Marx's Theory of Revolutions

Marx's Theory of Revolutions

Wednesday, November 29, 2017

Red October: The Winter Palace


November 6-7 – October 24-25, 1917: The Winter Palace Defended. When Kerensky returns to the Winter Palace from the Pre-Parliament (the session of November 6 – October 24), he finds Commissar Stankevich there, back from headquarters at the front. Stankevich was skeptical about whether an insurrection was actually taking place – too quiet. Kerensky thought it was; he was waiting on the resolution of the Pre-Parliament before taking certain steps against it. Stankevich went to Mariinsky Palace to see how things stood there.

Kerensky did not like the news Stankevich brought back at about 9:00 p.m. – particularly the resolution demanding that the Pre-Parliament should run the fight against the insurrection through its own committee of public safety. Kerensky summoned the Pre-Parliament’s leaders to a cabinet meeting at the palace, at which he threatened to resign – again. Avksentiev explained that the resolution was “purely theoretical” and admitted that maybe the wording wasn‘t apt. The Menshevik Dan wanted the government to proclaim it had proposed peace negotiations to the Entente, and publish it on posters throughout the city.

A delegation of Cossack officers came in next. They believed their three regiments of cavalry would be willing and able not only to defend the government, but also to destroy the Bolsheviks. Kerensky seems to have liked this pretty well, but said he regretted he had not arrested Trotsky before then.

Of course none of this was based on the realities of the situation. After the meetings broke up at 2:00 a.m. (November 7 – October 25), Kerensky was left alone with his deputy Konovalov. General Polkovnikov came in with a plan to capture Smolny, but he could not specify what forces he intended to use. Maybe the commander in chief could find them. Only then did Kerensky realize that all Polkovnikov’s reports on the preparedness and loyalty of the garrison were not just mistaken, but self-deluded.

Further proof that the situation was more dangerous than imagined came from a commissar of the city government: ships of the Baltic Fleet in the Neva, bridges taken, Bolshevik movements “meeting nowhere the slightest resistance….” Now Kerensky and his deputy knew they needed troops – lots of them, and fast.

They went to Polkovnikov’s nearby headquarters and found it stuffed with officers hiding from troops they could no longer command. Not much help. Kerensky telephoned his party’s headquarters; maybe the Social Revolutionaries could arm the membership. Miliukov observes that this was sure to alienate military elements aligned with the right. But unlike the Bolsheviks, the Social Revolutionaries had made no effort to arm the party rank and file.

Now it was time to call in the Cossack regiments. But cavalry cannot operate without support, the Cossacks said. They must have armored cars, machine guns, and especially infantry to back them up. Kerensky promised these things, but they were things he could not deliver. Only squadrons, not regiments, of Cossacks ever came to the defense of the Winter Palace.

People in headquarters and at the palace were beginning to sense an oncoming fiasco.

Kerensky summoned a War Ministry official to headquarters. He was stopped, taken to the barracks of the Pavlovsky Regiment, then permitted to go on his way. Commissar Stankevich too was allowed to pass into headquarters during this time (later going on his mission to the telephone exchange). That at least was something.

It was 5:00 a.m. New conversations with the headquarters of the Northern Front brought new promises and assurances. But troops were not arriving. Kerensky and Konovalov returned to the palace to rest, only to find the phones had been cut off. And there in the river, across the courtyard from the palace, revolutionary marines stood guard on the Dvortsovy bridge.

November 7 – October 25, 1917: Kerensky Goes for Help. Their rest cut short by disturbing news. Kerensky and Konovalov return to General Polkovnikov’s headquarters. Maybe the phones were working there….

But the situation was deteriorating. The junkers were nervous: the Bolsheviks had told them to move off. Armored cars intended for the defense of the Winter Palace seemed to have gone missing. No news from the front. At any rate the officers ejected from their regiments had found somewhere else to hide.

Now Kerensky wanted the cabinet to join him at headquarters. Most of them, for one reason or another, didn’t have automobiles; only Kishkin and one other minister paid attendance. Though he didn’t have a quorum of the cabinet, Kerensky did have one last card to play: he himself would go forth and hasten the echelons advancing to the rescue of the Provisional Government. They sent for Kerensky’s touring car.

