Pyotr Pospelov Explained

Pyotr Pospelov
Birth Name:Pyotr Nikolayevich Pospelov
Office:Director of the Institute of Marxism–Leninism of the Central Committee
Term Start:25 January 1961
Term End:May 1967
Predecessor:Gennady Obichkin
Successor:Pyotr Fedoseyev
Term Start1:7 July 1949
Term End1:July 1952
Predecessor1:Vladimir Kruzhkov
Successor1:Gennady Obichkin
Office2:Editor-in-chief of Pravda
Term Start2:1940
Term End2:1949
Predecessor2:Ivan Niktin
Successor2:Mikhail Suslov
Office6:Candidate member of the 20th–21st Presidium
Term Start6:29 June 1957
Term End6:17 October 1961
Office7:Member of the 19th, 20th–21st Secretariat
Term Start7:5 March 1953
Term End7:4 May 1960
Birth Date:20 June 1898
Birth Place:Kuznetsovo, Korcheva Uyezd, Tver Governorate, Russian Empire
Death Place:Moscow, RSFSR, Soviet Union
Nationality:Soviet
Party:Communist Party (1916–1979)
Native Name Lang:ru

Pyotr Nikolayevich Pospelov (Russian: Пётр Никола́евич Поспе́лов;  - 22 April, 1979) was a high-ranked functionary of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union ("Old Bolshevik", since 1916), propagandist, academician of the USSR Academy of Sciences (1953), chief editor of Pravda newspaper, and director of the Institute of Marxism-Leninism. He was known as a staunch Stalinist who quickly became a supporter of Nikita Khrushchev.[1]

Life and career

Pospelov was born at Konakovo in 1898. He joined the Bolsheviks as a student, in 1916, and in 1917, he was secretary of the Tver textile workers' union. During 1918–19, he worked for the Bolshevik underground in Chelyabinsk, which was then controlled by the White Army.[2] He was based in Tver again, in 1920, until 1924, when he was transferred to the Agitprop department of the Central Committee. The party machine was then already controlled by Joseph Stalin, whom Pospelov loyally supported until Stalin's death in 1953. In 1926–30, he studied at the Communist Academy in Moscow, and then in the Economics Department of the Institute of Red Professors in 1930. In 1930–39, he was a member of the Central Control Commission and its successor, the Party Control Commission.

Pospelov was one of the principal authors of The History of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union (Bolsheviks): Short Course, which served as a basic text on party history in the Stalinist period.[3]

Early in the Great Purge, on 13 March, 1937, just after two of Lenin's former closest comrades, Nikolai Bukharin and Alexei Rykov had been arrested, Pravda gave prominence to an article signed by Pospelov, headed 'The Struggle of Bukharin and Rykov against Lenin and the party', accusing them of criminal links with Leon Trotsky[4]

In 1937–40, he was appointed deputy head of Agitprop, which was headed by Andrei Zhdanov. He was a member of the Central Committee, 1939–1971. In September 1940, he was appointed chief editor of Pravda, but was sacked in August 1949, and replaced by Mikhail Suslov, at a time when dozens of officials who had been linked to Zhdanov were losing their jobs in a purge carried out by Zhdanov's former rival, Georgy Malenkov.[5] He held the lesser post of Director of the Marx–Engels–Lenin–Stalin Institute, in 1949–52. Early in 1953, he was reinstated as deputy chief editor of Pravda.

On 6 March, 1953, just after the death of Stalin, Pospelov was appointed a Secretary of the Central Committee. In the power struggles of the early 1950s, he backed Nikita Khrushchev against Malenkov.

Pospelov was reputedly so upset when Stalin died that he started sobbing, until the police chief, Lavrentiy Beria shook him, exclaiming "What's the matter with you? Cut it out!,"[6] while also he playing a prominent role in the dismantling of Stalin's reputation. Speaking to the USSR Academy of Sciences on 19 October, 1953, Pospelov was one of the first to publicly attack the 'Cult of the Personality'.[7]

Khrushchev revealed in his memoirs that in 1954, Pospelov was put in charge of what became known as the "Pospelov commission" which investigated cases of loyal party officials who had been the mass repressions in the Soviet Union, and that he wrote the speech, On the Personality Cult and its Consequences, which Khrushchev delivered during a closed session of the 20th Party Congress, in 1956. Khrushchev claimed that he had even proposed that Pospelov should deliver it, but was talked into delivering it himself.[8] [9] During the 21st Party Congress, in February, 1959, Pospelov delivered a speech in which he denounced Malenkov and his allies as a "wretched group of bankrupts, splitters and fractionists."[10]

Pospelov lost his position as a secretary of the Central Committee in May 1960, at a time when hardliners such as Suslov had forced Khrushchev to take a harder line against the west, in the wake of the shooting down of the U2 pilot, Gary Powers. In 1961–67, Pospelov returned to his former role as Director of the Marx-Engels-Lenin Institute.

Despite his part in the process of de-Stalinisation, in a 1969, article in the Kommunist, Pospelov praised Stalin as bulwark of party unity in the face of the "anti-Leninist" challenge of Trotskyism, writing that

Pospelov died in Moscow in 1979, and was buried at the Novodevichy Cemetery.

Awards

Notes and References

  1. http://www.hronos.km.ru/biograf/pospelov.html Pospelov's biography
  2. Web site: Zalessky . K.A. . Поспелов, Петр Николаевич 1898-1979 биографический указатель . Khronos . 13 July 2022.
  3. Banerji, Arup (2008). Writing History in the Soviet Union: Making the Past Work. New Delhi: Social Science Press. p. 145. .
  4. Book: Conquest . Robert . The Great Terror, Stalin's Purge of the Thirties . 1971 . Penguin . Harmondsworth, Middlesex . 273.
  5. Book: Hahn . Werner G. . Postwar Soviet Politics, The Fall of Zhdanov and the Defeat of Moderation, 1946-53 . 1982 . Cornell U.P. . Ithaca . 111–12.
  6. Book: Taubman . William . Khrushchev . 2005 . Simon & Schuster . London . 0-7432-7564-0 . 278.
  7. Book: Conquest . Robert . Power and Policy in the U.S.S.R. . 1961 . MacMillan . London . 276.
  8. Book: Khrushchev . Nikita . Khrushchev Remembers . 1971 . Sphere . London . 311–16.
  9. Michael Charlton (1992) "Footsteps from the Finland Station: Five Landmarks in the Collapse of Communism", Chapter 1: "Khrushchev's Secret Speech", pp. 7–80
  10. Book: Conquest . Power and Policy in the U.S.S.R. . 378.