<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8" standalone="yes"?><oembed><version><![CDATA[1.0]]></version><provider_name><![CDATA[the commune]]></provider_name><provider_url><![CDATA[https://thecommune.wordpress.com]]></provider_url><author_name><![CDATA[internationalcommunist]]></author_name><author_url><![CDATA[https://thecommune.wordpress.com/author/internationalcommunist/]]></author_url><title><![CDATA[manifesto of the workers&#8217; group of the russian communist&nbsp;party]]></title><type><![CDATA[link]]></type><html><![CDATA[<p align="justify">We publish  below extracts from the Manifesto of the Workers&#8217; Group of the Russian  Communist Party (Bolsheviks).  This current of opposition in the  RKP (b) was led by Gavril Ilyich Myasnikov, a Russian metalworker from  the <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Urals" target="_blank">Urals</a>, who was a veteran Bolshevik activist  who participated in the 1905 and 1917 revolutions. Myasnikov was a <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Left_Communist" target="_blank">Left Communist</a> in 1918, opposed to the <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Treaty_of_Brest-Litovsk" target="_blank">Treaty of Brest-Litovsk</a>. He was dissatisfied with elements  of Russian ommunist Party policy and increasing bureaucratisation but had disagreed with the <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Workers_Opposition" target="_blank">Workers Opposition</a> in 1920-21 in their call for unions to manage the economy.  Instead,  in a 1921 manifesto, Myasnikov called for “producers’ <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Soviets" target="_blank">soviets</a>”  to administer industry and for freedom of the press for all workers.   Leaders of the Workers&#8217; Opposition <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alexander_Shlyapnikov" target="_blank">Alexander Shlyapnikov</a> and <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sergei_Medvedev" target="_blank">Sergei Medvedev</a> feared that Myasnikov&#8217;s proposals would give too much power to peasants.  Despite their disagreements, however, they supported Myasnikov&#8217;s right  to voice criticisms of Party policy. Along with former members of the  Workers&#8217; Opposition, Myasnikov signed the &#8220;Letter of the Twenty-Two&#8221;  to the Comintern in 1922, protesting the <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Russian_Communist_Party" target="_blank">Russian Communist Party</a> leaders&#8217; suppression of dissent.<!--more--></p>
<p align="justify">In February  1922, Myasnikov was expelled from the <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Russian_Communist_Party" target="_blank">Russian Communist Party</a>. In 1923, he formed an opposition  faction called “<a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Workers_Group_of_the_Russian_Communist_Party&amp;action=edit&amp;redlink=1" target="_blank">Workers&#8217; Group of the Russian Communist  Party</a>” that opposed <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/NEP" target="_blank">NEP</a>.  The group included some former members of the <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Workers%27_Opposition" target="_blank">Workers&#8217; Opposition</a>. Party leaders arrested Myasnikov  in May 1923, but then released him and attempted to isolate him from  his support base by assigning him to a trade mission in Germany in 1923.   There Myasnikov formed ties to the Communist Workers&#8217; Party (<a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/KAPD" target="_blank">KAPD</a>).   These groups helped him publish the manifesto of the <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Workers_Group&amp;action=edit&amp;redlink=1" target="_blank">Workers&#8217; Group</a>,  without permission from the Russian Communist Party.  The main  source for this group’s writings in English, the Manifesto of the Communist  Workers&#8217; Group of Russia, was published in the <em>Workers&#8217; Dreadnought </em>throughout  January and February of 1924.  The Workers&#8217; Group was suppressed  after its preparations to call a one day general strike and a mass demonstration,  in commemoration of the Bloody Sunday march of 1905, with Lenin’s  portrait heading the march. The Central Committee produced a resolution  branding them as anti-Communist and anti-Soviet and ordered the GPU  to suppress it.  In 1923 Myasnikov was persuaded to return to Russia,  where he was arrested and imprisoned.   In 1927, his sentence  was changed to internal exile in <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Armenia" target="_blank">Armenia</a>.  In 1928, he fled the USSR for Iran.  In 1930, he immigrated to  France, where he worked in factories until 1945. In 1945, the Soviet  secret police returned Myasnikov to the USSR, where he was executed.</p>
<p><strong>Chris Kane</strong>,  <em>The Commune </em></p>
<p align="center"><strong>Manifesto  of the Workers&#8217; Group of the Russian  Communist Party (Bolsheviks) </strong></p>
<p align="justify">To the Communist  Comrades of all countries:</p>
