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Gorbachev and Stalin's Ghost
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13969 |
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Section : |
CURRENT ISSUES
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Date : |
2 / 1988 |
3,571 Words |
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Herbert J. Ellison Herbert J. Ellison is chairman of Russian and east
European studies at the University of Washington. He was
formerly secretary of the Kennan Institute for Advanced
Russian Studies in Washington, D.C. |
Mikhail Gorbachev has delivered no more important speech during the nearly three years of his leadership than that to a joint session of the Party Central Committee, the Supreme Soviet of the USSR, and the Supreme Soviet of the Russian Republic commemorating the 70th anniversary of the Bolshevik Revolution. Filling four full pages of Pravda the next day, the speech contained major pronouncements addressed to every segment of the Soviet population and to foreign communist leaders, as well as to the leadership and population of the rest of the world. The speech provided an interpretive overview of Soviet history, with special emphasis on Stalin, intended to guide and limit the turbulent discussion of the subject encouraged by glasnost; an evaluation of the achievements and prospects of Gorbachev's leadership (with as much emphasis upon problems and frustrations as on hopes); and an important review of the contemporary international scene and the challenge to Soviet foreign policy.
Press comment at the time focused mainly on the remarks on Stalin, and the meaning of that was widely misinterpreted. In view of major developments since, particularly in U.S.-Soviet relations and arms negotiations, the foreign policy section, which was almost ignored, deserves special attention. So too does the vital connection between Gorbachev's pronouncements on Stalin, perestroika, and foreign policy.
The recommended version
From Lenin to Gorbachev, Soviet leaders have sought to use history as a means of legitimizing both party rule and current policy. Stalin's presentation of Soviet history was very tightly woven, justifying the purge of his political
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