**

Vladimir Lenin’s
Left-Wing Communism: an Infantile Disorder The Struggle Against Which
Enemies Within the Working-Class Movement
Helped Bolshevism Develop, Gain Strength, and Become Steeled
------------------------------



First and foremost, the struggle against opportunism which in 1914
definitely developed into social-chauvinism and definitely sided with the
bourgeoisie, against the proletariat. Naturally, this was Bolshevism’s
principal enemy within the working-class movement. It still remains the
principal enemy on an international scale. The Bolsheviks have been devoting
the greatest attention to this enemy. This aspect of Bolshevik activities is
now fairly well known abroad too.

It was, however, different with Bolshevism’s other enemy within the
working-class movement. Little is known in other countries of the fact that
Bolshevism took shape, developed and became steeled in the long years of
struggle against *petty*-*bourgeois revolutionism*, which smacks of
anarchism, or borrows something from the latter and, in all essential
matters, does not measure up to the conditions and requirements of a
consistently proletarian class struggle. Marxist theory has established—and
the experience of all European revolutions and revolutionary movements has
fully confirmed—that the petty proprietor, the small master (a social type
existing on a very extensive and even mass scale in many European
countries), who, under capitalism, always suffers oppression and very
frequently a most acute and rapid deterioration in his conditions of life,
and even ruin, easily goes to revolutionary extremes, but is incapable of
perseverance, organisation, discipline and steadfastness. A petty bourgeois
driven to frenzy by the horrors of capitalism is a social phenomenon which,
like anarchism, is characteristic of all capitalist countries. The
instability of such revolutionism, its barrenness, and its tendency to turn
rapidly into submission, apathy, phantasms, and even a frenzied infatuation
with one bourgeois fad or another—all this is common knowledge. However, a
theoretical or abstract recognition of these truths does not at all rid
revolutionary parties of old errors, which always crop up at unexpected
occasions, in somewhat new forms, in a hitherto unfamiliar garb or
surroundings, in an unusual—a more or less unusual—situation.

Anarchism was not infrequently a kind of penalty for the opportunist sins of
the working-class movement. The two monstrosities complemented each other.
And if in Russia—despite the more petty-bourgeois composition of her
population as compared with the other European countries—anarchism’s
influence was negligible during the two revolutions (of 1905 and 1917) and
the preparations for them, this should no doubt stand partly to the credit
of Bolshevism, which has always waged a most ruthless and uncompromising
struggle against opportunism. I say "partly", since of still greater
importance in weakening anarchism’s influence in Russia was the circumstance
that in the past (the seventies of the nineteenth century) it was able to
develop inordinately and to reveal its absolute erroneousness, its unfitness
to serve the revolutionary class as a guiding theory.

When it came into being in 1903, Bolshevism took over the tradition of a
ruthless struggle against petty-bourgeois, semi-anarchist (or
dilettante-anarchist) revolutionism, a tradition which had always existed in
revolutionary Social-Democracy and had become particularly strong in our
country during the years 1900-03, when the foundations for a mass party of
the revolutionary proletariat were being laid in Russia. Bolshevism took
over and carried on the struggle against a party which, more than any other,
expressed the tendencies of petty-bourgeois revolutionism, namely, the
"Socialist-Revolutionary" Party, and waged that struggle on three main
issues. First, that party, which rejected Marxism, stubbornly refused (or,
it might be more correct to say: was unable) to understand the need for a
strictly objective appraisal of the class forces and their alignment, before
taking any political action. Second, this party considered itself
particularly "revolutionary", or "Left", because of its recognition of
individual terrorism, assassination—something that we Marxists emphatically
rejected. It was, of course, only on grounds of expediency that we rejected
individual terrorism, whereas people who were capable of condemning "on
principle" the terror of the Great French Revolution, or, in general, the
terror employed by a victorious revolutionary party which is besieged by the
bourgeoisie of the whole world, were ridiculed and laughed to scorn by
Plekhanov in 1900-03, when he was a Marxist and a revolutionary. Third, the
"Socialist-Revolutionaries," thought it very "Left" to sneer at the
comparatively insignificant opportunist sins of the German Social-Democratic
Party, while they themselves imitated the extreme opportunists of that
party, for example, on the agrarian question, or on the question of the
dictatorship of the proletariat.