<p align="justify">The present  condition   of   the   productive forces  in the countries of highly  developed capitalism gives the  proletarian movement of these countries a character of a fight for the  communist revolution.   Either humanity &#8211; drowning by national  and civil wars in its own blood will disappear in barbarism, or the  proletariat will carry out its historical mission to take the power  and once and for all put an end to the exploitation of man by man, and  to civil and class  wars  among   peoples  and nations, and will plant the banner of eternal peace, work and  brotherhood.</p>
<p align="justify">The hurried  proceedings with the armaments of the air fleet by England, France,  America, Japan, and so on, threatens with a new never heard-of war,  in which many tens of millions of human beings will perish through centuries  of collected riches  of  the   cities,   factories,   and worships, and everything which the labourers and peasants have created  through  centuries painful work.</p>
<p align="justify">It is the mission  of the proletariat in every country to throw down its own national bourgeoisie.     The quicker the proletariat makes an end of the bourgeoisie of its own    country, sooner will the proletariat of the whole world solve its historic  problem.</p>
<p align="justify">In order to  put an end to the exploitation, repression,  and the wars,   the proletariat must cease  to fight for  a  slight    increase of wages or for shortening of the working time; formerly it  was necessary to do so, but to-day it must fight for its  rule.</p>
<p align="justify">The  bourgeoisie   and  the  other  oppressors classes of all kinds and  shades are satisfied with the social  traitors  of  all    countries   and  peoples.  Especially because these  divert the attention &#8216;the proletariat away from the chief objects the  struggle against the rule of the bourgeoisie and of the oppressors,  and continuously put up such small, petty demands that they cannot check  the repression and violence.   The Socialists of all countries  are at any given moment the only saviours of the bourgeoisie from the  proletarian revolution, because the numberless mass of the working class  is accustomed to be suspicious of everything which comes from their  oppressions, but when the same things are described as being in its  interests and will be adorned further with Socialist phrases, then this  workman who dimmed by these phrases believes the traitors and expends  his power for a hopeless fight.  The bourgeoisie has, and will  have, no better advocate.</p>
<p align="justify">The Communist  vanguard of the proletariat must, before everything, destroy in the  heads of their class-comrades the bourgeois rubbish and capture their    consciousness in   order to lead them to a bloody fight for  victory.    But order to burn out this rubbish; one should  stay always on the side of the proletariat in its dangers and difficulties.     Naturally, it should be attempted to win the sympathy of e proletariat  by all manner of means,  but not by cutting away, neglecting, or  giving up fundamental   watchwords.      Whoever departs from them—for temporary advantages &#8211; he does not attempt  to lead the masses, but limps after them   and does not conquer,  but surrenders himself to those with whom he must fight.</p>
<p align="justify">One must not,  also, &#8216;always look around for others and wait till the proletarian revolution  will simultaneously break out in all countries; one must    not   excuse   its   indecision   “We  are  ready  for   revolution and are  also strong, but the others are strike the German bourgeoisie and the  social “set &#8221;  (of   people),   what    will   take   place then?      The following happens: the bourgeoisie and social traitors will flee  before the proletarian ire to France and Belgium and will implore Poincare  weepingly, to finish with the German proletariat, promising the French  in return for it to keep the Versailles treaty holy and perhaps even  to give up the Rhine and Ruhr territory; that is, they will so act as  the Russian bourgeoisie and their   allied   social  traitors did and do till to-day.    Poincare and Co.  will   naturally   accept with   the    greatest pleasure the good cause saving Germany from its proletariat—just  as the robbers of the whole worlds did with Soviet Russia. But the ill-luck  of Poincare and Co. consists in the matter that their army composed  of workmen and peasants, as soon as it will see, that they should help  the German bourgeoisie and its accomplices against the German proletariat  and Soviet Germany, will turn its arms against its own bourgeoisie,  against Poincar6, and Poincare—in order to save the skin of himself  and his bourgeoisie with their socialist accomplices to their fate,  and that, although the German proletariat will break the treaty of Versailles,  drive away Poincare from the Rhine and Ruhr, and will proclaim a peace  without annexations and contributions with self-determination of nations.  It is not difficult for Poincare to get the upper hand of the Germany  of Cuno and of the Fascists, but he will break his teeth with the proletarian  Germany of Councils. Therefore, if there is possession of strength,  one must fight and not turn round to see all sides.</p>
<p align="justify">There is still  another danger for the proletarian revolution. That is the splitting  of its forces.</p>
