Chapter 2
TROTSKY LEAVES NEW YORK TO COMPLETE THE REVOLUTION
You will have a revolution, a terrible revolution. What course it takes will depend much on what Mr. Rockefeller tells Mr. Hague to do. Mr. Rockefeller is a symbol of the American ruling class and Mr. Hague is a symbol of its political tools.
Leon Trotsky, in New York Times,December 13, 1938.
(Hague was a New Jersey politician)
In 1916, the year preceding the Russian Revolution, internationalist Leon Trotsky was expelled from France, officially because of his participation in the Zimmerwald conference but also no doubt because of inflammatory articles written for Nashe Slovo, a Russian-language newspaper printed in Paris. In September 1916 Trotsky was politely escorted across the Spanish border by French police. A few days later Madrid police arrested the internationalist and lodged him in a "first-class cell" at a charge of one-and-one-haft pesetas per day. Subsequently Trotsky was taken to Cadiz, then to Barcelona finally to be placed on board the Spanish Transatlantic Company steamer Monserrat. Trotsky and family crossed the Atlantic Ocean and landed in New York on January 13, 1917.
Other Trotskyites also made their way westward across
the Atlantic. Indeed, one Trotskyite group acquired sufficient immediate
influence in Mexico to write the Constitution of Querétaro for the
revolutionary 1917 Carranza government, giving Mexico the dubious distinction
of being the first government in the world to adopt a Soviet-type constitution.
How did Trotsky, who knew only German and Russian,
survive in capitalist America? According to his autobiography, My Life,
"My only profession in New York was that of a revolutionary
socialist." In other words, Trotsky wrote occasional articles for Novy
Mir, the New York Russian socialist journal. Yet we know that the Trotsky
family apartment in New York had a refrigerator and a telephone, and, according
to Trotsky, that the family occasionally traveled in a chauffeured limousine.
This mode of living puzzled the two young Trotsky boys. When they went into a
tearoom, the boys would anxiously demand of their mother, "Why doesn't the
chauffeur come in?"1 The stylish living standard is also at
odds with Trotsky's reported income. The only funds that Trotsky admits
receiving in 1916 and 1917 are $310, and, said Trotsky, "I distributed the
$310 among five emigrants who were returning to Russia." Yet Trotsky had
paid for a first-class cell in Spain, the Trotsky family had traveled across
Europe to the United States, they had acquired an excellent apartment in New
York — paying rent three months in advance — and they had use of a chauffeured
limousine. All this on the earnings of an impoverished revolutionary for a few
articles for the low-circulation Russian-language newspaper Nashe Slovo in
Paris and Novy Mir in New York!
Joseph Nedava estimates Trotsky's 1917 income at
$12.00 per week, "supplemented by some lecture fees."2 Trotsky was in New York in 1917 for three
months, from January to March, so that makes $144.00 in income from Novy Mir
and, say, another $100.00 in lecture fees, for a total of $244.00. Of this
$244.00 Trotsky was able to give away $310.00 to his friends, pay for the New
York apartment, provide for his family — and find the $10,000 that was taken
from him in April 1917 by Canadian authorities in Halifax. Trotsky claims that
those who said he had other sources of income are "slanderers"
spreading "stupid calumnies" and "lies," but unless Trotsky
was playing the horses at the Jamaica racetrack, it can't be done. Obviously
Trotsky had an unreported source of income.
What was that source? In The Road to Safety, author
Arthur Willert says Trotsky earned a living by working as an electrician for
Fox Film Studios. Other writers have cited other occupations, but there is no
evidence that Trotsky occupied himself for remuneration otherwise than by
writing and speaking.
Most investigation has centered on the verifiable
fact that when Trotsky left New York in 1917 for Petrograd, to organize the
Bolshevik phase of the revolution, he left with $10,000. In 1919 the U.S.
Senate Overman Committee investigated Bolshevik propaganda and German money in
the United States and incidentally touched on the source of Trotsky's $10,000.
Examination of Colonel Hurban, Washington attaché to the Czech legation, by the
Overman Committee yielded the following:
COL. HURBAN: Trotsky, perhaps, took money from
Germany, but Trotsky will deny it. Lenin would not deny it. Miliukov proved
that he got $10,000 from some Germans while he was in America. Miliukov had the
proof, but he denied it. Trotsky did, although Miliukov had the proof.
SENATOR OVERMAN: It was charged that Trotsky got
$10,000 here.
COL. HURBAN: I do not remember how much it was, but I
know it was a question between him and Miliukov.