History, incidentally, has now confirmed on a vast and world-wide scale the
opinion we have always advocated, namely, that German
*revolutionary*Social-Democracy (note that as far back as 1900-03
Plekhanov demanded
Bernstein’s expulsion from the Party, and in 1913 the Bolsheviks, always
continuing this tradition, exposed Legien’s
[10]<http://www.marxists.org/archive/lenin/works/1920/lwc/ch04.htm#fw10>baseness,
vileness and treachery)
*came closest* to being the party the revolutionary proletariat needs in
order to achieve victory. Today, in 1920, after all the ignominious failures
and crises of the war period and the early post-war years, it can be plainly
seen that, of all the Western parties, the German revolutionary
Social-Democrats produced the finest leaders, and recovered and gained new
strength more rapidly than the others did. This may be seen in the instances
both of the Spartacists
[11]<http://www.marxists.org/archive/lenin/works/1920/lwc/ch04.htm#fw11>and
the Left, proletarian wing of the Independent Social-Democratic Party of
Germany, which is waging an incessant struggle against the opportunism and
spinelessness of the Kautskys, Hilferdings, Ledebours and Crispiens. If we
now cast a glance to take in a complete historical period, namely, from the
Paris Commune to the first Socialist Soviet Republic, we shall find that
Marxism’s attitude to anarchism in general stands out most definitely and
unmistakably. In the final analysis, Marxism proved to be correct, and
although the anarchists rightly pointed to the opportunist views on the
state prevalent among most of the socialist parties, it must be said, first,
that this opportunism was connected with the distortion, and even deliberate
suppression, of Marx’s views on the state (in my book, *The State and
Revolution*, I pointed out that for thirty-six years, from 1875 to 1911,
Bebel withheld a letter by Engels
[12]<http://www.marxists.org/archive/lenin/works/1920/lwc/ch04.htm#fw12>,
which very clearly, vividly, bluntly and definitively exposed the
opportunism of the current Social-Democratic views on the state); second,
that the rectification of these opportunist views, and the recognition of
Soviet power and its superiority to bourgeois parliamentary democracy
proceeded most rapidly and extensively among those trends in the socialist
parties of Europe and America that were most Marxist.

The struggle that Bolshevism waged against "Left" deviations within its own
Party assumed particularly large proportions on two occasions: in 1908, on
the question of whether or not to participate in a most reactionary
"parliament" and in the legal workers’ societies, which were being
restricted by most reactionary laws; and again in 1918 (the Treaty of
Brest-Litovsk 
[13]<http://www.marxists.org/archive/lenin/works/1920/lwc/ch04.htm#fw13>),
on the question of whether one "compromise" or another was permissible.

In 1908 the "Left" Bolsheviks were expelled from our Party for stubbornly
refusing to understand the necessity of participating in a most reactionary
"parliament". 
[14]<http://www.marxists.org/archive/lenin/works/1920/lwc/ch04.htm#fw14>The
"Lefts"—among whom there were many splendid revolutionaries who
subsequently were (and still are) commendable members of the Communist
Party—based themselves particularly on the successful experience of the 1905
boycott. When, in August 1905, the tsar proclaimed the convocation of a
consultative "parliament",
[15]<http://www.marxists.org/archive/lenin/works/1920/lwc/ch04.htm#fw15>the
Bolsheviks called for its boycott, in the teeth of all the opposition
parties and the Mensheviks, and the "parliament" was in fact swept away by
the revolution of October 1905.
[16]<http://www.marxists.org/archive/lenin/works/1920/lwc/ch04.htm#fw16>The
boycott proved correct at the time, not because nonparticipation in
reactionary parliaments is correct in general, but because we accurately
appraised the objective situation, which was leading to the rapid
development of the mass strikes first into a political strike, then into a
revolutionary strike, and finally into an uprising. Moreover, the struggle
centred at that time on the question of whether the convocation of the first
representative assembly should be left to the tsar, or an attempt should be
made to wrest its convocation from the old regime. When there was not, and
could not be, any certainty that the objective situation was of a similar
kind, and when there was no certainty of a similar trend and the same rate
of development, the boycott was no longer correct.