Then another automobile arrived, bearing the stars and stripes of the American embassy. In Kerensky’s version of events, the American and British embassies had heard of his plan to go to the front, and put the car at his disposal. The American ambassador’s version is less generous. A Russian officer followed the car to the embassy and demanded to use it for Kerensky’s trip to the front. That much, the ambassador said, the embassy might be willing to acquiesce in, but then the Russian officer left the American flag in place.

Kerensky got into his own car; the embassy car followed. People seemed to recognize him; Kerensky says he saluted “a little carelessly and with an easy smile.” The Red Guards did not know what to make of it as the cars rushed past; at any rate they did not fire.

In the result, the Third Bicycle Battalion, expected at the Winter Palace, telegraphed Smolny instead and were invited to send a delegation there. Kerensky did not find them and so was unable to change their minds. He did find some troops at the Gatchina station at about 10:00 a.m., but his harangue was unsuccessful. Thereafter his movements are lost to history. The next day General Kornilov, supposedly under guard in Bhykov, also dropped out of sight. Trotsky says Kerensky must have tipped Kornilov off.

November 7 – October 25, 1917: The Winter Palace Encircled. The Military Revolutionary Committee launches its plan to encircle the Winter Palace and trap the ministers of the Provisional Government inside. Lashevich at Smolny, Podvoisky and Antonov in the front lines, and Chudnowsky, lately arrived from the front, were in charge. The plan involved joint operations between naval and ground forces. Moreover, the ground forces included marines, garrison infantry, and detachments of the Red Guards. So the field headquarters were in the Peter and Paul, with subordinate commands on the cruiser Aurora, in the Pavlovsky Regiment, and in the barracks of the marines.

By its very nature, encirclement is a difficult maneuver, even for competent generals with experienced staffs – not to mention practiced coordination between the different branches of the service. Needless to say the politicians on the Military Committee encountered difficulties and delays.

At first the committee promised it to take the palace by 10:00 a.m. This would have made the announcement at that hour true without qualification. As it was, Petrograd had been taken, but not the Provisional Government – even though the government was, as the War Ministry wired the front, “in the capital of a hostile state.”

Trotsky thinks a coup de main would have worked late that morning or even that afternoon – just rush the main entrance with the troops on hand. Two considerations, I believe, must have militated against this tactic. The first was political: the insurrection had been bloodless up until then; an assault would have drawn blood. This consideration was apparently later dropped. The second consideration was strategic: the object was to capture the Provisional Government alive and whole; in the confusion of an assault, some of them, maybe someone brave or clever enough to continue the resistance, might have got away. Moreover it would have been a very bad thing for the insurrection to kill a socialist minister by mistake.

At any rate, the Military Committee went ahead with its plan. Different kinds of detachments, under differing chains of command, had to take their places in the line. Though this complicated movements still further, the committee assembled the encirclement out of sight of the palace. Action was planned for 10:00 a.m., but a naval force of ships and marines from Kronstadt failed to arrive in time. 

The committee decided to wait on the Kronstadters. It took time: noon passed; 3:00 p.m. passed. All afternoon, Podvoisky and Antonov were under pressure from Smolny. The Bolshevik’s political plan called for the liquidation of the Provisional Government before the Congress of Soviets was convened. That would clear the way for the Congress to assume the state power on behalf of the soviets. But the delegates had been summoned for the 25th (November 7, new style). So Smolny was under pressure too. After 6:00 p.m., even though the Kronstadters had arrived and were at their posts, Podvoisky and Antonov stopped making promises about when the palace would be taken.

November 7 – October 25, 1917: Inside the Winter Palace. The Provisional Government – minus Kerensky – is getting nowhere in its efforts to find reinforcements while the insurrection’s encirclement is still fairly porous. General Polkovnikov was too discouraged to act. General Alexiev, once commander in chief under the tsar, came to headquarters as an advisor. He soon realized the game was up and left.

