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The Guilty Party
BY Adam Shatz
The Black Book of Communism: Crimes, Terror, Repression • By Stéphane Courtois,
Nicolas Werth, Jean-Louis Panné, Andrzej Paczkowski, Karel Bartosek, and Jean-
Louis Margolin
Harvard University Press • 858 pp • $37.50 • October 1999
In 1946, the Russian journalist Ilya Ehrenburg and the novelist Vassily
Grossman published The Black Book, an explosive report on the German
Einsatzgruppen's campaign of terror against Soviet Jews. The book did not sit
well with Stalin, who thought it placed too much emphasis on the identity of
Hitler's victims. After all, mused the Soviet dictator, the Red Army did not
fight fascism merely to save the Jews. As was his custom in such cases, he
suppressed the book, which ultimately entered the subterranean culture known as
samizdat.

A half century later, there is a new Black Book, only this time it is not about
the Nazis but about regimes like the one that banned Ehrenburg and Grossman's
study. The Black Book of Communism is a collection of essays by French
historians on the "crimes, terrors, and repression" committed by the socialist
governments that once flew the red flag over one third of humanity.

When the book was published in France two years ago, during the eightieth
anniversary of the October Revolution, its introduction set off an incendiary
debate by suggesting that communism was more murderous than Nazism--so
incendiary, in fact, that the disillusioned ex-communists who assembled the 858-
page book had a bitter falling-out. The cover of the Harvard edition lists six
editors below the title, giving them the appearance of an anticommunist united
front. But, as the secret history of our century ought to have taught us, such
appearances are often deceptive.

Just weeks after The Black Book of Communism was published, in late October
1997, the volume's two most distinguished contributors--Nicolas Werth, a
historian of the Soviet Union, and Jean-Louis Margolin, a China expert--angrily
repudiated the editor Stéphane Courtois in a series of interviews and articles
published in Le Monde. The scholars were infuriated by Courtois's introductory
screed indicting international communism for "crimes against peace, war crimes,
and crimes against humanity" and characterizing fellow travelers as "common
prostitutes." Worst of all, they complained, Courtois had not permitted them to
see the introduction prior to publication. On October 31, Werth and Margolin
were quoted in Le Monde excoriating Courtois for effacing "the historical
character" of communism and for vastly inflating the number of deaths that
occurred under it.

The introduction had originally been assigned to François Furet, the dean of
French Revolution historians and one of France's most prominent ex-communists.
But when Furet died--shortly after publishing a passionate inventory of
communist crimes and his own intellectual complicity in them, The Passing of an
Illusion--responsibility for the introduction fell to Courtois. In venom, if
not in vim, he outdid the great scholar, blasting Lenin, Stalin, Mao, Castro,
and dozens of others for turning "mass crime into a full-blown system of
government." Moreover, he claimed that communism had caused four times as many
deaths as Nazism: 100 million as compared with Nazism's 25 million. On the
scale of what Hannah Arendt called "radical evil," Courtois implied that
communism deserved a ranking as high as, if not higher than, Nazism.

Courtois was careful to distinguish his approach from the exculpatory arguments
of German revisionist historians like Ernst Nolte, who have let Hitler off the
hook by asserting that Stalin's campaign against Ukraine's kulaks was the
original genocide. He was less careful in charging that "a single-minded focus
on the Jewish genocide," cynically encouraged by communists after the war,
"also prevented an assessment of" communist crimes. In fact, the Jewish
genocide barely registered among French intellectuals until the late 1980s,
when Raul Hilberg's seminal study, The Destruction of the European Jews,
finally appeared in translation. The Russian gulag, as exposed by Aleksandr
Solzhenitsyn, had received far more attention thanks to the new philosophers of
the 1970s.

To some French readers, Courtois's recitation of communist crimes against
humanity smacked of fascist apologia. After all, this was a country where, as
the Princeton historian Anson Rabinbach observed in Dissent last year, "the
demand for a 'Nuremberg trial of communism' has a particular connotation,
frequently reiterated by Jean-Marie Le Pen, leader of the National Front, to
justify not prosecuting French crimes of the Vichy era." Since the book's
publication coincided with Maurice Papon's trial on charges of Nazi
collaboration during the Vichy years, French readers were invited to
contemplate the notion that partisan resistance fighters, many of them
communists and all of them in alliance with Soviet Russia, were on no firmer
moral ground than a pro-fascist bureaucrat who sent Jewish women and children
to the ovens.