SENATOR OVERMAN: Miliukov proved it, did he?
COL. HURBAN: Yes, sir.
SENATOR OVERMAN: Do you know where he got it from?
COL. HURBAN: I remember it was $10,000; but it is no
matter. I will speak about their propaganda. The German Government knew Russia
better than anybody, and they knew that with the help of those people they
could destroy the Russian army.
(At 5:45 o'clock p.m. the subcommittee adjourned
until tomorrow, Wednesday, February 19, at 10:30 o'clock a.m.)3
It is quite remarkable that the committee adjourned
abruptly before the source of Trotsky's funds could be placed into the Senate
record. When questioning resumed the next day, Trotsky and his $10,000 were no
longer of interest to the Overman Committee. We shall later develop evidence
concerning the financing of German and revolutionary activities in the United
States by New York financial houses; the origins of Trotsky's $10,000 will then
come into focus.
An amount of $10,000 of German origin is also
mentioned in the official British telegram to Canadian naval authorities in Halifax,
who requested that Trotsky and party en route to the revolution be taken off
the S.S. Kristianiafjord (see page 28). We also learn from a British
Directorate of Intelligence report4 that Gregory Weinstein, who in 1919 was
to become a prominent member of the Soviet Bureau in New York, collected funds
for Trotsky in New York. These funds originated in Germany and were channeled
through the Volks-zeitung, a German daily newspaper in New York and subsidized
by the German government.
While Trotsky's funds are officially reported as
German, Trotsky was actively engaged in American politics immediately prior to
leaving New York for Russia and the revolution. On March 5, 1917, American
newspapers headlined the increasing possibility of war with Germany; the same
evening Trotsky proposed a resolution at the meeting of the New York County
Socialist Party "pledging Socialists to encourage strikes and resist
recruiting in the event of war with Germany."5 Leon Trotsky was called by the New York
Times "an exiled Russian revolutionist." Louis C. Fraina, who
cosponsored the Trotsky resolution, later — under an alias — wrote an
uncritical book on the Morgan financial empire entitled House of Morgan.6 The Trotsky-Fraina proposal was opposed
by the Morris Hillquit faction, and the Socialist Party subsequently voted
opposition to the resolution.7
More than a week later, on March 16, at the time of
the deposition of the tsar, Leon Trotsky was interviewed in the offices of Novy
Mir.. The interview contained a prophetic statement on the Russian revolution:
"... the committee which has taken the place of
the deposed Ministry in Russia did not represent the interests or the aims of
the revolutionists, that it would probably be shortlived and step down in favor
of men who would be more sure to carry forward the democratization of
Russia."8
The "men who would be more sure to carry forward
the democratization of Russia," that is, the Mensheviks and the
Bolsheviks, were then in exile abroad and needed first to return to Russia. The
temporary "committee" was therefore dubbed the Provisional
Government, a title, it should be noted, that was used from the start of the
revolution in March and not applied ex post facto by historians.
President Woodrow Wilson was the fairy godmother who
provided Trotsky with a passport to return to Russia to "carry
forward" the revolution. This American passport was accompanied by a
Russian entry permit and a British transit visa. Jennings C. Wise, in Woodrow
Wilson: Disciple of Revolution, makes the pertinent comment, "Historians
must never forget that Woodrow Wilson, despite the efforts of the British
police, made it possible for Leon Trotsky to enter Russia with an American
passport."
President Wilson facilitated Trotsky's passage to
Russia at the same time careful State Department bureaucrats, concerned about
such revolutionaries entering Russia, were unilaterally attempting to tighten
up passport procedures. The Stockholm legation cabled the State Department on
June 13, 1917, just after Trotsky crossed the Finnish-Russian border,
"Legation confidentially informed Russian, English and French passport
offices at Russian frontier, Tornea, considerably worried by passage of
suspicious persons bearing American passports."9
To this cable the State Department replied, on the
same day, "Department is exercising special care in issuance of passports
for Russia"; the department also authorized expenditures by the legation
to establish a passport-control office in Stockholm and to hire an
"absolutely dependable American citizen" for employment on control
work.10 But the bird had flown the coop.
