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ARCHIVES: The Unknown Opposition to Soviet Rule
By Gordon M. Hahn
New documents prove that, even after Stalin's purges, famines, and show trials, the internal opposition to Soviet rule never ended. By Archivist Gordon M. Hahn.
Two Soviet practices--extreme secrecy and the use of show trials--gave the West the impression
that by at least the 1960s the Soviet regime had a tight hold on power, having crushed all but a
few internationally famous cases of dissent and dissident activity. In fact, as the great Russian poet
Anna Akhmatova wrote, even after the Great Terror there were still "two Russias staring eye to
eye," one made up of the oppressed, the other of their oppressors. Although oppressed Russia
was relatively small, KGB and Soviet Communist Party documents now available in the Hoover
Archives--documents acquired by way of the Hoover Institution's joint microfilming project with
the Russian State Archives--make it clear that throughout the 1960s, 1970s, and 1980s, the
domestic opposition to Soviet rule was extensive, its literature pervasive.
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Andrei Sakharov--the father of the Soviet hydrogen bomb--in 1968 published an essay in support
of intellectual freedom in the New York Times. That essay so exasperated Soviet officials that
they fired him from the weapons program. When Sakharov went on to denounce the Soviet
intervention in Afghanistan in 1979, he was banished to Gorky without a trial, where he remained
in relative isolation until Gorbachev invited him back to Moscow in 1986.
Photo: Hoover Institution Archives, gift of Morris Pripstein. |
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The 1960s
In 1962, around the time of the massacre by Soviet army troops of demonstrators protesting a rise
in the price of bread in Novocherkassk, the KGB reported that it uncovered the distribution of
7,705 "anti-Soviet sheets" and "anonymous letters," which had been prepared and distributed by
2,522 people. Sixty anti-Soviet groups with 215 members were uncovered. Still more worrisome
for the regime were data indicating that only some 40 percent of the authors apprehended had a
middle or higher education, meaning that more than half came from the least-educated sector of
Soviet society--that is, from the workers and peasants for whom the regime had ostensibly
established the "dictatorship of the proletariat." Indeed, 35 percent were industrial workers.
Approximately 7 percent of the agitators were members and candidate members of the party itself.
More than 10 percent were Komsomol members. One was even a deputy head of a city party
committee's organization-instructional department. The most activity was uncovered in the union
republics of Ukraine, Azerbaijan, Georgia, and Latvia, in Moscow and Leningrad, and in Russia's
southern provinces in the North Caucasus.
The presence of dissident and opposition elements inside even the party apparatus resulted, in this
analyst's view, from the regime's failure to institute even the most minimal liberalization
measures--measures that had considerable backing within the party itself. Calls for such measures
were made frequently in Khrushchev's time during the "partywide discussion" of issues that
preceded party congresses. Documents in the Hoover Archives indicate that the flow of
proposals, letters, and appeals collected by local party organizations and sent to Moscow for
careful selection and summation included a considerable number of pleas for multicandidate
elections, secret ballots, greater freedom of speech, and other reforms.
The 1970s
The Brezhnev period, for all its manifestations of "stagnation," was therefore also a period of
seething discontent and growing disdain for the system and the party bosses, represented in the
open opposition to the invasion of Czechoslovakia, the show trial of Andrei Sinyavsky, Yuli
Daniel, and others, and the arrest and internal exile of Andrei Sakharov. This opposition activity,
which was well known at the time, was complemented by numerous efforts to resist Soviet power
that were completely unknown. The KGB's report to the Politburo on its efforts to quash
"anti-Soviet activity" in 1967 showed the distribution of 11,856 "anti-Soviet leaflets and other
anonymous documents." The KGB explained this activity as the result of the authors' "political
immaturity, as well as the absence of proper educational work in the collectives where they
worked." The KGB also discovered 456 attempts to distribute anonymous literature among the
armed forces and eighty attempts to create armed opposition units. Finally, despite the long odds
against success, 1967 saw 221 attempts by Soviet citizens "to cross the border."
In the following decade, the 1970s--in the wake of the 1968 Soviet invasion of Czechoslovakia
and the extermination of any residue of Khrushchev's domestic thaw--dissident and opposition
activity mounted. Compared with the 114 charged with "anti-Soviet activity" in 1967, 243 were
brought up before Soviet law in the first half of 1980 alone. The category of arrested "active
anti-Soviets" grew from sixteen in 1979 to forty in the first half of 1980.