The Bolsheviks’ boycott of "parliament" in 1905 enriched the revolutionary
proletariat with highly valuable political experience and showed that, when
legal and illegal parliamentary and non-parliamentary forms of struggle are
combined, it is sometimes useful and even essential to reject parliamentary
forms. It would, however, be highly erroneous to apply this experience
blindly, imitatively and uncritically to other conditions and other
situations. The Bolsheviks, boycott of the Duma in 1906 was a mistake
although a minor and easily remediable one.
[*]<http://www.marxists.org/archive/lenin/works/1920/lwc/ch04.htm#fw*>The
boycott of the Duma in 1907, 1908 and subsequent years was a most
serious error and difficult to remedy, because, on the one hand, a very
rapid rise of the revolutionary tide and its conversion into an uprising was
not to be expected, and, on the other hand, the entire historical situation
attendant upon the renovation of the bourgeois monarchy called for legal and
illegal activities being combined. Today, when we look back at this fully
completed historical period, whose connection with subsequent periods has
now become quite clear, it becomes most obvious that in 1908-14 the
Bolsheviks *could not have* preserved (let alone strengthened and developed)
the core of the revolutionary party of the proletariat, had they not upheld,
in a most strenuous struggle, the viewpoint that it was *obligatory* to
combine legal and illegal forms of struggle, and that it was *obligatory* to
participate even in a most reactionary parliament and in a number of other
institutions hemmed in by reactionary laws (sick benefit societies, etc.).

In 1918 things did not reach a split. At that time the "Left" Communists
formed only a separate group or "faction" within our Party, and that not for
long. In the same year, 1918, the most prominent representatives of "Left
Communism", for example, Comrades Radek and Bukharin, openly acknowledged
their error. It had seemed to them that the Treaty of Brest-Litovsk was a
compromise with the imperialists, which was inexcusable on principle and
harmful to the party of the revolutionary proletariat. It was indeed a
compromise with the imperialists, but it was a compromise which, under the
circumstances, *had to be made.*

Today, when I hear our tactics in signing the Brest-Litovsk Treaty being
attacked by the Socialist-Revolutionaries, for instance, or when I hear
Comrade Lansbury say, in a conversation with me, "Our British trade union
leaders say that if it was permissible for the Bolsheviks to compromise, it
is permissible for them to compromise too", I usually reply by first of all
giving a simple and "popular" example:

Imagine that your car is held up by armed bandits. You hand them over your
money, passport, revolver and car. In return you are rid of the pleasant
company of the bandits. That is unquestionably a compromise. "*Do ut des*"
(I "give" you money, fire-arms and a car "so that you give" me the
opportunity to get away from you with a whole skin). It would, however, be
difficult to find a sane man who would declare such a compromise to be
"inadmissible on principle", or who would call the compromiser an accomplice
of the bandits (even though the bandits might use the car and the firearms
for further robberies). Our compromise with the bandits of German
imperialism was just that kind of compromise.