Menshevik Trotsky with Lenin's Bolsheviks were already in Russia preparing to
"carry forward" the revolution. The passport net erected caught only
more legitimate birds. For example, on June 26, 1917, Herman Bernstein, a
reputable New York newspaperman on his way to Petrograd to represent the New
York Herald, was held at the border and refused entry to Russia. Somewhat
tardily, in mid-August 1917 the Russian embassy in Washington requested the
State Department (and State agreed) to "prevent the entry into Russia of
criminals and anarchists... numbers of whom have already gone to Russia."11
Consequently, by virtue of preferential treatment for
Trotsky, when the S.S. Kristianiafjord left New York on March 26, 1917, Trotsky
was aboard and holding a U.S. passport — and in company with other Trotskyire
revolutionaries, Wall Street financiers, American Communists, and other
interesting persons, few of whom had embarked for legitimate business. This
mixed bag of passengers has been described by Lincoln Steffens, the American
Communist:
The passenger list was long and mysterious. Trotsky
was in the steerage with a group of revolutionaries; there was a Japanese
revolutionist in my cabin. There were a lot of Dutch hurrying home from Java,
the only innocent people aboard. The rest were war messengers, two from Wall
Street to Germany....12
Notably, Lincoln Steffens was on board en route to
Russia at the specific invitation of Charles Richard Crane, a backer and a
former chairman of the Democratic Party's finance committee. Charles Crane,
vice president of the Crane Company, had organized the Westinghouse Company in
Russia, was a member of the Root mission to Russia, and had made no fewer than
twenty-three visits to Russia between 1890 and 1930. Richard Crane, his son,
was confidential assistant to then Secretary of State Robert Lansing. According
to the former ambassador to Germany William Dodd, Crane "did much to bring
on the Kerensky revolution which gave way to Communism."13 And so Steffens' comments in his diary
about conversations aboard the S.S. Kristianiafjord are highly pertinent:"
. . . all agree that the revolution is in its first phase only, that it must
grow. Crane and Russian radicals on the ship think we shall be in Petrograd for
the re-revolution.14
Crane returned to the United States when the Bolshevik
Revolution (that is, "the re-revolution") had been completed and,
although a private citizen, was given firsthand reports of the progress of the
Bolshevik Revolution as cables were received at the State Department. For
example, one memorandum, dated December 11, 1917, is entitled "Copy of
report on Maximalist uprising for Mr Crane." It originated with Maddin
Summers, U.S. consul general in Moscow, and the covering letter from Summers
reads in part:
I have the honor to enclose herewith a copy of same [above
report] with the request that it be sent for the confidential information of
Mr. Charles R. Crane. It is assumed that the Department will have no objection
to Mr. Crane seeing the report ....15
In brief, the unlikely and puzzling picture that
emerges is that Charles Crane, a friend and backer of Woodrow Wilson and a
prominent financier and politician, had a known role in the "first"
revolution and traveled to Russia in mid-1917 in company with the American
Communist Lincoln Steffens, who was in touch with both Woodrow Wilson and
Trotsky. The latter in turn was carrying a passport issued at the orders of
Wilson and $10,000 from supposed German sources. On his return to the U.S.
after the "re-revolution," Crane was granted access to official
documents concerning consolidation of the Bolshevik regime: This is a pattern
of interlocking — if puzzling — events that warrants further investigation and
suggests, though without at this point providing evidence, some link between
the financier Crane and the revolutionary Trotsky.
Documents on Trotsky's brief stay in Canadian custody
are now de-classified and available from the Canadian government archives.
According to these archives, Trotsky was removed by Canadian and British naval
personnel from the S.S. Kristianiafjord at Halifax, Nova Scotia, on April 3,
1917, listed as a German prisoner of war, and interned at the Amherst, Nova
Scotia, internment station for German prisoners. Mrs. Trotsky, the two Trotsky
boys, and five other men described as "Russian Socialists" were also
taken off and interned. Their names are recorded by the Canadian files as:
Nickita Muchin, Leiba Fisheleff, Konstantin Romanchanco, Gregor Teheodnovski,
Gerchon Melintchansky and Leon Bronstein Trotsky (all spellings from original
Canadian documents).
Canadian Army form LB-l, under serial number 1098
(including thumb prints), was completed for Trotsky, with a description as
follows: "37 years old, a political exile, occupation journalist, born in
Gromskty, Chuson, Russia, Russian citizen." The form was signed by Leon
Trotsky and his full name given as Leon Bromstein (sic) Trotsky.
The Trotsky party was removed from the S.S.
Kristianiafjord under official instructions received by cablegram of March 29,
1917, London, presumably originating in the Admiralty with the naval control
officer, Halifax. The cablegram reported that the Trotsky party was on the
"Christianiafjord" (sic) and should be "taken off and retained
pending instructions." The reason given to the naval control officer at
Halifax was that "these are Russian Socialists leaving for purposes of
starting revolution against present Russian government for which Trotsky is
reported to have 10,000 dollars subscribed by Socialists and Germans."
