CHAPTER 3I DEFENSE OF THE REVOLUTION
"SUPPOSE your system is tried, would you have any means of
defending the revolution?" you ask.
Certainly.
"Even by armed force?"
Yes, if necessary.
"But armed force IS organized violence. Didn't you say
Anarchism was against it?"
Anarchism is opposed to any interference with your liberty, be it
by force and violence or by any other means. It is against all
invasion and compulsion. But if any one attacks you, then it
is he who is invading you, he who is employing violence
against you. You have a right co-defend yourself. More than that, it
is your duty, as an Anarchist, to protect your liberty, to resist
coercion and compulsion. Otherwise you are a slave, not a free man.
In ocher words, the social revolution will attack no one, but it will
defend itself against invasion from any quarter.
Besides, you must not confuse the social revolution with Anarchy.
Revolution, in some of its stages, is a violent upheaval; Anarchy is
a social condition of freedom and peace. The revolution is the means
of bringing Anarchy about but it is not Anarchy itself. It is to pave
the road for Anarchy, to establish conditions which will make a life
of liberty possible.
But to achieve its purpose the revolution must be imbued with and
directed by the Anarchist spirit and ideas. The end shapes the means,
just as the tool you use must be fit to do the work you want to
accomplish. That is to say, the social revolution must be Anarchistic
in method as in aim.
Revolutionary defense must be in consonance with this spirit.
Self-defense excludes all traces of coercion, of persecution or
revenge. It is concerned only with repelling attack and depriving the
enemy of opportunity to invade you.
"How would you repel foreign invasion?"
By the strength of the revolution. In what does that strength
consist? First and foremost, in the support of the people, in the
devotion of the industrial and agricultural masses. If they feel that
they themselves are making the revolution, that they have become the
masters of their lives, that they have gained freedom and are
building up their welfare, then in that very sentiment you have the
greatest strength of the revolution. The masses fight to-day for
king, capitalist, or president because they believe them worth
fighting for. Let them believe in the revolution, and they will
defend it to the death.
They will fight for the revolution with heart and soul, as the
half-starved working men, women, and even children of Petrograd
defended their city, almost with bare hands, against the White army
of General Yudenitch. Take that faith away, deprive the people of
power by setting up some authority over them, be it a political party
or military organization, and you have dealt a fatal blow to the
revolution. You will have robbed it of its main source of strength,
the masses. You will have made it defenseless.
The armed workers and peasants are the only effective defense of
the revolution. By means of their unions and syndicates they must
always be on guard against counterrevolutionary attack. The worker in
factory and mill, in mine and field, is the soldier of the
revolution. He is at his bench and plow or on the battlefield,
according to need. But in his factory as in his regiment he is the
soul of the revolution, and it is his will that decides its
fate. In industry the shop committees, in the barracks the soldiers'
committees- these are the fountain-head of all revolutionary strength
and activity.
It was the volunteer Red Guard, made up of Boilers, that
successfully defended the Russian Revolution in its most critical
initial stages. Later on it was again volunteer peasant regiments who
defeated the White armies. The regular Red army, organized later, was
powerless without the volunteer workers' and peasants' divisions.
Siberia was freed from Kolchak and his hordes by such peasant
volunteers. In the north of Russia it was also workers' and peasants
detachments that drove out the foreign armies which came to impose
the yoke of native reactionaries upon the people.1
In the Ukraine the volunteer peasant armies- known as povstantsi
- saved the Revolution from numerous counter-revolutionary generals
and particularly from Denikin when the latter was already at the very
gates of Moscow. It was the revolutionary povstantsi who freed
southern Russia from the invading armies of Germany, France, Italy,
and Greece and subsequently also routed the White forces of General
The military defense of the revolution may demand a supreme
command, coordination of activities, discipline, and obedience to
orders. But these must proceed from the devotion of the workers and
peasants, and must be based on their voluntary cooperation through
their own local, regional, and federal organizations. In the matter
of defense against foreign attack, as in all other problems of the
social revolution, the active interest of the masses, their autonomy
and self-determination are the best guarantee of success.
Understand well that the only really effective defense of the
revolution lies in the attitude of the people. Popular discontent is
the worse enemy of the revolution and its greatest danger. We must
always bear in mind that the strength of the social revolution is
organic, not mechanistic: not in mechanical, military measures lies
its might, but industry, in its ability to reconstruct life, to
establish liberty and justice. Let the people feel that it is indeed
their own cause which is at stake, and the last man of them will
fight like a lion in its behalf.
The same applies to internal as to external defense. What chance
would any White general or counter-revolutionist have if he could not
exploit oppression and injustice to incite the people against the
revolution? Counter-revolution can feed only on popular discontent.
Where the masses are conscious that the revolution and all its
activities are in their own hands, thee they themselves are managing
things and are free to change their methods when they consider it
necessary, counter-revolution can find no support and is harmless.
"But would you let counter-revolutionists incite the people
if they tried to?"
By all means. Lee them talk all they like. To restrain them would
serve only to create a persecuted class and thereby enlist popular
sympathy for them and their cause. To suppress speech and press is
not only a theoretic offense against liberty: it is a direct blow at
the very foundations of the revolution. It would, first of all, raise
problems where none had existed before. It would introduce methods
which must lead to discontent and opposition, to bitterness and
strife, to prison, Tcheka, and civil war. It would generate fear and
distrust, would hatch conspiracies, and culminate in a reign of
terror which has always killed revolutions in the past.
The social revolution must from the very sears be based on
entirely different principles, on a new conception and attitude. Full
freedom is the very breath of its existence; and be it never
forgotten that the cure for evil and disorder is more liberty,
not suppression. Suppression leads only to violence and destruction.