But when, in 1914-18 and then in 1918-20, the Mensheviks and
Socialist-Revolutionaries in Russia, the Scheidemannites (and to a large
extent the Kautskyites) in Germany, Otto Bauer and Friedrich Adler (to say
nothing of the Renners and Co.) in Austria, the Renaudels and Longuets and
Co. in France, the Fabians, the Independents and the Labourites in Britain
entered into *compromises* with the bandits of their own bourgeoisie, and
sometimes of the "Allied" bourgeoisie, and *against* the revolutionary
proletariat of their own countries, all these gentlemen were actually acting
as *accomplices in banditry.*

The conclusion is clear: to reject compromises "on principle", to reject the
permissibility of compromises in general, no matter of what kind, is
childishness, which it is difficult even to consider seriously. A political
leader who desires to be useful to the revolutionary proletariat must be
able to distinguish *concrete* cases of compromises that are inexcusable and
are an expression of opportunism and *treachery;* he must direct all the
force of criticism, the full intensity of merciless exposure and relentless
war, against *these concrete* compromises, and not allow the past masters of
"practical" socialism and the parliamentary Jesuits to dodge and wriggle out
of responsibility by means of disquisitions on "compromises in general". It
is in this way that the "leaders,, of the British trade unions, as well as
of the Fabian society and the "Independent" Labour Party, dodge
responsibility *for the treachery they have perpetrated’* for having made *a
compromise* that is really tantamount to the worst kind of opportunism,
treachery and betrayal.

There are different kinds of compromises. One must be able to analyse the
situation and the concrete conditions of each compromise, or of each variety
of compromise. One must learn to distinguish between a man who has given up
his money and fire-arms to bandits so as to lessen the evil they can do and
to facilitate their capture and execution, and a man who gives his money and
fire-arms to bandits so as to share in the loot. In politics this is by no
means always as elementary as it is in this childishly simple example.
However, anyone who is out to think up for the workers some kind of recipe
that will provide them with cut-and-dried solutions for all contingencies,
or promises that the policy of the revolutionary proletariat will never come
up against difficult or complex situations, is simply a charlatan.

To leave no room for misinterpretation, I shall attempt to outline, if only
very briefly, several fundamental rules for the analysis of concrete
compromises.

The party which entered into a compromise with the German imperialists by
signing the Treaty of Brest-Litovsk had been evolving its internationalism
in practice ever since the end of 1914. It was not afraid to call for the
defeat of the tsarist monarchy and to condemn "defence of country" in a war
between two imperialist robbers. The parliamentary representatives of this
party preferred exile in Siberia to taking a road leading to ministerial
portfolios in a bourgeois government. The revolution that overthrew tsarism
and established a democratic republic put this party to a new and tremendous
test—it did not enter into any agreements with its "own" imperialists, but
prepared and brought about their overthrow. When it had assumed political
power, this party did not leave a vestige of either landed or capitalist
ownership. After making public and repudiating the imperialists’ secret
treaties, this party proposed peace to *all* nations, and yielded to the
violence of the Brest-Litovsk robbers only after the Anglo-French
imperialists had torpedoed the conclusion of a peace, and after the
Bolsheviks had done everything humanly possible to hasten the revolution in
Germany and other countries. The absolute correctness of this compromise,
entered into by such a party in such a situation, is becoming ever clearer
and more obvious with every day.

The Mensheviks and the Socialist-Revolutionaries in Russia (like all the
leaders of the Second International throughout the world, in 1914-20) began
with treachery—by directly or indirectly justifying "defence of country",
i.e., the defence *of their own* predatory bourgeoisie. They continued their
treachery by entering into a coalition with the bourgeoisie *of their
own*country, and fighting, together with
*their own* bourgeoisie, against the revolutionary proletariat of their own
country. Their bloc, first with Kerensky and the Cadets, and then with
Kolchak and Denikin in Russia—like the bloc of their *confreres* abroad with
the bourgeoisie of *their* respective countries—was in fact desertion to the
side of the bourgeoisie, against the proletariat. From beginning to end, *
their* compromise with the bandits of imperialism meant their becoming *
accomplices* in imperialist banditry.
------------------------------
Footnotes

[10] <http://www.marxists.org/archive/lenin/works/1920/lwc/ch04.htm#bk10>Lenin
is referring probably to his article "What Should Not Be Copied from
the Gennan Labour Movement", published in the Bolshevik magazine *
Prosveshcheniye* in April 1914 (see present edition, Vol. 20, pp. 254-58).
Here Lenin exposed the treacherous behaviour of Karl Legien, the German
Social-Democrat who in 1912, in addressing the Congress of the U.S.A.,
praised U.S. official circles and bourgeois parties.

