http://www.marxist.com/72nd-anniversary-assassination-of-leon-trotsky.htm

 72nd anniversary of the assassination of Leon
Trotsky<http://www.marxist.com/72nd-anniversary-assassination-of-leon-trotsky.htm>
Written by In Defence of Marxism Monday, 20 August 2012
[image: 
Print]<http://www.marxist.com/72nd-anniversary-assassination-of-leon-trotsky/print.htm#>

*On August 21, 1940 the great revolutionary fighter, theoretician, and
martyr, Leon Trotsky, died of the wounds inflicted in a brutal attack by a
Stalinist agent. To mark the 72nd anniversary of his assassination we want
to bring to the attention of our readers some of the material we published
on our website about the life, work and ideas of Trotsky.*

   - *Trotsky's Relevance
Today<http://www.tedgrant.org/archive/grant/1990/relevance.htm>
   *
   By Ted Grant, Summer 1990
   - ** <http://www.marxist.com/ted-grant-impact-trotsky-death180806.htm>*Ted
   Grant recalls the impact of Trotsky's
death<http://www.marxist.com/ted-grant-impact-trotsky-death180806.htm>
   *
   By Ted Grant, August 1990
   - ** <http://www.marxist.com/house-in-coyacan-reflections-trotsky.htm>*The
   House in Coyoacan - Reflections on Trotsky's last
years<http://www.marxist.com/house-in-coyacan-reflections-trotsky.htm>
   *
   By Alan Woods, 30 June 2003
   - *In Memory of Leon
Trotsky<http://www.marxist.com/memory-legacy-leon-trotsky.htm>
   *
   By Alan Woods, 23 January 2000
   - *The Assassination of Leon
Trotsky<http://www.marxist.com/59-years-assassination-trotsky.htm>
   *
   By Vsevolod (Esteban) Volkov, 20 August 1999
   - *Esteban Volkov speaks in
Barcelona<http://www.marxist.com/esteban-volkov-speaks-in-barcelona.htm>
   *
   By Esteban Volkov, 31 July 2003
   - *The fight of the Trotsky family - interview with Esteban
Volkov<http://www.marxist.com/trotsky-assassination-esteban-volkov210806.htm>
   *
   Esteban Volkov interviewed by Alan Woods, 17 June 1988
   - *[Video] Trotsky
Assassination<http://videos.howstuffworks.com/discovery/28030-spytek-trotsky-assassination-video.htm>
   *
   This is a short video by Discovery Channel on the assassination of
   Trotsky.
   - See also: *Trotsky.net <http://trotsky.net/>*
   The purpose of this web site is to provide an overall view of the ideas
   and struggles of Leon Trotsky. Set up by the International Marxist Tendency.

[image: Leon Trotsky]

 --------------

http://www.marxist.com/leon-trotsky-the-man-and-his-ideas.htm
 Leon Trotsky: the man and his
ideas<http://www.marxist.com/leon-trotsky-the-man-and-his-ideas.htm>
Written by Rob Sewell Monday, 20 August 2012
[image: 
Print]<http://www.marxist.com/leon-trotsky-the-man-and-his-ideas/print.htm#>

*Today marks the anniversary of Leon Trotsky’s assassination. Struck down
72 years ago by an ice-pick to the head from a cowardly Stalinist assassin,
he soon fell into a coma and died the following day, 21st August 1940.*

*The attack was no surprise. Ever since Trotsky’s arrival in Mexico, the
Stalinist press was busy slandering the Old Man in preparation for an
assassination attempt. At the same time, Moscow was waging a massive
international campaign against him, infiltrating the movement and, under
Stalin’s orders, preparing his death.*

Following the end of the Spanish Civil War, Stalinist NKVD agents were
dispatched to Mexico to carry out the plans. The first assault had come in
May 1940, when Trotsky’s bedroom was riddled with bullets and Robert
Sheldon Harte, his secretary-guard, was kidnapped and murdered. Sheldon’s
body was later discovered in a lime-pit. Stalin had become desperate in his
efforts to eliminate Trotsky, one of the few old Bolsheviks still alive -
the rest had been murdered by Stalin during the Purge Trials of 1936-38.
These horrendous frame-ups, where the defendants were forced to implicate
themselves in lies and terrorist crimes supposedly organized by Trotsky,
constituted a river of blood differentiating counter-revolutionary
Stalinism from genuine Bolshevism.

Stalin knew that having betrayed the Revolution, he needed to eliminate
those who defended and embodied the ideas of Bolshevism and world
revolution. First and foremost this fell to Leon Trotsky, who had been
driven into exile some eleven years earlier. All the resources of the
Russian state were now set in motion to carry out his assassination. Before
long, Stalin had murdered several of Trotsky’s co-workers, seven of his
secretaries, and four of his children – the latest being his son Leon Sedov
in early 1938.