On April 1, 1917, the naval control officer, Captain
O. M. Makins, sent a confidential memorandum to the general officer commanding
at Halifax, to the effect that he had "examined all Russian
passengers" aboard the S.S. Kristianiafjord and found six men in the
second-class section: "They are all avowed Socialists, and though professing
a desire to help the new Russian Govt., might well be in league with German
Socialists in America, and quite likely to be a great hindrance to the Govt. in
Russia just at present." Captain Makins added that he was going to remove
the group, as well as Trotsky's wife and two sons, in order to intern them at
Halifax. A copy of this report was forwarded from Halifax to the chief of the
General Staff in Ottawa on April 2, 1917.
The next document in the Canadian files is dated
April 7, from the chief of the General Staff, Ottawa, to the director of
internment operations, and acknowledges a previous letter (not in the files)
about the internment of Russian socialists at Amherst, Nova Scotia: ". . .
in this connection, have to inform you of the receipt of a long telegram yesterday
from the Russian Consul General, MONTREAL, protesting against the arrest of
these men as they were in possession of passports issued by the Russian Consul
General, NEW YORK, U.S.A."
The reply to this Montreal telegram was to the effect
that the men were interned "on suspicion of being German," and would
be released only upon definite proof of their nationality and loyalty to the
Allies. No telegrams from the Russian consul general in New York are in the
Canadian files, and it is known that this office was reluctant to issue Russian
passports to Russian political exiles. However, there is a telegram in the
files from a New York attorney, N. Aleinikoff, to R. M. Coulter, then deputy
postmaster general of Canada. The postmaster general's office in Canada had no
connection with either internment of prisoners of war or military activities.
Accordingly, this telegram was in the nature of a personal, nonofficial
intervention. It reads:
DR. R. M. COULTER, Postmaster Genl. OTTAWA Russian
political exiles returning to Russia detained Halifax interned Amherst camp.
Kindly investigate and advise cause of the detention and names of all detained.
Trust as champion of freedom you will intercede on their behalf. Please wire
collect. NICHOLAS ALEINIKOFF
On April 11, Coulter wired Aleinikoff, "Telegram
received. Writing you this afternoon. You should receive it tomorrow evening.
R. M. Coulter." This telegram was sent by the Canadian Pacific Railway
Telegraph but charged to the Canadian Post Office Department. Normally a private
business telegram would be charged to the recipient and this was not official
business. The follow-up Coulter letter to Aleinikoff is interesting because,
after confirming that the Trotsky party was held at Amherst, it states that
they were suspected of propaganda against the present Russian government and
"are supposed to be agents of Germany." Coulter then adds," . .
. they are not what they represent themselves to be"; the Trotsky group is
"...not detained by Canada, but by the Imperial authorities." After
assuring Aleinikoff that the detainees would be made comfortable, Coulter adds
that any information "in their favour" would be transmitted to the
military authorities. The general impression of the letter is that while
Coulter is sympathetic and fully aware of Trotsky's pro-German links, he is
unwilling to get involved. On April 11 Arthur Wolf of 134 East Broadway, New
York, sent a telegram to Coulter. Though sent from New York, this telegram,
after being acknowledged, was also charged to the Canadian Post Office
Department.
Coulter's reactions, however, reflect more than the
detached sympathy evident in his letter to Aleinikoff. They must be considered
in the light of the fact that these letters in behalf of Trotsky came from two
American residents of New York City and involved a Canadian or Imperial
military matter of international importance. Further, Coulter, as deputy
postmaster general, was a Canadian government official of some standing.
Ponder, for a moment, what would happen to someone who similarly intervened in
United States affairs! In the Trotsky affair we have two American residents
corresponding with a Canadian deputy postmaster general in order to intervene
in behalf of an interned Russian revolutionary.
Coulter's subsequent action also suggests something
more than casual intervention. After Coulter acknowledged the Aleinikoff and
Wolf telegrams, he wrote to Major General Willoughby Gwatkin of the Department
of Militia and Defense in Ottawa — a man of significant influence in the Canadian
military — and attached copies of the Aleinikoff and Wolf telegrams:
These men have been hostile to Russia because of the
way the Jews have been treated, and are now strongly in favor of the present
Administration, so far as I know. Both are responsible men. Both are reputable
men, and I am sending their telegrams to you for what they may be worth, and so
that you may represent them to the English authorities if you deem it wise.