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The KGB reported that during 1986 there had been an increase in the number of calls for
violence against the Soviet leadership, and by March 1987 it had prepared a special armored
car for General Secretary Gorbachev. |
The 1980s
In the 1980s, opposition remained considerable. On March 13, 1985, two days after Gorbachev
was confirmed as general secretary, the KGB reported increased anti-Soviet activity for 1984:
1,376 authors of 9,092 anti-Soviet leaflets and anonymous letters distributed in Ukraine, Latvia,
Kazakhstan, and throughout the Russian republic from Novosibirsk and Sverdlovsk to Leningrad
and Moscow. The KGB report for 1985 saw a small decrease in the number of anonymous
anti-Soviet activities--1,275 down from 1,376--but a marked increase in "nationalist" and
religious opposition and "extremism." Under this heading, the KGB reported the "unmasking" of
25 nationalist anti-Soviet groupings in Ukraine and the Baltic republics and 170 underground
Islamic schools in the Central Asian republics. Some months later the KGB reported that it had
foiled attempts to create an anti-Soviet underground, uncovering 934 groups of anti-Soviet
orientation and "localizing more than 100 provocative group demonstrations, preventing them
from growing into disorder." Gorbachev was told in February 1987 that there had been a growth
in anti-Soviet activity in 1986 and that twenty-two nationalist groupings were still to be found in
Ukraine and the Baltic. Some 7 percent of those involved were party members and candidates; of
those, 16 percent were in the Komsomol. The KGB also reported that during 1986 there had been
an increase in the number of terrorist threats and calls for violence against Soviet leadership. By
March 1987 the KGB had prepared special armored cars for the general secretary and other high
party and government leaders and had recommended strengthening the guard details for members
of the Politburo.
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Throughout the 1960s and 1970s few Westerners knew the depth of dissent in the Soviet Union.
Most of what Westerners did know came from the works of dissident writers, such as Alexander
Solzhenitsyn, Andrei Sinyavsky, and Yuli Daniel, whose manuscripts were published in the West.
Sinyavsky's novel pictured here--The Trial Begins--was smuggled out of the Soviet Union and
published in the West under the pseudonym Abram Tertz. For this and other works, the Soviets
convicted Sinyavsky for "propaganda carried out with the purpose of subverting . . . the Soviet
regime" and "slanderous inventions defamatory to the Soviet political and social system."
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Endgame
In January 1988, on the eve of the Soviet withdrawal from Afghanistan, the Moscow summit with
President Ronald Reagan, and Gorbachev's turn toward a more fundamental reform of the Soviet
political system, the KGB filed a report with the general secretary that sounded gravely alarmed:
The USSR KGB possesses data showing that the USA, other NATO countries, and other foreign
anti-Soviet centers are having a definite influence on the formation of terrorist and extremist
anti-Soviet persons and other enemy elements and are instigating them to carry out actions typical
of such groups on the territory of the Soviet Union. Foreign Zionist, Armenian, and other émigré
organizations, separate Muslim religious formations, Afghan counterrevolutionaries, and
inveterate segments of the organization of Ukrainian nationalists are nurturing extremist plans.
Instigated by the enemy, they are sending their emissaries to our country to propagandize the idea
of terror and violence and seeking out like-minded people.
Was this report--only a brief portion of which is quoted above--intended to discourage
Gorbachev from implementing his agenda for change? The answer is unclear. It is also unclear
whether Gorbachev believed such reports. In his first months in power, Gorbachev demonstrated
a certain distrust of the information being sent from the KGB, ordering the KGB to supply the
leadership with "reliable and objective" reports. What is clear is that the period of unknown
opposition was drawing to a close. The seeds of the revolution of 1991 were already sprouting. In
lieu of a concerted attempt to turn back glasnost, the regime was at risk. Yet instead of turning
back, in 1988 and 1989 Gorbachev made the decision--ultimately fatal for the regime--to move
reform forward by allowing, then legalizing, political opposition and vastly reducing the powers of
the Soviet Communist Party and the KGB. The opposition within the Soviet Union--for so many
years oppressed and unknown--was thus able to remove the Communist Party itself from power.
The information in this article is based on documents acquired through the Hoover
Institution's joint microfilming project with the Russian State Archives. the documents cited are in
Fond 89, the Collection of Recently Declassified Documents at the Center for the Preservation of
Contemporary Documentation of the Russian Archives. Microfilmed copies of those documents
are housed at the Hoover Institution Archives; in addition, a detailed guide to Fond 89 is available
at the Hoover Institution Archives.
Available from the Hoover Press is the Studies of Nationalities series, which examines those
nationalities who lived under Soviet rule. The series includes The Kazakhs, by Martha Brill Olcott,
The Latvians: A Short History, by Andrejs Plakans, and The Azerbaijani Turks: Power and
Identity under Russian Rule, by Audrey L. Altstadt. To order these and other books in the series,
call 800-935-2882.
Gordon M. Hahn is coordinator of Russian Archives Research Projects at the Hoover Institution.
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