That morning insurrectionary troops had not yet encircled the Winter Palace, nor had they occupied the streets nearby or the square in which it stood. They’d watched Kerensky’s car drive off and let Stankevich pass in and out again. Now they were stopping cars and dispossessing the riders. Somehow they missed the cars of the ministers summoned to the palace for a cabinet meeting. Only one minister was stopped and arrested, and he was later released.

The cabinet was thus able to meet and try what Polkovnikov could not find the energy for. At about 11:00 a.m., finding no-one else in the cabinet willing, they appointed Kishkin, a Cadet and a civilian, to coordinate the defense. Trotsky observes this can hardly have induced troops from the front, who hated the Cadets, to come to the cabinet’s rescue. Kishkin relieved Polkovnikov and appointed an equally ineffective replacement.

If he wanted more defenders, Kishkin would have to find more junkers and persuade the Cossacks to come in. The defense also needed armored cars, they had six, but five departed and did not return. Fortunately the palace still had a direct wire to district military headquarters. There was also a telephone line the insurrection had overlooked.

At noon the palace was defended by ensigns from two junker schools and a section of field artillery from a third, an engineering school. The junkers piled up cordwood in the courtyard as a barricade for their riflemen.

Difficulties arose. Passers-by brandished revolvers and disarmed the surprised sentries. There did not appear to be sufficient rations for the day, much less for a siege. Agitators so played on their nerves that the junkers demanded a council of war with the ministers. Konovalov granted it; the whole cabinet was there with him.

An hour’s meeting gave reassurance. The chief of the engineering school took command of the whole junker contingent; his actions made the defense seem more substantial. So did rifle fire from behind the barricades, meant to clear the square. This gave the Military Committee pause. Deciding to bring up more reserves, mainly the still-expected Kronstadters, the committee called off a planned advance.

Now there was time to bring in more defenders too. Note that the encirclement had to face both ways: inward to hold the defenders, and outward to prevent reinforcements. Neither circle was complete. The Cossacks, after much internal debate, resolved to send in two squadrons of cavalry and some machine gun crews. They arrived towards evening. Shortly afterwards some forty Cavaliers of St. George, crippled war veterans, came up, and after them a company of the Women’s Battalion, widows of men killed in the war. If this was their infantry support, the Cossacks did not like the looks of it. At no time, Trotsky estimates, did the garrison defending the palace number more than 2,000.

November 7 – October 25, 1917: The Winter Palace Bombarded. At about 4:00 p.m., ships from Kronstadt join the cruiser Aurora. They came much later than planned, but of course the officers did not share the feelings of the sailors towards the revolution.

One of the ships, another cruiser, took a position menacing the Baltic railroad, in case the government should send reinforcements in that way. The others, two destroyers and two gunboats, sailed up the Neva River. They still had to debark their marines, and then the marines had to take their place in the encirclement. From the Winter Palace, says Trotsky, the reinforcement must have looked to the Minister of the Marine, Admiral Verderevsky, formidable.

By 5:00 p.m., the Keksgolmsky Regiment had occupied the War Ministry. By 6:00 p.m., the palace was at last surrounded. Armored cars took up positions at the entrances to the Palace Square; one of them ran up and disarmed the junkers at the main gate.

But the next step in the Military Committee’s plan, an increasingly menacing series of bombardments, was also complicated – perhaps a bit more than necessary. We’ll return to this part of the story in a moment.

Meanwhile, inside the palace, if they couldn’t get anything else, the cabinet was at least trying to get news. At 4:00 p.m., Kerensky’s deputy Konovalov called a meeting with party leaders to see what they could do. Only one attended, expressed “sympathy,” as Trotsky says, and hastily left. A secret telephone line was still working, but no good news could be had from the front. Officers without commands drifted into the palace; they made the staff prepare dinner and serve it with wine.

The junkers demanded and received a new conference with the cabinet. But the news the cabinet could share would at this point could hardly have given satisfaction. While this was going on, Kishkin came in with an ultimatum from Antonov. The encirclement was complete, naval guns were trained on the palace; the cabinet should surrender and the garrison should give up its arms. The ministers of war and marine advised their civilian colleges to give in. This the latter would not do; they made no answer and appealed to the city duma instead. The duma was, after all, the only legitimate authority in the city…!