<p align="justify">In the interests  of the proletarian world revolution, the exertion of the total revolutionary  proletariat must be unified. If the victory of the proletariat is unthinkable  without definite break and desperate fight with the enemies of the working  class— with the social traitors of the Second so-called International,  who, arms in hand, suppress the revolutionary movement of the proletariat  in their own as well as foreign countries, this victory of the proletariat  without the union of all forces which are for the communist revolution,  for the dictatorship of the proletariat, is equally unthinkable. And,  therefore, do we, the workers&#8217; group of the Communist Party of Russia  (B), address to all honest Communist revolutionary proletarians with  the appeal to unite their forces for the last and decisive battle. We  call upon all parties of the Third International, the parties which  are united in the Fourth International, and also those separate organisations  which belong to neither of these, but which pursue the same objects  as these, to form a united front. A united front for fight and victory.</p>
<p align="justify">The beginning  is made. The proletarian Russia has finished according to the proletarian  communist art, the bourgeoisie and its followers of all sorts and shades  (social-revolutionaries, Mensheviks, and so on), who defended them so  zealously. As you see, although it was weaker than the German bourgeoisie  was, it has beaten the whole world bourgeoisie, as a result of the attack  made upon it at the request of the Russian bourgeois, landlords, and  socialist renegades.</p>
<p align="justify">Now it is the  turn of the proletariat of the west to act, and it must unify its powers  and begin the fight for its rule.</p>
<p align="justify">Naturally,  it is harmful to close one&#8217;s eyes before the dangers, which threaten  the Russian October Revolution, and also the world revolution from inside  of Russia.</p>
<p align="justify">Soviet Russia  goes through one of the most difficult moments. It has many drawbacks  of such nature that it can become disastrous for proletarian Russia  and the whole world. These drawbacks result from the weakness of the  Russian working class and of the weakness of the proletarian world movement.</p>
<p align="justify">The proletarian  Russia cannot yet oppose its will to the tendencies of liquidation of  the conquests of the October Revolution—tendencies come from the bureaucracy  degenerated in the New Economic policy, and, therefore, a very great  danger threatens the achievements of the Russian proletarian revolution,  not so much from outside as from inside itself.</p>
<p align="justify">The proletariat  of the whole world is directly and indirectly interested in protecting  the victories of the October Revolution against every danger. Such a  country as Russia, as the basis of communist world revolution, means  already to achieve half the victory, and, therefore, the pioneers of  the international proletarian army, the communist of all countries,  must give expression to their views upon the deficiencies and illnesses  from which Soviet Russia and its troop of the Communist army of the  proletariat—the Communist Party of Russia (B) suffers.</p>
<p align="justify">The workers&#8217;  group of the Communist Party of Russia (B), which is well posted on  the Russian situation, -makes the beginning. We are not of the opinion  that we, proletarian communists, should not speak about our mistakes  because there are on the earth social traitors and scoundrels who will  be able to exploit our words against Soviet Russia and Communism. All  these fears are beside the point. Whether our enemies openly or secretly  are inimical to us, it does not matter; they are troublemakers, who,  according to their nature, cannot live without doing harm to us proletarians  and communists. But what is the conclusion of it? Should we pass, therefore,  over our sicknesses and deficiencies silently and not speak of them  nor take measures to destroy them? What will take place, then, when  we allow ourselves to be chased by the social traitors upon the hours  of a dilemma and keep silent? In such a case it can go so that there  remains only a memory of the achievements of the October Revolution.</p>
<p align="justify">It is, therefore,  exactly in the interests of the proletarian world revolution and of  the Russian working class, if we, the workers&#8217; group, make the beginning,  and, without trembling before the opinion of the social traitors, we  put the decisive questions of the international and proletarian movement.  We have already said that the deficiencies can be explained from the  weakness of the international as well as from the Russian proletarian  movement, and the best help which the proletariat of other countries  can give to the Russian proletariat is a revolution in their own countries,  even if only in one or two of these most developed of capitalist countries.  If even there is not sufficient strength at present, it is at any rate  enough to help the Russian revolution to hold its position of the October  Revolution till the proletariat of all other countries will rise and  vanquish the enemy.</p>