Obviously Coulter knows — or intimates that he knows
— a great deal about Aleinikoff and Wolf. His letter was in effect a character
reference, and aimed at the root of the internment problem — London. Gwatkin
was well known in London, and in fact was on loan to Canada from the War Office
in London.17
Aleinikoff then sent a letter to Coulter to thank him
most heartily for the interest you have taken in the
fate of the Russian Political Exiles .... You know me, esteemed Dr. Coulter,
and you also know my devotion to the cause of Russian freedom .... Happily I
know Mr. Trotsky, Mr. Melnichahnsky, and Mr. Chudnowsky . . . intimately.
It might be noted as an aside that if Aleinikoff knew
Trotsky "intimately," then he would also probably be aware that
Trotsky had declared his intention to return to Russia to overthrow the
Provisional Government and institute the "re-revolution." On receipt
of Aleinikoff's letter, Coulter immediately (April 16) forwarded it to Major
General Gwatkin, adding that he became acquainted with Aleinikoff "in
connection with Departmental action on United States papers in the Russian
language" and that Aleinikoff was working "on the same lines as Mr.
Wolf . . . who was an escaped prisoner from Siberia."
Previously, on April 14, Gwatkin sent a memorandum to
his naval counterpart on the Canadian Military Interdepartmental Committee
repeating that the internees were Russian socialists with "10,000 dollars
subscribed by socialists and Germans." The concluding paragraph stated: "On
the other hand there are those who declare that an act of high-handed injustice
has been done." Then on April 16, Vice Admiral C. E. Kingsmill, director
of the Naval Service, took Gwatkin's intervention at face value. In a letter to
Captain Makins, the naval control officer at Halifax, he stated, "The
Militia authorities request that a decision as to their (that is, the six
Russians) disposal may be hastened." A copy of this instruction was
relayed to Gwatkin who in turn informed Deputy Postmaster General Coulter.
Three days later Gwatkin applied pressure. In a memorandum of April 20 to the
naval secretary, he wrote, "Can you say, please, whether or not the Naval
Control Office has given a decision?"
On the same day (April 20) Captain Makins wrote
Admiral Kingsmill explaining his reasons for removing Trotsky; he refused to be
pressured into making a decision, stating, "I will cable to the Admiralty
informing them that the Militia authorities are requesting an early decision as
to their disposal." However, the next day, April 21, Gwatkin wrote
Coulter: "Our friends the Russian socialists are to be released; and
arrangements are being made for their passage to Europe." The order to
Makins for Trotsky's release originated in the Admiralty, London. Coulter
acknowledged the information, "which will please our New York
correspondents immensely."
While we can, on the one hand, conclude that Coulter
and Gwatkin were intensely interested in the release of Trotsky, we do not, on
the other hand, know why. There was little in the career of either Deputy
Postmaster General Coulter or Major General Gwatkin that would explain an urge
to release the Menshevik Leon Trotsky.
Dr. Robert Miller Coulter was a medical doctor of
Scottish and Irish parents, a liberal, a Freemason, and an Odd Fellow. He was
appointed deputy postmaster general of Canada in 1897. His sole claim to fame
derived from being a delegate to the Universal Postal Union Convention in 1906
and a delegate to New Zealand and Australia in 1908 for the "All Red"
project. All Red had nothing to do with Red revolutionaries; it was only a plan
for all-red or all-British fast steamships between Great Britain, Canada, and
Australia.
Major General Willoughby Gwatkin stemmed from a long
British military tradition (Cambridge and then Staff College). A specialist in
mobilization, he served in Canada from 1905 to 1918. Given only the documents
in the Canadian files, we can but conclude that their intervention in behalf of
Trotsky is a mystery.
We can approach the Trotsky release case from another
angle: Canadian intelligence. Lieutenant Colonel John Bayne MacLean, a
prominent Canadian publisher and businessman, founder and president of MacLean
Publishing Company, Toronto, operated numerous Canadian trade journals,
including the Financial Post. MacLean also had a long-time association with
Canadian Army Intelligence.18
In 1918 Colonel MacLean wrote for his own MacLean's
magazine an article entitled "Why Did We Let Trotsky Go? How Canada Lost
an Opportunity to Shorten the War."19 The article contained detailed and
unusual information about Leon Trotsky, although the last half of the piece
wanders off into space remarking about barely related matters. We have two
clues to the authenticity of the information. First, Colonel MacLean was a man
of integrity with excellent connections in Canadian government intelligence.