Now the cabinet heard from the district military headquarters: the commanding general there offered to resign. Half an hour later a detachment of soldiers, marines, and Red Guards advanced on headquarters, met no resistance, and arrested the general instead. Then the general who had replaced Polkovnikov stood down. Demoted and ordered to leave by Kishkin, he fell into the hands of some marines. But Podvoisky took custody before he could come to any harm. It was about 5:00 p.m.

The junker riflemen crouched behind the cordwood barriers in front of the palace could see that the siege was tightening. They began to fire more rapidly, with rifles and machine guns; the besiegers did the same; casualties, the first of the whole day anywhere in the city, were suffered.

The cabinet grew apprehensive about the view from the room where they were meeting, called the Malachite Room. If they could see the ships in the river, the ships could fire at them – directly. So they moved to an interior room and papered over the windows overlooking the courtyard. Then the lights went off: the insurrection was in control of the electricity. The cabinet had to content themselves with a lamp.

The palace staff found this a good moment to absent themselves. The displaced officers ordered those who remained to bring more wine. Word of the debauch reached the defenders; it had a demoralizing effect. The junker artillerymen announced they had received orders to return to their school. At least they left a couple of their guns behind. The Pavlovsky Regiment captured and disarmed them on their way out, taking two of their guns and turning them around to bear on the Winter Palace.

At last the Cossack regiments, despairing of infantry support, resolved to withdraw their squadrons. Their machine gunners too, though the guns were left behind. The besiegers let the Cossacks out through a passage the defenders did not know about. This was at about 9:00 p.m.

Infiltration tactics began to have an effect that evening. Troops armed with words entered the palace through the passage the Cossacks used to leave. They did not find it difficult to demoralize the junker guards and patrols in the halls; they advised that anybody who wanted to leave could do so freely.

The plan for bombarding the palace was at last coming together. Like the plan of encirclement, it took longer to hatch than hoped. Corporal Blagonravov got some field guns up onto the parapets of the Peter and Paul by noon, but the insurrection had not found any gunners. There was a company of gunners in the garrison, but they were not revolutionists. Reluctant to fire on the government, they made difficulties about the guns: they were rusty, the compressors needed oil.

Antonov, waiting for the agreed signal from the fortress, grew cross at the delay. He went to see Blagonravov; they lost the way; Antonov suspected treachery for a moment. When they finally found the guns, Antonov dismissed the artillerists and sent for men from the Aurora. Then a messenger hurried up: the palace has surrendered…! But it was only headquarters, taken by the insurrection at about 5:00 p.m.

Blagonravov also had to explain that the agreed signal for beginning the bombardment, a red lantern hoisted above the rampants of the Peter and Paul, could not be given. A red lantern was nowhere to be had. Never mind. Lashevich sends over gunners from the Aurora; they began anew to prepare the guns.

Meanwhile Chudnovsky also found his way into the palace and persuaded some junkers to give up. Then Chudnovsky was arrested and the junkers had to persuade the commandant to let him go. A few junkers went with him and some of the Cavaliers of St. George too; their exit created confusion in the courtyard, where the junker riflemen still kept up their fire.

The lights went back on, making a good target of the junkers. Somebody switched them off, then they went back on again. The junkers fired at the light; an officer threatened the palace electrician. But the marines had taken control of the current.

Then the soldiers of the Women’s Battalion, thinking that the tsarist General Alexiev was held captive and, moreover, that his life must in the interest of the Russian land and people be preserved, sortied to his rescue. Their advance broke up under fire and the greater part of them surrendered. This was at about 10:00 p.m.

Then a lull, for about an hour. Trotsky says, “The besiegers are busied with the preparation of artillery fire.” The surrounded government, under the impression that the besiegers were weak and that their assault had failed, was sending defiant messages: “’Let the army and the people answer!’”

At length the guns and cannon were ready. The plan of bombardment called for a series of escalations: first blanks, then light caliber guns, then the six-inch guns of the Aurora would open up. The blanks made a huge sound and flash. Maybe this would change the defenders’ minds. Antonov again proposed that the defenders give up. Some of them do, including junkers and the rest of the Women’s Battalion, leaving their weapons on the sidewalk.

