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576 pages, Paperback
First published January 1, 1994
Not only Leninists but conservative believers in conspiracy theories have insisted that the Communist role in history has never been passive, for they either argue (as in the case of the Communists) that an elite party must perform an irreplaceable function in creatively leading the masses through the shoals of historical events to attain victory, or that it was principally Bolshevik machinations that brought down otherwise viable societies. The decisive weight that Communist leaders have assigned to their own roles was an essential justification for their own existences and the total obedience they demanded from their followers. The contemporary organizational demise of Communist parties virtually everywhere but Asia, where they have wholly abandoned their original social goals in practice, is itself testimony to their confusion and lack of control in coping with reality. That Communist parties triumphed in the past was ultimately a reflection of the crisis in global politics after 1917, and essentially a protest against the way that the world operated rather than the result of Lenin’s acumen. Indeed, after 1928 the USSR acted purely on the basis of its national interests rather than that of its internationalist pretensions, and it did far more to inhibit events wherever it could do so than to encourage further upheavals.
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The history of Communist parties, in essence, was principally one of improvisations and ad hoc responses to situations and opportunities that its enemies created, as in Russia in October 1917, China after 1946, and Vietnam in 1975, often compelling them to rely principally upon armed struggle rather than the preferred political route to attempt to prevent themselves from being destroyed, as in the cases of both Greece and the Philippines. The ability of victorious parties to remain relatively passive and survive until their enemies’ failures and contradictions caused them either to disintegrate or created a situation ripe for action was much more useful to leftists than any other quality. With the partial exception of the Bolshevik Revolution, it has far more often been the old order rather than radical parties that has determined the Left’s choice of paths to power. All social democratic and even most Bolshevik parties have permitted themselves to be repressed before acknowledging the failure of parliamentarianism. One can never forget the innumerable occasions during this century when antisocialist leaders of nations, including Italy's liberals, have abolished democratic systems because of a ruling class's unwillingness to tolerate pacific leftist political challenges to their follies.