Second, government records since released by Canada, Great Britain, and the
United States confirm MacLean's statement to a significant degree. Some MacLean
statements remain to be confirmed, but information available in the early 1970s
is not necessarily inconsistent with Colonel MacLean's article.
MacLean's opening argument is that "some
Canadian politicians or officials were chiefly responsible for the prolongation
of the war [World War I], for the great loss of life, the wounds and sufferings
of the winter of 1917 and the great drives of 1918."
Further, states MacLean, these persons were (in
1919)doing everything possible to prevent Parliament and the Canadian people
from getting the related facts. Official reports, including those of Sir Douglas
Haig, demonstrate that but for the Russian break in 1917 the war would have
been over a year earlier, and that "the man chiefly responsible for the
defection of Russia was Trotsky... acting under German instructions."
Who was Trotsky? According to MacLean, Trotsky was
not Russian, but German. Odd as this assertion may appear it does coincide with
other scraps of intelligence information: to wit, that Trotsky spoke better
German than Russian, and that he was the Russian executive of the German "Black
Bond." According to MacLean, Trotsky in August 1914 had been
"ostentatiously" expelled from Berlin;20 he finally arrived in the United States
where he organized Russian revolutionaries, as well as revolutionaries in
Western Canada, who "were largely Germans and Austrians traveling as
Russians." MacLean continues:
Originally the British found through Russian
associates that Kerensky,21 Lenin and some lesser leaders were
practically in German pay as early as 1915 and they uncovered in 1916 the
connections with Trotsky then living in New York. From that time he was closely
watched by... the Bomb Squad. In the early part of 1916 a German official
sailed for New York. British Intelligence officials accompanied him. He was
held up at Halifax; but on their instruction he was passed on with profuse
apologies for the necessary delay. After much manoeuvering he arrived in a
dirty little newspaper office in the slums and there found Trotsky, to whom he
bore important instructions. From June 1916, until they passed him on [to] the
British, the N.Y. Bomb Squad never lost touch with Trotsky. They discovered
that his real name was Braunstein and that he was a German, not a Russian.22
Such German activity in neutral countries is
confirmed in a State Department report (316-9-764-9) describing organization of
Russian refugees for revolutionary purposes.
Continuing, MacLean states that Trotsky and four
associates sailed on the "S.S. Christiania" (sic), and on April 3
reported to "Captain Making" (sic) and were taken off the ship at
Halifax under the direction of Lieutenant Jones. (Actually a party of nine,
including six men, were taken off the S.S. Kristianiafjord. The name of the
naval control officer at Halifax was Captain O. M. Makins, R.N. The name of the
officer who removed the Trotsky party from the ship is not in the Canadian
government documents; Trotsky said it was "Machen.") Again, according
to MacLean, Trotsky's money came "from German sources in New York."
Also:
generally the explanation given is that the release
was done at the request of Kerensky but months before this British officers and
one Canadian serving in Russia, who could speak the Russian language, reported
to London and Washington that Kerensky was in German service.23
Trotsky was released "at the request of the
British Embassy at Washington . . . [which] acted on the request of the U.S.
State Department, who were acting for someone else." Canadian officials
"were instructed to inform the press that Trotsky was an American citizen
travelling on an American passport; that his release was specially demanded by
the Washington State Department." Moreover, writes MacLean, in Ottawa
"Trotsky had, and continues to have, strong underground influence. There his
power was so great that orders were issued that he must be given every
consideration."
The theme of MacLean's reporting is, quite evidently,
that Trotsky had intimate relations with, and probably worked for, the German
General Staff. While such relations have been established regarding Lenin — to
the extent that Lenin was subsidized and his return to Russia facilitated by
the Germans — it appears certain that Trotsky was similarly aided. The $10,000
Trotsky fund in New York was from German sources, and a recently declassified
document in the U.S. State Department files reads as follows:
March 9, 1918 to: American Consul, Vladivostok from
Polk, Acting Secretary of State, Washington D.C.
For your confidential information and prompt
attention: Following is substance of message of January twelfth from Von Schanz
of German Imperial Bank to Trotsky, quote Consent imperial bank to
appropriation from credit general staff of five million roubles for sending
assistant chief naval commissioner Kudrisheff to Far East.
This message suggests some liaison between Trotsky
and the Germans in January 1918, a time when Trotsky was proposing an alliance
with the West. The State Department does not give the provenance of the
telegram, only that it originated with the War College Staff. The State
Department did treat the message as authentic and acted on the basis of assumed
authenticity. It is consistent with the general theme of Colonel MacLean's
article.