The bombardment was renewed – somewhat. The rate of fire was not all the Aurora was capable of: thirty-some shots over the course of nearly two hours. Only two hits. Trotsky wonders, “Is lack of skill the real cause?”

Perhaps the commander of the Red Army in the Russian Civil War has overlooked some things about naval gunfire. During World War II, a cruiser with six-inch guns could open fire on an enemy ship at nearly 10,000 yards. A broadside every minute would not be considered a very rapid rate of fire. Not all the shells could be counted on to hit; the target, say another cruiser, would have been about 600 feet long and 55 or more feet abeam. It was also moving. Nevertheless it was possible for one cruiser to hit and, after repeated hits, sink another.

The Winter Palace was not moving. It was, say, a block or more long. The range for Aurora’s six-inch guns was point blank. On Wikipedia, it looks as if she could bring a broadside of eight guns to bear. So consider the story Trotsky relates of the Minister of Marine, Admiral Verderevsky, in light of these facts. The commandant brought the admiral a shard of metal from somewhere on the palace grounds. The admiral inspected it and said, yes, the shard came from a shell fired by the Aurora. Now the government knew that its own navy was willing to fire at it.

Trotsky finds reason to doubt the story about the shard. But it is true that a shell can be fitted with a fuse, and the fuse can ignite the explosive in the shell at any desired range. It seems to me this shard must have come from a shell that exploded over the palace, not in it.

That is, the gunners were not shooting at the palace at all. Neither did the sailors want to cause any more casualties than absolutely necessary, nor the officers to deface a monument of tsarist Russia. On this account, the two “hits” Trotsky mentions were actually misses.

As little effect as the barrage had on the Winter Palace, it caused plenty of consternation and anxiety in other parts of the city, as the next entries show.

November 7 – October 25, 1917: The March of the City Duma. One of the last outbound telephone calls from the Winter Palace’s regular lines that evening goes to the city duma in their headquarters on the Nevsky Prospect. It sparked a considerable discussion, not so much about what to do, but about what unkind fate had in store for the Bolsheviks. Minister of Supplies Prokopovich, briefly detained by the Bolsheviks that morning on the way to the cabinet meeting at the Winter Palace, expressed the desire to join his colleagues in their fate. The duma, dominated by the bourgeois parties, was sympathetic.

Now gunfire could be heard from the direction of the palace. Something must be done! In Trotsky’s words, “The duma must march in a body to the Winter Palace in order to die there, if necessary, with the government.” It was, at any rate, a plan. But it had to be ratified. More discussion. The delegates from the Compromiser parties were ready to march; the Cadets would join them. The advice of the Bolshevik delegates – to stay off the streets and suggest to the government that they ought, in order to avoid bloodshed, to surrender – was ignored.

The duma took a roll-call vote: sixty-two of the delegates were prepared to die “if necessary.” Then the duma got word that the Executive Committee of the Deputies of the Peasants Soviets wanted to march with them. Another round of speeches was now required.

The palace defenders heard of the march: to them “a miracle,” Trotsky suggests. By the time it passed from mouth to mouth, the rumor sounded like a miracle indeed: “The people with the clergy at their head,” where “people” again means “bourgeoisie.”

The streets around the Nevsky Prospect were dark and pretty quiet when the marchers, bearing lanterns and umbrellas, got underway. The fourteen Bolshevik delegates went off to Smolny and the Congress of Soviets, leaving three Menshevik-Internationalists quite alone in the halls of the duma. The American journalist Reed saw the minister Prokopovich, the mayor of Petrograd, and Avksentiev, lately the President of the Pre-Parliament, in the procession, but no clergy.

No people either, of any social condition. The whole crowd numbered no more than 400 marchers, mainly all politicians. They sang the Marseillaise to keep up their morale. Where the Nevsky Prospect crosses over the Ekaterininsky Canal, the march encountered an ensign’s guard of marines. Reed recounts the conversation. The marines did not propose to allow anyone to interfere with the insurrection’s business at the Winter Palace. The marchers could see that the marines would halt their march by force. Prokopovich made a new proposal, “’Let us return to the duma and talk over methods of saving the country and the revolution.’”