"Will you not defend the revolution then?" your friend
demands.
Certainly we will. But not against mere Balk, not against an
expression of opinion. The revolution must be big enough to welcome
even the severest criticism, and profit by it if it is justified. The
revolution will defend itself most determinedly against real
counter-revolution, against all active enemies, against any attempt
to defeat or sabotage it by forcible invasion or violence. That is
the right of the revolution and its duty. But it will not persecute
the conquered foe, nor wreak vengeance upon an entire social class
because of the fault of individual members of it. The sins of the
fathers shall not be visited upon their children.
What will you do with counter-revolutionists?"
Actual combat and armed resistance involve human sacrifices, and
the counter-revolutionists who lose their lives under such
circumstances suffer the unavoidable consequences of their deeds. But
the revolutionary people are not savages. The wounded are not
slaughtered nor chose taken prisoners executed. Neither is practiced
the barbarous system of shooting hostages, as the Bolsheviki did.
"How will you treat counter-revolutionists taken prisoners
during an engagement?"
The revolution must find new ways, some sensible method of dealing
with them. The old method is to imprison them, support them in
idleness, and employ numerous men to guard and punish them. And while
the culprit remains in prison, incarceration and brutal treatment
still further embitter him against the revolution, strengthen his
opposition, and nurse thoughts of vengeance and new conspiracies. The
revolution will regard such methods as stupid and detrimental to its
best interests. It will try instead by humane treatment to convince
the defeated enemy of the error and uselessness of his resistance. It
will apply liberty instead of revenge. It will take into
consideration thee most of the counter-revolutionists are dupes
rather than enemies, deluded victims of some individuals seeking
power and authority. It will know that they need enlightenment rather
than punishment, and that the former will accomplish more than the
latter. Even to-day this perception is gaining ground. The Bolsheviki
defeated the Allied armies in Russia more effectively by
revolutionary propaganda among the enemy soldiers than by the
strength of their artillery. These new methods have been recognized
as practical even by the United States Government which is making use
of them now in its Nicaraguan campaign. American aëroplanes
scatter proclamations and appeals to the Nicaraguan people to
persuade them to desert Sandino and his cause, and the American army
chiefs expect the best results from these tactics. But the Sandino
patriots are fighting for home and country against a foreign invader,
while counter-revolutionists wage war against their own people. The
work of their enlightenment is much simpler and promises better
results.
"Do you think that would really be the best way to deal with
counter-revolution?"
By all means. Humane treatment and kindness are more effective
than cruelty and vengeance. The new attitude in this regard would
suggest also a number of other methods of similar character. Various
modes of dealing with conspirators and active enemies of the
revolution would develop as soon as you begin to practice the new
policy. The plan might be adopted, for instance, of scattering them,
individually or in small groups, over districts removed from their
counter-revolutionary influences, among communities of revolutionary
spirit and consciousness. Consider also that counter-revolutionists
must eat; which means that they would find themselves in a situation
that would claim their thoughts and time for other things than the
hatching of conspiracies. The defeated counter-revolutionist, left at
liberty instead of being imprisoned, would have to seek means of
existence. He would not be denied his livelihood, of course, since
the revolution would be generous enough to feed even its enemies. But
the man in question would have to join some community, secure
lodgings, and so forth, in order to enjoy the hospitality of the
distributing center. In other words, the counter-revolutionary
"prisoners in freedom" would depend on the community and
the good will of its members for their means of existence. They would
live in its atmosphere and be influenced by its revolutionary
environment. Surely they will be safer and more contented than in
prison, and presently they would cease to be a danger to the
revolution. We have repeatedly seen such examples in Russia, in cases
where counter-revolutionists had escaped the Tcheka and settled down
in some village or city, where as a result of considerate and decent
treatment they became useful members of the community, often more
zealous in behalf of the public welfare than the average citizen,
while hundreds of their fellow-conspirators, who had not been lucky
enough to avoid arrest, were busy in prison with thoughts of revenge
and new plots.
Various plans of treating such "prisoners in freedom"
will no doubt be tried by the revolutionary people. But whatever the
methods, they will be more satisfactory than the present system of
revenge and punishment, the complete failure of which has been
demonstrated throughout human experience. Among the new ways might
also be tried that of free colonization. The revolution will offer
its enemies an opportunity to settle in some part of the country and
there establish the form of social life that will suit them best. It
is no vain speculation to foresee that it would not be long before
most of them would prefer the brotherhood and liberty of the
revolutionary community to the reactionary. regime of their colony.
But even if they did not, nothing would be lost. On the contrary, the
revolution would itself be the greatest gainer, spiritually, by
forsaking methods of revenge and persecution and practicing humanity
and magnanimity. Revolutionary self-defense, inspired by such
methods, will be the more effective because of the very freedom it
will guarantee even to its enemies. Its appeal to the masses and to
the world at large will thereby be the more irresistible and
universal. In its justice and humanity lies the invincible strength
of the social revolution.
No revolution has yet tried the true way of liberty. None has had
sufficient faith in it. Force and suppression, persecution, revenge,
and terror have characterized all revolutions in the past and have
thereby defeated their original aims. The time has come to try new
methods, new ways. The social revolution is to achieve the
emancipation of man through liberty, but if we have no faith in the
latter, revolution becomes a denial and betrayal of itself. Let us
then have the courage of freedom: let it replace suppression and
terror. Let liberty become our faith and our deed and we shall
grow strong therein.
Only liberty can make the social revolution effective and
wholesome. It alone can pave the way to greater heights and prepare a
society where well-being and joy shall be the heritage of all. The
day will dawn when man shall for the first time have full opportunity
to grow and expand in the free and generous sunshine of Anarchy.
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