Consequently, we can derive the following sequence of
events: Trotsky traveled from New York to Petrograd on a passport supplied by
the intervention of Woodrow Wilson, and with the declared intention to
"carry forward" the revolution. The British government was the
immediate source of Trotsky's release from Canadian custody in April 1917, but
there may well have been "pressures." Lincoln Steffens, an American
Communist, acted as a link between Wilson and Charles R. Crane and between
Crane and Trotsky. Further, while Crane had no official position, his son
Richard was confidential assistant to Secretary of State Robert Lansing, and
Crane senior was provided with prompt and detailed reports on the progress of
the Bolshevik Revolution. Moreover, Ambassador William Dodd (U.S. ambassador to
Germany in the Hitler era) said that Crane had an active role in the Kerensky
phase of the revolution; the Steffens letters confirm that Crane saw the
Kerensky phase as only one step in a continuing revolution.
The interesting point, however, is not so much the communication
among dissimilar persons like Crane, Steffens, Trotsky, and Woodrow Wilson as
the existence of at least a measure of agreement on the procedure to be
followed — that is, the Provisional Government was seen as
"provisional," and the "re-revolution" was to follow.
On the other side of the coin, interpretation of
Trotsky's intentions should be cautious: he was adept at double games. Official
documentation clearly demonstrates contradictory actions. For example, the
Division of Far Eastern Affairs in the U.S. State Department received on March
23, 1918, two reports stemming from Trotsky; one is inconsistent with the
other. One report, dated March 20 and from Moscow, originated in the Russian
newspaper Russkoe Slovo. The report cited an interview with Trotsky in which he
stated that any alliance with the United States was impossible:
The Russia of the Soviet cannot align itself... with
capitalistic America for this would be a betrayal It is possible that Americans
seek such an rapprochement with us, driven by its antagonism towards Japan, but
in any case there can be no question of an alliance by us of any nature with a
bourgeoisie nation.24
The other report, also originating in Moscow, is a
message dated March 17, 1918, three days earlier, and from Ambassador Francis:
"Trotsky requests five American officers as inspectors of army being
organized for defense also requests railroad operating men and equipment."25
This request to the U.S. is of course inconsistent
with rejection of an "alliance."
Before we leave Trotsky some mention should be made
of the Stalinist show trials of the 1930s and, in particular, the 1938
accusations and trial of the "Anti-Soviet bloc of rightists and
Trotskyites." These forced parodies of the judicial process, almost
unanimously rejected in the West, may throw light on Trotsky's intentions.
The crux of the Stalinist accusation was that
Trotskyites were paid agents of international capitalism. K. G. Rakovsky, one
of the 1938 defendants, said, or was induced to say, "We were the vanguard
of foreign aggression, of international fascism, and not only in the USSR but
also in Spain, China, throughout the world." The summation of the
"court" contains the statement, "There is not a single man in
the world who brought so much sorrow and misfortune to people as Trotsky. He is
the vilest agent of fascism .... "26
Now while this may be no more than verbal insults
routinely traded among the international Communists of the 1930s and 40s, it is
also notable that the threads behind the self-accusation are consistent with
the evidence in this chapter. And further, as we shall see later, Trotsky was
able to generate support among international capitalists, who, incidentally,
were also supporters of Mussolini and Hitler.27
So long as we see all international revolutionaries
and all international capitalists as implacable enemies of one another, then we
miss a crucial point — that there has indeed been some operational cooperation
between international capitalists, including fascists. And there is no a priori
reason why we should reject Trotsky as a part of this alliance.
This tentative, limited reassessment will be brought
into sharp focus when we review the story o£ Michael Gruzenberg, the chief
Bolshevik agent in Scandinavia who under the alias of Alexander Gumberg was
also a confidential adviser to the Chase National Bank in New York and later to
Floyd Odium of Atlas Corporation. This dual role was known to and accepted by
both the Soviets and his American employers. The Gruzenberg story is a case
history of international revolution allied with international capitalism.
Colonel MacLean's observations that Trotsky had
"strong underground influence" and that his "power was so great
that orders were issued that he must be given every consideration" are not
at all inconsistent with the Coulter-Gwatkin intervention in Trotsky's behalf;
or, for that matter, with those later occurrences, the Stalinist accusations in
the Trotskyite show trials of the 1930s. Nor are they inconsistent with the
Gruzenberg case. On the other hand, the only known direct link between Trotsky
and international banking is through his cousin Abram Givatovzo, who was a
private banker in Kiev before the Russian Revolution and in Stockholm after the
revolution. While Givatovzo professed antibolshevism, he was in fact acting in
behalf of the Soviets in 1918 in currency transactions.28
Is it possible an international web (:an be spun from
these events? First there's Trotsky, a Russian internationalist revolutionary
with German connections who sparks assistance from two supposed supporters of
Prince Lvov's government in Russia (Aleinikoff and Wolf, Russians resident in
New York). These two ignite the action of a liberal Canadian deputy postmaster
general, who in turn intercedes with a prominent British Army major general on
the Canadian military staff. These are all verifiable links.
