeping with the first point of Lenin’s three point program concerning the press, the MRC would forcibly close critical publications and handover the facilities to Bolshevik sympathizers (the following two points were a state monopoly on advertising and allocating printing services and supplies to socialist parties and citizen groups in proportion to their size). [12] On October 26, 1917, the MRC in Petrograd shut down seven newspapers that had supported the Provisional Government. During its tenure, the MRC in Petrograd shut down up to five newspapers a day on suspicions of being counter-revolutionary. [12]

Other duties performed by the MRC included political policing against possible counter-revolutionaries, issuing of exit visas and various permits, controlling of foreign trade outlets, censoring of the press, distribution of various goods to both the military and civilian population, allocation of housing, licensing of theatrical performances, etc. [13]

Eventually, many of the duties of the MRC were overtaken by the Council of People’s Commissars that was formed after the October insurrection, as well as other new and/or newly renovated administrative offices. The MRC was officially abolished on December 5, 1917.

[edit] Influence

In the weeks following the October insurrection, military revolutionary committees based on the MRC of Petrograd were set up throughout the other soviets and helped cement Bolshevik control. These other MRCs were formed by locals but agents from the Petrograd MRC were often in positions to give advice or direction. By the end of October 1917, representatives from the Petrograd MRC were on assignments in at least forty-four cities as well as 113 military units throughout Russia, Turkestan, and the Caucasus. [14]

[edit] See also

[edit] References

  1. ^ Trotsky, Leon, Lessons of October: "On October 16th the Military Revolutionary Committee was created, the legal Soviet organ of insurrection." Accessed 27/8/07
  2. ^ The Russian Civil War, Evan Mawdsley, 1987
  3. ^ Lenin, collected works, Vol 26, p236, (Lawrence and Wishart), 1964
  4. ^ Trotsky, Leon, Lessons of October Accessed 27/8/07
  5. ^ A. Ioffe, “Pervoe proletarskoe pravitel’stvo,’ Kommunisticheskii internatsional, No. 6, 1919, Col. 777-82.
  6. ^ Rigby, pp. 38-39
  7. ^ Utechin, p. 124
  8. ^ Rigby, p. 40
  9. ^ Rigby, p. 41
  10. ^ Rigby, pp. 41-42
  11. ^ Resis, p. 275
  12. ^ a b Resis, p. 285
  13. ^ Rigby, p. 42
  14. ^ Rigby, pp. 42-43
  • Resis, Albert (July 1977). Lenin on Freedom of the Press. Russian Review, Vol. 36, No. 3, pp. 274-296.
  • Rigby, T.H. (Jan. 1974). The First Proletarian Government. British Journal of Political Science, Vol. 4, No. 1, pp. 37-51.
  • Utechin, S.V. (Oct. 1958). Bolsheviks and Their Allies after 1917: The Ideological Pattern. Soviet Studies, Vol. 10, No. 2, pp. 113-135.
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