And this proposal was very sensibly adopted. On the return they did not feel much like singing the Marseillaise.

Overnight November 7-8 – October 25-26, 1917: Congress of Soviets in Session. The delegates who assemble in Smolny for the October Congress of Soviets do not resemble those of the June Congress – neither in party alignment nor, Trotsky says, in appearance. Worn soldiers, peasants, and workers in worn clothing who represented the Bolshevik soviets in October replaced the well-turned-out intellectuals who represented the leadership of the compromisist parties in June. Of the 832 delegates to the June Congress, some 600 were Mensheviks and Social Revolutionaries. Of the 650 arriving for the first session of the October Congress, 390 were with the Bolsheviks, 80 were Mensheviks, and of the 159 Social Revolutionaries, three-fifths were “left,” that is, were aligned with the Bolsheviks. Other delegates, to the number of 900, would arrive later.

The delegates took a straw poll on the preferred shape of the government they expected – most of them – to form:

·         505 for a government of the soviets

·         86 for a government of the “democracy”

·         55 for a coalition government

·         21 for a coalition government excluding the Cadets.

Party caucuses began in the morning. The city was quiet and in the hands of the insurrection; the Winter Palace was fairly quiet too, but it still held the Provisional Government. This gave the caucuses plenty to talk about.

The right- and left-Social Revolutionaries split over the question on taking a page from the Bolsheviks’ book by withdrawing from the Congress. Sixty on the right wanted to withdraw; 92 on the left were against it. By evening the two camps were sitting in separate caucuses.

The Mensheviks had trouble deciding what their attitude should be. Lots of views were being aired. They were still being aired at 8:00 p.m., when their caucus requested that the opening of the Congress be put off.

It was, until 10:40 p.m. The hall filled up to overflowing in clouds of tobacco smoke. The American journalist Reed squeezed in, but certain people who were important in the June Congress – Cheidze, Tseretilli, Chernov – were missing. The Menshevik Dan called the meeting to order on behalf of the Central Executive Committee chosen by the June Congress. He did not want to make a political speech but he can’t help referring to the compromisist ministers holed up in the Winter Palace.

Hardly anybody liked this. The Congress passed to the first order of business: selecting a new praesidium. A Bolshevik from Moscow moved that representation be proportional to the party identification of the delegates. The right-Social Revolutionaries refused their seats; the left-SRs were happy to take them (seven seats). For the time being the Mensheviks, guided by Martov, stayed in the game (three seats).

Sverdlov had drawn up the Bolshevik list of fourteen. He put Kamenev and Zinoviev, who’d voted in the Bolshevik Central Committee against starting the insurrection, on it, but modestly left himself off. Naturally Lenin was on the list, but he did not yet come forward. He was still in disguise – wig, spectacles, and make up – trying to gauge the mood of the Congress. The Mensheviks Dan and Skobelev saw him in a passageway and, recognizing him, stared. Lenin did not acknowledge them.

Kamenev took the chair. He announced the agenda, but the guns of the Aurora and the Peter and Paul were making another announcement….

The agenda was to be:

·         Organization of the new government

·         Peace policy

·         Role of the constituent Assembly

…but it was derailed by the evident incompletion of the insurrection. The Congress seated some delegates from the peasants soviets who, as this was officially a congress of workers and soldiers deputies, had not been invited. Then the Menshevik Martov spoke. To considerable applause, he moved to halt all military action and begin negotiations with the government. This promised to split the Congress before it could get well started. Luncharsky made the reply for the Bolsheviks. The Bolsheviks have “’absolutely nothing against Martov’s proposal.’” It passed unanimously.

Delegates from the soldiers committees – officers – now took the floor one after another, speaking against the insurrection, the Bolsheviks, and even the Congress itself. Then a Menshevik actually proposed forming a coalition with the Provisional Government – just then entering upon its last few minutes of existence. It was impossible to work with the Bolsheviks, he continued, and moreover the Congress lacked any lawful authority. The speech – what could be heard of it over booing and catcalls – was not received sympathetically.