Whether or not this was Courtois's intention, and it probably wasn't--Courtois
considers himself an anticommunist social democrat--The Black Book of Communism
aroused tremendous ire on the French left. Indeed, Courtois's hyperbole
provided some leftists with the perfect excuse for a display of antifascist
indignation, one that conveniently swept under the rug their own compromised
history of pro-Sovietism. On November 7, 1997, Claude Cabane, the editor of the
communist daily L'Humanité, assailed the book as an exercise in rightist
propaganda, quoting Primo Levi's remark that "one cannot imagine a Nazism
without the gas chambers, but one can imagine a Communism without the camps."
The historian Annette Wieviorka chimed in with a denunciation in Le Monde:
"Stéphane Courtois proposes simply and purely to substitute in popular memory
communist criminality for Nazi criminality." Is it any wonder, she asked, that
the book has been greeted with "jubilation" by Le Pen supporters? The Black
Book of Communism, in her view, amounted to little more than "agitprop
scholarship." "One could just as easily write a Black Book of capitalist
crimes," she quipped.

On November 12, the debate reached the chambers of parliament. Armed with
grisly figures from The Black Book of Communism, Michel Voisin, a deputy from
the center-right UDF coalition, interrogated the Socialist prime minister
Lionel Jospin about his party's governing coalition with the French communists.
While acknowledging the brutalities inflicted by Stalin, Jospin petulantly
instructed his listeners in the history of World War II and vigorously defended
his communist allies as patriotic heirs to the resistance whom he was "proud"
to have in his government.

By now it was Courtois's turn to reply to his critics. He did, in a pungent
rejoinder of nearly three thousand words in Le Monde. Considering that
communism so often betrayed its commitment to "an ideal of generosity,
fraternity and equality," he asserted, "one is entitled to ask whether [killing
in the name of such an ideal] is more excusable than murder linked to a racist
doctrine. To what extent do illusion or hypocrisy constitute extenuating
circumstances in mass crimes?" Finally, he scoffed at the charge that he was
offering comfort to the extreme right by calling attention to communist crimes,
declaring, "The victims of communism do not erase the victims of Nazism."
At this point, The Black Book of Communism was so enveloped in charges and
countercharges that its contents risked becoming a casualty of all the
publicity. Last January, Nicolas Weill, a journalist with Le Monde, worried
that "the transformation of this book into a pamphlet still prevents it from
being taken for what it is: an excellent book of history."

This is only partly true. Of the fourteen essays in The Black Book of
Communism, only two stand out as impressively researched contributions to
scholarship: Werth's study of Russia, which is the length of a short book, and
Margolin's survey of Mao's bloody carnival of ideological correctness in China.

Werth's monograph, "A State Against Its People," is the first and most
rewarding section of The Black Book of Communism. Drawing on recently unsealed
archival material, he shows how, in the early years of the civil war, state
terror became a "means of government" for Lenin and the Bolsheviks, laying the
foundations for Stalinism. Determined to requisition grain from rebellious
peasants, Lenin encouraged soldiers--as he wrote to his comrade Zinoviev--to
"make use of the energy of mass terror." Although the Bolsheviks faced a brutal
adversary in the anti-Semitic White Russian armies that carried out murderous
pogroms in the Ukraine, Werth argues that the Bolsheviks planned their killings
more systematically and on a wider scale. Contributing to the death toll on the
rural killing fields of 1919--1920 was the Soviets' idealism, since it
permitted them to justify "massacres on the basis of class...with the claim
that a new world was coming into being, and that everything was permitted to
assist the difficult birth."

As one newspaper explained at the time, "Our morality has no precedent, and our
humanity is absolute because it rests on a new ideal....To us, everything is
permitted, for we are the first...to liberate humanity from its shackles....
Blood? Let blood flow like water!" According to Werth, these clashes with the
independent peasantry opened the way for the exterminationist solutions of the
early 1930s, when Stalin used hunger as an "objective ally" in his efforts to
subdue the kulaks and collectivize agriculture.