Trotsky was an outstanding revolutionary and theoretician. As early as
1904, he expounded this theory of the Permanent Revolution, which was
confirmed in practice by the October Revolution. Trotsky had spent his
entire life in the revolutionary movement, led the Petrograd Soviet in
1905, led with Lenin the October Revolution in 1917, created the Red Army
from scratch, helped build the Third International, then, fighting against
the Stalinist bureaucracy, was cast from power and forced into exile by
Stalin.

>From Alma Ata, while others capitulated to Stalin, he single-handedly took
up the struggle to build the International Left Opposition in the fight for
genuine Marxism. He analysed Stalinism as a form of Bonapartism, but based
upon a nationalized planned economy. Stalinism was a Thermidorian reaction
that arose from the isolation of the Russian Revolution in a backward
country, resulting in a massive growth of the bureaucracy in the party and
state. Stalin was the figure head of this political reaction to October,
who sought to trample over the real heritage of October and pursue the
anti-Marxist idea of “Socialism in One Country”.

The struggle between the International Left Opposition and Stalinism was a
fight to the death, in the most literal sense. During the Purges of the
1930s, 18 million were arrested on trumped up charges (“enemies of the
people”) and sent to labour camps in hostile and extreme environments, out
of which some five million would perish, either of starvation, disease or
firing squad. Within two years of the 1934 seventh party congress, out of
139 members elected to the central committee, 110 had been arrested. The
Red Army was decimated: 13 out of the 19 commanders of the army corps, 110
out of 135 commanders of divisions and brigades, half of the commanders of
regiments and most of the political commissars were executed. In 1938, the
Polish Communist Party was officially dissolved on the pretext that it was
a cover for counterespionage!

“Our old comrade of the Polish party, Schwarzbart, one of the secretaries
of the autonomous Jewish district of Birobidzhan, went before the public
prosecutors”, recalled Leopold Trepper, the former leader of the Communists
working behind enemy lines (the “Red Orchestra”). “He was thrown into
prison, where he became almost blind. One morning at dawn he was taken out
into the yard and placed before a firing squad. Before he died, he shouted
his faith in the revolution, and just as the bullets laid this old
communist militant in the dust, from the cells rose the powerful strains of
the *Internationale*.”

Trepper says that “all those who did not rise up against the Stalinist
machine are responsible, collectively responsible. I am no exception to
this verdict.”

However, he goes on:

“But who did protest at the time? Who rose up to voice his outrage?

“The Trotskyists can lay claim to this honor. Following the example of
their leader, who was rewarded for his obstinacy with the end of an
ice-pick, they fought Stalinism to the death, and they were the only ones
who did. By the time of the great purges, they could only shout their
rebellion in the freezing wastelands where they had been dragged in order
to be exterminated. In the camps, their conduct was admirable. But their
voices were lost in the tundra.

“Today, the Trotskyists have a right to accuse those who once howled along
with the wolves. Let them not forget, however, that they had an enormous
advantage over us of having a coherent political system capable of
replacing Stalinism. They had something to cling to in the midst of their
profound distress at seeing the Revolution betrayed. They did not
“confess”, for they knew that their confession would serve neither the
party nor socialism.” (*The Great Game*, pp.55-56)

As Trotsky had explained in January 1937, with the announcement of new
trials of Radek, Pyatakov and others, “How could these Old Bolsheviks, who
went through the jails and exiles of Tsarism, who were the heroes of the
civil war, the leaders of industry, the builders of the party, diplomats,
turn out at the moment of the ‘the complete victory of socialism’ to be
saboteurs, allies of fascism, organisers of espionage, agents of capitalist
restoration? Who can believe such accusations? How can anyone be made to
believe them? And why is Stalin compelled to tie up the fate of his
personal rule with these monstrous, impossible, nightmarish juridical
trials?

“First and foremost, I must affirm the conclusion I had previously drawn
that the top rulers feel themselves more and more shaky. The degree of
repression is always in proportion to the magnitude of the danger. The
omnipotence of the Soviet bureaucracy, its privileges, its lavish mode of
life, are not cloaked by any tradition, any ideology, any legal forms. The
Soviet bureaucracy is a caste of upstarts trembling for their power, for
their revenues, standing in fear of the masses, and ready to punish by fire
and sword not only every attempt upon their rights but even the slightest
doubt of their infallibility. Stalin is the embodiment of these feelings
and moods of the ruling caste: therein lies his strength and his weakness.”
(*Writings*, 1936-37, p.121)

He went on to describe the Moscow frame-ups as “the greatest political
crime of our epoch and, perhaps, of all epochs.”