In brief, allegiances may not always be what they are
called, or appear. We can, however, surmise that Trotsky, Aleinikoff, Wolf,
Coulter, and Gwatkin in acting for a common limited objective also had some
common higher goal than national allegiance or political label. To emphasize,
there is no absolute proof that this is so. It is, at the moment, only a
logical supposition from the facts. A loyalty higher than that forged by a
common immediate goal need have been no more than that of friendship, although
that strains the imagination when we ponder such a polyglot combination. It may
also have been promoted by other motives. The picture is yet incomplete.
Footnotes:
1Leon
Trotsky, My Life (New York: Scribner's, 1930), chap. 22.
2Joseph
Nedava, Trotsky and the Jews (Philadelphia: Jewish Publication Society of
America, 1972), p. 163.
3United
States, Senate, Brewing and Liquor Interests and German and Bolshevik
Propaganda (Subcommittee on the Judiciary), 65th Cong., 1919.
4Special
Report No. 5, The Russian Soviet Bureau in the United States, July 14, 1919,
Scotland House, London S.W.I. Copy in U.S. State Dept. Decimal File,
316-23-1145.
5New York
Times, March 5, 1917.
6Lewis Corey,
House of Morgan: A Social Biography of the Masters of Money (New York: G. W.
Watt, 1930).
7Morris
Hillquit. (formerly Hillkowitz) had been defense attorney for Johann Most,
alter the assassination of President McKinley, and in 1917 was a leader of the
New York Socialist Party. In the 1920s Hillquit established himself in the New
York banking world by becoming a director of, and attorney for, the
International Union Bank. Under President Franklin D. Roosevelt, Hillquit
helped draw up the NRA codes for the garment industry.
8New York
Times, March 16, 1917.
9U.S. State
Dept. Decimal File, 316-85-1002.
10Ibid.
11Ibid.,
861.111/315.
12Lincoln
Steffens, Autobiography (New York: Harcourt, Brace, 1931), p. 764. Steffens was
the "go-between" for Crane and Woodrow Wilson.
13William
Edward Dodd, Ambassador Dodd's Diary, 1933-1938 (New York: Harcourt, Brace,
1941), pp. 42-43.
14Lincoln
Steffens, The Letters of Lincoln Steffens (New York: Harcourt, Brace, 1941), p.
396.
15U.S.
State Dept. Decimal File, 861.00/1026.
16This
section is based on Canadian government records.
17Gwatkin's
memoramada in the Canadian government files are not signed, but initialed with
a cryptic mark or symbol. The mark has been identified as Gwatkin's because one
Gwatkin letter (that o[ April 21) with that cryptic mark was acknowledged.
18H.J.
Morgan, Canadian Men and Women of the Times, 1912, 2 vols. (Toronto: W. Briggs,
1898-1912).
19June
1919, pp. 66a-666. Toronto Public Library has a copy; the issue of MacLean's in
which Colonel MacLean's article appeared is not easy to find and a frill
summary is provided below.
20See
also Trotsky, My Life, p. 236.
22According
to his own account, Trotsky did not arrive in the U.S. until January 1917.
Trotsky's real name was Bronstein; he invented the name "Trotsky."
"Bronstein" is German and "Trotsky" is Polish rather than
Russian. His first name is usually given as "Leon"; however,
Trotsky's first book, which was published in Geneva, has the initial
"N," not "L."
23See
Appendix 3; this document was obtained in 1971 from the British
Foreign Office but apparently was known to MacLean.
24U.S.
State Dept. Decimal File, 861.00/1351.
25U.S.
State Dept. Decimal File, 861.00/1341.
26Report
of Court Proceedings in the Case of the Anti-Soviet "Bloc of Rightists and
Trotskyites" Heard Before the Military Collegium of the Supreme Court of
the USSR (Moscow: People's Commissariat of Justice of the USSR, 1938), p. 293.
27See
p. 174. Thomas Lamont of the Morgans was an early supporter of Mussolini.
28See
p. 122.
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