Unfortunately, Werth and Margolin's contributions are the exception. The
trouble with The Black Book of Communism does not end with the introduction.
While there is no denying the atrocities visited on the victims of Stalin, Mao,
and Pol Pot, the book's treatment of communism in Latin America is so one-sided
that it might as well be plucked from a U.S. State Department report. We are
given the total count of war victims in Sandinista Nicaragua, but we are not
told that most of those deaths were caused by the U.S.-funded contras, referred
to here as the "anti-Sandinista resistance." In his treatment of Cuba, luridly
titled "Interminable Totalitarianism in the Tropics," Pascal Fontaine describes
Che Guevara as "dogmatic, cold, and intolerant...there was almost nothing in
him of the traditionally open and warm Cuban temperament." Che was Argentine.

While conceding that in Batista's Cuba, an authoritarian, racist state where
blacks were second-class citizens, "wealth remained unevenly distributed,"
Fontaine argues that Che was inspired not by the sight of social injustice but
by his "passionate hatred for the United States." (Nowhere does Fontaine
consider why Che's feelings toward his superpower neighbor might have been less
than warm--the history of U.S. meddling in Cuba's internal affairs, for
instance, or the Central Intelligence Agency-- sponsored overthrow of
Guatemala's democratic re former Jacobo Arbenz in 1954, which haunted Cuban
revolutionaries.) And, although he supplies important and disturbing
information about Cuba's political prisons, Fontaine fails to mention the
regime's achievements in health care, literacy, and education, which, while not
excusing human rights abuses, at least help explain why the Cuban model long
proved attractive to revolutionaries throughout Latin America and Africa.

In fact, the authors of The Black Book of Communism are unable to discern
anything remotely redeeming about a cause that once inspired many people of
conscience and that played a significant role in defeating both Nazism in
Europe and apartheid in South Africa. Although communism was a catastrophe that
perverted its followers' idealism, it sometimes honored that idealism--
something that cannot be said of fascism.

Unfortunately, even Nicolas Werth succumbs to the gratuitous finger-pointing of
the embittered ex-communist. His lament for the fate of the Vlasovtsky is
particularly bizarre. Named after their leader, Andrei Vlasov, the Vlasovtsky
were a group of Russian prisoners of war who defected to the German side in
1942. "On the basis of his anti-Stalinist convictions," writes Werth
credulously, "Vlasov agreed to collaborate with the Nazis to free his country
from the tyranny of the Bolsheviks." Vlasov paid with his life, and his 150,000
soldiers ended up wasting away in the gulag, an unhappy fate, to be sure. But
it's hard to get worked up, as Werth does, over the imprisonment of traitors
whose "anti-Stalinist convictions" led them to embrace the Nazis.

How is The Black Book of Communism going to play in post--Cold War America,
awash in both fresh evidence of communist espionage and recently declassified
documents revealing Washington's sponsorship of murderous dictatorships in
Guatemala, Chile, and Indonesia? A quick survey of American scholars of
communism suggests the book will not be quite the sensation it was in France.
"It's always a sign of stupidity when you approach a big subject by playing the
numbers game," says Arno Mayer, a historian at Princeton. "It just doesn't make
any sense to conflate all these figures without the least attention to social,
political, and cultural contexts." The Harvard historian Charles Maier, though
more partial to the book's treatment of the communist experience, is also
troubled by Courtois's use of numbers: "If you consider communism as a
monolithic phenomenon, naturally you're going to get a higher body count. After
all, there's only one Nazi regime, a regime created in the name of the German
people and race, whereas communism is based on an ideology that claims
universalism and extends from Russia to Vietnam, China, Cuba."

Still, the most common reaction will probably be "Shocked, shocked," to quote
the weary Claude Rains in Casablanca. As Maier observes, there is something
strangely provincial about this ostensibly global assault on communism: "What's
curious to me is how the French discover the horrors of communism every twenty
years or so. First it was the debate over the trials in the 1950s, then it was
the film based on Arthur London's memoir The Confession, which the French
intellectuals lined up dutifully to see. Then came the new philosophers, and,
wow, they discovered this stuff was bad news. And now Courtois. So my first
reaction in seeing this is to ask, 'What's new?'"

Maier is probably right, but the French discussion shows no signs of abating
anytime soon. The Black Book of Communism has whipped French intellectuals into
a frenzy of reflection over the meaning of the Bolshevik revolution, which is
deeply intertwined in the memory of the left with their own Revolution of 1789.
Spin-offs--"satellite books," Le Monde calls them--are either already here or
on their way, including Le Malheur du siècle, Twenty-Five Reflections on
Totalitarianism in the Twentieth Century, and, of course, The Black Book of
Capitalism.

Adam Shatz is a contributing writer to Lingua Franca.

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