<p align="justify">The working  class of Russia, weakened by the imperialist world war, the civil war  and the famine, is not all all strong; it can overcome the dangers which  threaten at present just because it has acknowledged these dangers and  will exert all its powers in order to overcome them and, with the help  of the proletariat of all other countries!, it will also succeed.</p>
<p align="justify">The workers&#8217;  group of the Communist Party of Russia (B) has sounded the alarm, and  its call finds loud echo in whole, great Soviet Russia. Everything which  is proletarian and honest in the Communist Party of Russia is uniting  and beginning the struggle. It will be successful for us to awaken in  the minds of all thinking proletarian groups the thought about the fate  of the achievements of the October Revolution.</p>
<p align="justify">The struggle  is hard. Legal work has been made impossible for us—we work unlawfully  (illegal). We could not print our “Manifesto” in Russia. We printed  it secretly and continued to copy it upon the typewriter. The comrades  who come to be suspected of being near to us in sympathy will be excluded  from the party and trade unions simply upon suspicion, arrested, and  spirited away.</p>
<p align="justify">To the Xllth.  Party Congress of the Communist Party of (Russia, the comrade Zinoviev  had announced, under the acclamation of the party and Soviet bureaucrats,  a new formula of suppression of every critique of the working class.  He said: “my and every criticism of the central office of the Communist  Party of /Russia, whether it comes from the right or left side, is Menshevism.&#8221;  (Read his speech to the Xllth. Congress of the Communist Party of Russia.)  What does it mean? It means the following: If the conduct of the central  office does not appear right to a workman-communist, and, he, in his  proletarian simplicity, begins to criticise, then he will be excluded  from the party and from the trade union; will finally declare him &#8216;a  Menshevik, and will thrust him into the G.P.U. (political police department).  The central of the party does not tolerate any criticism……………………….</p>
<p align="justify">Every Bolshevik  and especially the average members of the party who possessed little  experience in political intrigues, cried at every street-corner to the  Mensheviks: &#8220;you faithless traitors of the working class! We will  hang you to the telegraph poles. You carry the guilt of the international  carnage in which the working people of all countries were drowned. You  have murdered Rosa Luxemburg and Karl Liebknecht. The streets of Berlin  become red, thanks to your atrocities, with the blood of the workers  who rose in indignation against the capitalist exploitation and oppression.  You are the makers of the treaty of Versailles; you have committed numberless  crimes against the international proletariat by betraying them at every  step.&#8221; The readers must admit that it is not quite proper to offer  to a communist worker with such an attitude the &#8220;socialist united  front&#8221; i.e. a united front with Noske Scheidemann, Vandervelde  Branting and Co.</p>
<p align="justify">It must be  somehow masked. The theses are not entitled simply &#8216;Socialist united  front&#8217; but &#8216;on the united workers&#8217; front and on the relation with the  workers who follow the Second, Two-and-a half, and Amsterdam Internationals  and also to those who support the Anarcho-Syndicalist organisation.   The same comrade Zinoviev who writes these theses, a little earlier  had invited us to take part in the funeral of the Second International.  He has apparently received news from this International that the announcement  of its death is a little exaggerated. Therefore comrade Zinoviev has  not lost his presence of mind and invites us now to the marriage of  the Communist International with the, Second International.</p>
<p align="justify">An agreement  with the workers is not spoken of only with the parties of the Second  and two-and-half Internationals. Every workman, even if he has been  a refugee abroad, knows that the parties are represented by their head  offices and there sit Vandervelde, Branting, Scheidemann, Noske and  Co. With them, an agreement will be arrived. Who was at the Berlin Conference  of the Three Internationals? To whom has the Comintern offered its heart  and hand? To Wels, Vandervelde among others.</p>
<p align="justify">Have they tried  to come to an understanding with the Communist Workers&#8217; Party (KAPD)  of Germany, although the same comrade Zinoviev says that in it very  valuable proletarian elements are to be found.</p>
<p align="justify">It is true,  comrade Zinoviev says in the theses that no amalgamation at all of the  Comintern with the Second International is attempted and that the former  will keep its organisational independence.</p>
<p align="justify">The Communists  impose upon themselves a discipline in activities, but they must preserve  unconditionally with it the right and the possibility, not only before  and after but even when necessary during action, to give expression  to their opinions about the politics of all workers organisations without  exception.</p>
