Question by Tori Frost: what was khrushchev’s secret speech, in short?
I’m looking everywhere online but I can’t find a simple, straightforward summary of it like its purpose and basically what it was saying. All I get is copies of the speech itself and lengthy analysis. Please help! It’s urgent – due for my exam tomorrow!
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Answer by Mac
Khrushchev’s secret speech
(Feb. 24–25, 1956), in Russian history, denunciation of the deceased Soviet leader Joseph Stalin made by Nikita S. Khrushchev to a closed session of the 20th Congress of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union. The speech was the hallmark of a far-reaching de-Stalinization campaign intended to destroy the image of the late dictator as an infallible leader and to revert official policy to an idealized Leninist model.
In the speech, Khrushchev recalled Lenin’s Testament, a long-suppressed document in which Lenin had warned that Stalin was likely to abuse his power, and then he cited numerous instances of such excesses. Outstanding among these was Stalin’s use of mass terror in the Great Purge of the mid-1930s, during which, according to Khrushchev, innocent Communists had been falsely accused of espionage and sabotage and unjustly punished, often executed, after they had been tortured to make confessions.
Khrushchev criticized Stalin for having failed to make adequate defensive preparations before the German invasion of the Soviet Union (June 1941), for having weakened the Red Army by purging its leading officers, and for mismanaging the war after the invasion. He condemned Stalin for irrationally deporting entire nationality groups (e.g., the Karachay, Kalmyk, Chechen, Ingush, and Balkar peoples) from their homelands during the war and, after the war, for purging major political leaders in Leningrad (after 1948) and Georgia (1952). He also censured Stalin for attempting to launch a new purge (Doctors’ Plot, 1953) shortly before his death and for his policy toward Yugoslavia, which had resulted in a severance of relations between that nation and the Soviet Union (1948). The “cult of personality” that Stalin had created to glorify his own rule and leadership was also condemned by Khrushchev.
Khrushchev confined his indictment of Stalin to abuses of power against the Communist Party and glossed over Stalin’s campaigns of mass terror against the general population. He did not object to Stalin’s activities before 1934, which included his political struggles against Leon Trotsky, Nikolay Bukharin, and Grigory Zinovyev and the collectivization campaign that “liquidated” millions of peasants and had a disastrous effect on Soviet agriculture. Observers outside the Soviet Union have suggested that Khrushchev’s primary purpose in making the speech was to consolidate his own position of political leadership by associating himself with reform measures while discrediting his rivals in the Presidium (Politburo) by implicating them in Stalin’s crimes.
The secret speech, although subsequently read to groups of party activists and “closed” local party meetings, was never officially made public. Nonetheless, it caused shock and disillusionment throughout the Soviet Union and the Soviet bloc, not only with Stalin himself but with the political system and party that had enabled him to gain and misuse such great power. In Hungary and Poland it contributed substantially to revolts against the Stalinist regimes (1956), weakening the Soviet Union’s control over the Soviet bloc and temporarily strengthening the position of Khrushchev’s opponents in the Presidium.
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Spellbound says
Here is a short synopsis and an analysis: http://news.bbc.co.uk/onthisday/hi/dates/stories/… http://historyspalding.blogspot.com/2011/02/secre…
Here is MY analysis of why the speech was made:
The reason for his de-Stalinisation policy is that when Stalin died in 1953 there was no clear successor to him.
The country was initially run by a triumvirate of Malenkov, Beria, and Molotov but machinations among the Politburo led to Khrushchev being elected First Secretary of the Party in September of 1953.
Khrushchev's position was still very weak and he needed to find a way of isolating and removing his political rivals – he couldn't use Stalin's tactics of having them arrested by the NKVD as Beria had been in charge of that and loyalties ran deep (he and Malenkov had worked together to remove Beria, having him arrested in June 1953). What he decided to do was to present himself as a down to Earth, folksy, peasant. By doing this he sought to isolate Malenkov, a sophisticated man, but seen as a drab bureaucrat – he achieved this by beginning to reform the country, economically as well as politically. His reforms proved popular, at first, and they seemed to give communism a new direction.
He still needed to reform the party, and to ensure that the Stalinists could not come back to power. This was the reason for both the 1956 "Secret Speech" where he denounced Stalin and the terror of his regime, and for Molotov's removal from office in 1956 – he was removed from the Presidium (the enlarged and renamed Politburo) in 1957.
It was radical because it removed two of the major underpinnings of the Soviet state – the use of terror as a political tool, and the cult of personality surrounding Stalin; effectively claiming that from the purges onwards, with the exception of WWII, everything Stalin did or said was incorrect, and a perversion of Marxist-Leninist ideology.
See:
Khrushchev: The Man and His Era – William Taubman
Khrushchev Remembers – Nikita Sergeyevich Khrushchev