The Military
Revolutionary Committee, with Trotsky presiding, begins preparations for defending
the Congress of Soviets. Delegates aligned with the Compromisers boycotted the
meeting, leaving the Bolsheviks, with their new left Social Revolutionary
allies, completely in control. The Social Revolutionary Lazimir continued in
charge of operations; Sverdlov assumed a role corresponding to that of chief of
the general staff.
The committee
assigned commissars to all the units of the garrison. Among their
responsibilities was taking control of stores of arms; distributions of weapons
were to take place only by consent of the commissars. In this way, the
commissar for Peter and Paul fortress prevented a shipment of 10,000 rifles to
the Cossacks of the Don, as well as distributions to junkers and other counter-revolutionary
organizations in the capital.
The typographical
workers came forward to report an increase of Black Hundreds propaganda to the
committee. Such reports gave the committee an opportunity to control
counter-revolutionary agitation.
The rumors about
a Bolshevik insurrection that day proved again to be untrue. Nevertheless the
government continued its own preparations, which it still considered adequate.
The Petrograd Soviet, in a preparation of its own, announced that on Sunday the
22nd (November 4, new style), it would conduct a review of its forces.
The counter-revolution responded by promising a religious procession on that
day.
Also on this day,
Kerensky’s Minister of War, Verkhovsky, made the mistake of advocating a
separate peace to a committee of the Pre-Parliament. Even people who might have
agreed in private that this was advisable attacked him publicly, coupling his
policy to that of Trotsky. The Minister had to take an enforced vacation.
Finally, as the
nationalities question in Russia extended to the Cossacks, on this day they declared
the unity of their armies with the Caucasian mountaineers and the people of the
steppes. This proved to be the foundation for the Cossack state formed to
oppose the Bolshevik government the following spring.
No comments:
Post a Comment