Now a Latvian rifleman rose to speak. The officers do not represent the troops on the front. The day of the Compromisers is done. “’The Revolution has had enough gab! We want action!’” Reed says the audience “knew [his words] for the truth.”

The next speaker, another right socialist from the Bund, declared the events in Petrograd “’a misfortune,’” and invited his colleagues to walk out. Seventy of them, about half, did, leaving the other half wondering whether it was possible to work with the Bolsheviks. Some of them apparently joined with the left Social Revolutionaries in alignment with the Bolsheviks. The half that left, some of them, joined the march of the city duma.

Apparently, in spite of Martov’s motion, the sounds of gunfire can still be heard. Martov rose to speak again. He demanded adjournment of Congress until the motion had been acted upon and realized. The Bolsheviks from the city duma turned up right at this moment and were greeted enthusiastically.

Lenin and Trotsky were taking a rest in a room nearly bare of furnishings except some cushions thrown on the floor. Someone called for Trotsky to make a reply to Martov. The first premise of his argument is – well – uncompromising: “’An insurrection of the popular masses needs no justification.’” The present insurrection happened to have been victorious. Ought it to compromise victory? Compromise “’[w]ith whom? … With that pitiful handful who just walked out?’” The question answered itself. Trotsky ended by inviting the advocates of compromise “’into the rubbish-can of history!’”

“’Then we will go!’” answered Martov. He took the Mensheviks with him out of the Congress. The vote was fourteen for Martov to withdraw, twelve for Sukhanov to stay on. Trotsky moved a resolution condemning the Compromisers for their actions from the June offensive on down. Another interruption. Then a sailor from the cruiser Aurora came to assure the Congress that the ship was only throwing blanks.

A speaker for the left Social Revolutionaries said they could not support Trotsky’s resolution against their departed colleagues on the right. Lunacharsky, in answer, softened the Bolshevik tone – a little. Trotsky’s resolution was left on the table.

It was approaching 2:00 a.m. October 26. The Congress took a half-hour’s recess….

Overnight November 7-8 – October 25-26, 1917: The Provisional Government Arrested. The Winter Palace is beset inside and out: infiltrators in the halls agitating for the surrender of the defending garrison, and naval gunfire exploding menacingly but mostly harmlessly outdoors. Together these tactics minimized casualties while maximizing the demoralization of the defense.

As the numbers of infiltrators grew, so did their boldness. Singly and then in groups they called on the junker sentries to surrender. They dropped a couple of grenades from a gallery; Kishkin the physician-minister tended to a couple of lightly wounded junkers. If infiltrators happened to be captured – and some of them just gave themselves up – they continued to agitate with their captors. After a time, Trotsky says, nobody knew who were the captives and who were the captors.

Kishkin made one last phone call on the secret line: the Cadets must arm the party and relieve the palace at once. But this worked no better with Kishkin’s Cadets late that night than it had worked with Kerensky’s Social Revolutionaries early that morning.

Now peremptory word came from Smolny: have done with the Winter Palace so the Congress of Soviets can get on with its business. Doubt about the result threatened to split the Congress and isolate the Bolsheviks. Even Lenin was sending angry notes. Only the guns of the Aurora could meet the need. The Peter and Paul sent an order to fire point-blank. On the Aurora, the Bolshevik Fleurovsky had a hunch; he held fire for a quarter of an hour. It was just as well…

…for at that moment a great rush of soldiery sweeps past the junker riflemen and through the main entrance of the palace. The junkers behind their cordwood barricades do not fire because they think it might be the approach of the miracle march of the city duma. Then some of them have to surrender; the rest take to their feet.

The insurrection, armed to the teeth, confronts the defenders in the stairways and halls: pistols are not fired; grenades are not thrown. It’s a standoff. The rest of the encircling force advances, followed closely by Antonov and Chudnovsky. The commandant, seeing the game is up, offers to surrender the palace and asks terms for his junkers.