<p align="justify">Discipline  in action and independence in expressing the views is formally recognised  for the inner party life in the Statutes of the C.P. of Russia. That  does not mean any thing other than one must do what the majority has  decided …you can exercise only criticism…….. Do that which has  been commanded to you, but if you are too angry and  know quite definitely that it does harm to the cause of world revolution,  then you can give your anger free vent, during, before and after action—speak.  That is synonymous with giving up independent action, exactly as Vandervelde  had provided a clause when he subscribed to the Treaty of Versailles.</p>
<p align="justify">In the same  theses the executive gives out the watchword of &#8216;Workers&#8217; Government&#8217;  whereby it slyly substitutes for the slogan of the &#8220;dictatorship  of the Proletariat&#8221; the slogan of &#8220;Socialist Ministries.&#8221;  What is exactly then &#8216;Workers&#8217; Government&#8217;? It is a government which  will be formed out of the Central Committees of Allied Parties and Ebert  (Socialist) is President, as in Germany—even if  a cabinet,  as befits him, is added, we get an ideal programme which is built upon  these theses.  Then when this watchword is not accepted, the Communists  must support with their voice the Socialist Prime Minister Branting  in Sweden and Ebert in Germany. Comrade Zinoviev offers them the united  front and proposes to them the formation of a Socialist government with  communist supplement.</p>
<p align="justify">Noske, Ebert,  Scheidemann and company will go to the meetings of workmen and will  tell them that the Comintern has declared amnesty and offers instead  of the gibbet, Ministerial Chairs. But upon one condition, viz. that the  Communists will receive one, even if the worst Ministerial Chair. To  give or not to give? It will be voted and decided to give it. They will  tell the whole working class that the Communists have recognised that  only together with them and not against them is it possible to fight  for Socialism. Only look at these people! They lept and they jumped,  they buried and hanged us and finally, however, have they come to us.</p>
<p align="justify">The Communist  International has certified the political trustworthiness of the Second  International and has received from it a certificate of political poverty.  What is really the cause of this change?  Why does comrade Zinoviev  offer Ebert, Scheidemann and Noske a Ministerial seat instead of a gibbet?  Only a little previously had he sung the burial hymn to the Second International  and complained against its spirits. Why does he sing now a panegyric?  Shall we see its resurrection and worship it?</p>
<p align="justify">The theses  of comrade Zinoviev answer this question thus: &#8220;The economic world  crisis&#8217; is sharpening, unemployment is increasing, capital is taking  the offensive and endeavours to press down the standard of life of the  proletariat.&#8221;  Also a war is inevitable. For these reasons,  the working class is going more to the left. The reformist illusions  are destroyed. The broad workmen&#8217;s circles begin for the first time  to prize the Communist vanguard&#8230; and therefore&#8230; one must  form a united front with Scheidemann.</p>
<p align="justify">The end does  not correspond with the beginning. We would not be just unless we added  a few more grounds which comrade Zinoviev adds in his defence of the  united front. He makes a wonderful discovery: &#8220;The working class  strives towards unity. And how can it do otherwise than through a united  front with Scheidemann?!!!</p>
<p>Every conscious  worker to whom the interests of his class and of the world revolution  is not foreign, can ask: Is it only now, in the movement when the necessity  of united front is supported, that the working class has desired to  become united? Everyone who has lived in the moment of the appearance  of the working class on the arena of political struggle, knows the desperation  which rises in every workman: why do the Mensheviki, Bolsheviki, the  Social-Revolutionaries and the members of the Workers&#8217; Party fight one  another? They all want the best for the people. Then what do they fight  each other for? Every workman lives in this doubt. But what conclusion  must one draw from that? It is necessary to organise and lead the working  class into a self-dependent class-party, in which act one must place  oneself in antagonism to all other parties. That our petty-bourgeois  prejudices must be laid aside, was correct. It is true also until today.  We must prepare the working- class in all capitalist countries where  the era for social revolution has arrived, for open armed attack, exactly  against International Menshevism and Social-Revolutionaries. In this  case the experiences of the Russian Revolution must be considered. It  must be tightly hammered into the working class of the whole world that  they, the Socialists of the Second and Two-and-a-half Internationals  are at the head of counter-revolution and will continue to remain there.  The propaganda of united front together with the social traitors of  all shades attempts to convince that the latter also fight for and not  against Socialism.</p>
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