In Mexico, in 1937, an independent International Committee of Inquiry was
established to examine the Moscow Trials. This inquiry examined all the
documents, allegations and evidence, including those from Trotsky. After a
rigorous examination of the facts, the Committee declared that the Moscow
Trials were a frame-up and that Trotsky and his son were innocent of the
charges made against them.

Trotsky was driven from one country to another, where governments closed
their doors to him. Only in republican Mexico did he find refuge, and then
only to be encircled by hostile agents, trained to do Stalin’s bidding.
>From here, Trotsky worked continuously to rebuild the forces of genuine
Marxism. From here, he laid the basis for a new International.

In August 1936, after completing his brilliant analysis of Stalinism in
“The Revolution Betrayed”, and the opening of the frame-up trial of
Zinoviev and Kamenev, Trotsky wrote the following about the need to
preserve our heritage:

“Reactionary epochs like our own not only disintegrate and weaken the
working class and its vanguard but also lower the general ideological level
of the movement and throw political thinking back to stages long since
passed through. In these conditions, the task of the vanguard is above all
not to let itself be carried along by the backward flow: it must swim
against the current. If an unfavourable relation of forces prevents it from
holding the positions that it has won, it must at least retain its
ideological positions, because in them is expressed the dearly purchased
experience of the past. Fools will consider this policy ‘sectarian’.
Actually it is the only means of preparing for a new tremendous surge
forward with the coming tide.

“Great political defeats inevitably provoke a reconsideration of values,
generally occurring in two directions. On the one hand the true vanguard,
enriched by the experience of defeat, defends with tooth and nail the
heritage of revolutionary thought and on this basis attempts to educate new
cadres for the mass struggles to come. On the other hand the routinists,
centrists, and dilettantes, frightened by defeat, do their best to destroy
the authority of revolutionary tradition and go backward in their search
for a ‘New Word’.” (Trotsky, *Stalinism and Bolshevism*)

Trotsky’s struggle was clearly a defence of our revolutionary heritage.
Fighting against the stream, he consciously educated and prepared a new
cadre for the future revolution. All his time and energy was devoted to
this fundamental aim. With the complete degeneration of the Second
reformist International and the Stalinist Comintern, the issue of
constructing a new international, under extreme difficulties, was
paramount. For Trotsky, it was a race against time.

In his *Diary in Exile*, written in 1935, he explained: “And still I think
that the work I am engaged now, despite its extremely insufficient and
fragmentary nature, is the most important work of my life – more important
than 1917, more important than the period of the Civil War or any other…

“Thus I cannot speak of the ‘indispensability’ of my work, even about the
period from 1917 to 1921. But now my work is ‘indispensable’ in the full
sense of the word. There is no arrogance in this claim at all. The collapse
of the two Internationals has posed a problem which none of the leaders of
these Internationals is at all equipped to solve. The vicissitudes of my
personal fate have confronted me with this problem and armed me with
important experience in dealing with it. There is now no one except me to
carry out the mission of arming a new generation with the revolutionary
method over the heads of the leaders of the Second and Third International.
And I am in a complete agreement with Lenin (or rather Turgenev) that the
worse vice is to be more than 55 years old! I need at least about five more
years of uninterrupted work to ensure the succession.”

Trotsky had only five more years to live before his murder. He was fully
aware of Stalin’s intentions to eliminate him. Stalin had very much
regretted the decision to deport him out of reach. These last years were
crammed full of articles, letters and advice to the young forces of
Trotskyism, as well as the founding of the Fourth International. These were
the richest of years as can be seen from his invaluable writings.

Following Trotsky’s tragic death, the Fourth International was destroyed by
its inadequate leadership, who made one mistake after another and was
consumed with prestige politics. As with Marx, Trotsky had sown dragons but
reaped fleas. Nevertheless, the task remains to rebuild the movement, which
is being undertaken today by the International Marxist Tendency. Based on
the real ideas of Trotsky and the great Marxists, we will finish the task
bequeathed by the Old Man.

On this occasion of the anniversary of Trotsky’s assassination, we renew
our faith in the world working class and the revolutionaries ideas of
Marxism. World revolution is now being put back on the agenda. We are
therefore proud to stand on the shoulders of giants. We hold to the words
of Trotsky’s final *Testament*:

"I can see the bright green strip of grass beneath the wall, and the clear
blue sky above the wall, and sunlight everywhere. Life is beautiful. Let
the future generations cleanse it of all evil, oppression and vileness and
enjoy it to the full.”


[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]



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