That much Antonov is willing to grant, but not to the cabinet. He and Chudnovsky are led to the room where the ministers huddle; the ministers have not ordered their sentries to resist. And so in this interior room, at 2:10 a.m. October 26, the Military Revolutionary Committee, in the person of the Bolshevik Antonov, places the ministers of the Provisional Government under arrest. Kerensky’s deputy Konovalov signifies that the government, under the threat of force, will submit.

A hand-picked guard of twenty-five led the captives into the square. Soldiers in the crowd called for their heads; some tried to strike them. Trotsky says the Red Guards told them, “Do not stain the proletarian victory,” and formed a protective ring around the ministry’s guard. Once an errant shot made everybody flatten. A minister later gave Antonov much of the credit for getting them through.

The insurrection took a roll call of the cabinet and put them up in the Peter and Paul for the rest of the night. The surrendered junkers were paroled, but Trotsky doubts whether most of them kept their promise never to bear arms against the new socialist government. Back in the palace the American journalist Reed saw looters at work – until somebody reminded them that the valuables were now the property of the people. Guards were placed at the doors to recover and record items found stashed in pockets. Chudnovsky was made commandant of the Winter Palace.

Reed took quite a tour of the palace before he and his journalist colleagues were invited to leave. They even got into the Malachite Room. There Reed found ministerial drafts of proclamations and plans, drifting off into anxious doodles. He pocketed one that appeared to be in Konovalov’s handwriting.

Word went out, first about the capture of the palace and then about the arrest of the government, to the Aurora and to Smolny….

Early Morning November 8 – October 26, 1917: Victory for the Congress. During the recess that started at 2:00 a.m., delegates to the Congress of Soviets trade rumors about the fall of the Winter Palace and the capture of the cabinet of the Provisional Government; when it reconvenes, Kamenev, to bitter cheers, reads Antonov’s list of arrested ministers. The name of Foreign Minister Tereshchenko, a better friend to the capital markets of the Entente than to the soldiers at the front, was received with pronounced hostility.

A left-Social Revolutionary spoke up on behalf of the imprisoned socialist ministers. Another deputy said it would be ironic if the Minister of Agriculture should “’turn up in the same cell’” he had occupied under the tsar. This cut no ice with Trotsky, who had already been held in Kresty prison both under the tsar and under the government of the minister in question. The socialist ministers would be held under house arrest, Trotsky answered, due to “’considerations of expediency’” until the revolution’s grip on its new government was secure.

Next a representative of the Third Bicycle Battalion appeared before the Congress to announce that his unit, chosen out of all the troops at the front to ride against the revolution, had met with the Fifth Bicycle Battalion on the way, and together with them decided not to do it: “’[W]e will not give the power to a government at the head of which stand the bourgeoisie and the landlords!’” Trotsky says this speaker was “greeted with a storm, a whirlwind, a cyclone.” The bicyclist gave evidence that the front, which might have replaced the deposed Provisional Government as the greatest of the threats the revolution faced, would not become its enemy.

Then a Menshevik spoke up. The Congress thought they had left. Now the threat of troops from the front inspired no doubts or fears. So they left again, seemingly for good.

At 5:17 a.m. Krylenko came in to read a message received by the Military Revolutionary Committee: The 12th Army, holding the Northern Front nearest Petrograd in Estonia, had, with its commanding General Cheremissov, placed itself at the disposal of the committee. The commissar appointed by the Provisional Government had resigned. “Pandemonium,” says the American journalist Reed.

The rivals of the Bolshevik program having taken themselves out of the picture, Lunacharsky now came forward to read a proclamation and move that it be adopted and published by the Congress. By it, the Congress took the power of the state into its own hands, gave all local power to the soviets, and adopted all the other essentials of the Bolshevik program. The proclamation anticipated the decrees on peace and land that would come the next day.

Peasant delegates, admitted to the Congress but not given votes, now, because it promised the redistribution of lands, wanted to subscribe to the proclamation. So they were given votes. The proclamation frightened those few remaining delegates who thought the Bolsheviks were headed to disaster. A last group of Mensheviks withdrew – some of them apparently for the third time. Only fourteen votes out of hundreds were cast against the resolution.

The Congress adjourned at about 6:00 a.m.

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