Why Have I Taken Up the Struggle Against Bolshevism
"Why Have I Taken Up the Struggle Against Bolshevism" (Russian: «Почему я стал на путь борьбы с большевизмом») is a two-page open letter by the Russian lieutenant general and the commander of the Russian Liberation Army Andrey Vlasov. After the twenty-three years' service in the Soviet military,[1] Vlasov changed the allegiance during World War II to collaborate with Nazi Germany. According to Robert Service, Vlasov was outraged when Joseph Stalin denied him permission to retreat in time from an unavoidable encirclement[2] of the 2nd Shock Army. In June 1942 Vlasov refused to be airlifted for evacuation to the rear and chose to stay with his men.[3] Having been captured by the Germans in the same month, Vlasov published his open letter in the newspaper Zarya on March 3, 1943. For his speeches about future independent Russia Vlasov was placed by Germans under house arrest.[4]
Background
Vlasov was drafted into the Red Army in 1919. Having attended an infantry tactics course, he became a battalion commander. In 1930 Vlasov became a tactics instructor. Several years later Vlasov was entrusted with command of the 11th Infantry Regiment, that shortly afterwards was officially recognized as the best in the Kiev Military District.[5] In 1939 Vlasov became the chief military adviser to Chiang Kai-shek, who awarded Vlasov the Golden Order of the Dragon.[5] Upon his return to the Soviet Union, Vlasov was appointed the commander of the 99th Infantry Division, which he retrained and reformed, bringing it out of disarray. For this work Vlasov received the Order of Lenin and a gold watch.[6]
During World War II, Vlasov failed to defend Kiev, but successfully recaptured Solnechnogorsk and Volokolamsk from Germans. In that period, American journalist Larry LeSueur, who interviewed Vlasov, and the French journalist Ève Curie both mentioned Vlasov's popularity among soldiers.[1]
Contents
Vlasov begins his letter with the commitment to "give an honest answer" to the question, why he "is stepping up against Bolshevism".[7] Vlasov explains, that he fought in the ranks of the Soviet army because he believed that "the revolution would give the Russian people land, freedom and happiness", but he "realized that the victory of the Bolsheviks had brought the Russian people none of the things it had fought for during the Civil War years".[7] Criticizing Stalin, Vlasov expresses his opposition to collectivization, political commissars and the purge of the Soviet army command in the 1930s.[7] In Vlasov's opinion, "Bolshevism has fenced off the Russian people from Europe by an impenetrable wall".[7] As the commander of the defeated 2nd Shock Army, Vlasov wrote that "perhaps nowhere else did the Stalin's disregard for the life of the Russian people manifest itself as much, as in the practice of the 2nd Shock Army".[7] According to Vlasov, "the soldiers and commanders received 100 or even 50 grams of rusks a day, swelled up from hunger and many became incapable of moving through the swamps to which they had been sent on the direct orders of the high command".[7] "With a full sense of responsibility to the motherland, the people and history for the actions" he commits, Vlasov calls people to fight and "build a new Russia".[7] The letter emphasizes several points in bolded font and ends with the belief, that the Russian people "will find the strength to unite in the time of severe calamities, overthrow the hateful yoke and build a new state in which they will find happiness".[7]
Notes
- Andreyev 1989, p. 23
- Service, Robert (2005). A History of Modern Russia from Nicholas II to Vladimir Putin. Harvard University Press. p. 277. ISBN 067401801X.
- Кирилл Александров. Предатель или порядочный солдат? (in Russian). журнал "История". Retrieved 27 Feb 2014.
- Генерал Власов: "Почему я стал на путь борьбы с большевизмом?" (in Russian). Историческая правда. Retrieved 27 Feb 2014.
- Andreyev 1989, p. 21
- Andreyev 1989, p. 22
- Почему я стал на путь борьбы с большевизмом? (in Russian). General Vlasov.ru. Retrieved 27 Feb 2014.
References
- Andreyev, Catherine (1989). Vlasov and the Russian Liberation Movement: Soviet Reality and Emigré Theories. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 0521389607.CS1 maint: ref=harv (link)
See also
- Smolensk Declaration
- Prague Manifesto