[11] <http://www.marxists.org/archive/lenin/works/1920/lwc/ch04.htm#bk11> *
Spartacists*—members of the Spartacus League founded in January 1916, during
the First World War, under the leadership of Karl Liebknecht, Rosa
Luxemburg, Franz Mehring and Clara Zetkin. The Spartacists conducted
revolutionary anti-war propaganda among the masses, and exposed the
expansionist policy of German imperialism and the treachery of the
Social-Democratic leaders. However, the Spartacists—the German Left wing—did
not get rid of their semi-Menshevik errors on the most important questions
of theory and tactics. A criticism of the German Left-wing’s mistakes is
given in Lenin’s works "On Junius’s Pamphlet" (see present edition, Vol. 22,
pp. 297-305), "A Caricature of Marxism and Imperialist Economism" (see Vol.
23, pp. 28-76) and elsewhere.

In April 1917, the Spartacists joined the Centrist Independent
Social-Democratic Party of Germany, preserving their organisational
independence. After the November 1918 revolution in Germany, the Spartacists
broke away from the "Independents", and in December of the same year founded
the Communist Party of Germany.

[12] <http://www.marxists.org/archive/lenin/works/1920/lwc/ch04.htm#bk12>The
reference is to Frederick Engels’s letter to August Bebel, written on
March 18-28, 1875.

[13] <http://www.marxists.org/archive/lenin/works/1920/lwc/ch04.htm#bk13>The
Treaty
of Brest 
Litovsk<http://www.marxists.org/history/ussr/government/foreign-relations/1918/March/3a.htm>was
signed between Soviet Russia and the powers of the Quadruple Alliance
(Germany, Austria-Hungary, Bulgaria and Turkey) on March 3, 1918, at Brest
Litovsk and ratified on March 15 by the Fourth (Extraordinary) All-Russia
Congress of Soviets. The peace terms were very harsh for Soviet Russia.
According to the treaty, Poland, almost all the Baltic states, and part of
Byelorussia were placed under the control of Germany and Austria-Hungary.
The Ukraine was separated from Soviet Russia, becoming a state dependent on
Germany. Turkey gained control of the cities of Kars, Batum and Ardagan. In
August 1918, Germany imposed on Soviet Russia a supplementary treaty and a
financial agreement containing new and exorbitant demands.

The treaty prevented further needless loss of life, and gave the R.S.F.S.R.
the ability to shift it’s attention to urgent domestic matters. The signing
of the Treaty of Brest-Litovsk promoted the struggle for peace among the
broad masses of all the warring nations, and denounced the war as a struggle
between imperialist powers. On November 13, 1918, following the November
revolution in Germany--the overthrow of the monarchist regime—the All-Russia
Central Executive Committee annulled the predatory Treaty of Brest-Litovsk.

[14] <http://www.marxists.org/archive/lenin/works/1920/lwc/ch04.htm#bk14>The
reference is to the otzovists
*[the term otzovist derives from the Russian verb "otozvat" meaning "to
recall".*—*Ed.]* and ultimatumists, the struggle against whom developed in
1908, and in 1909 resulted in the expulsion of A. Bogdanov, the otzovist
leader, from the Bolshevik Party. Behind a screen of revolutionary phrases,
the otzovists demanded the recall of the Social-Democrat deputies from the
Third Duma and the cessation of activities in legal organisations such as
the trade unions, the co-operatives, etc. Ultimatumism was a variety of
otzovism. The ultimatumists did not realise the necessity of conducting
persistent day-by-day work with the Social-Democrat deputies, so as to make
them consistent revolutionary parliamentarians. They proposed that an
ultimatum should be presented to the Social-Democratic group in the Duma,
demanding their absolute subordination to decisions of the Party’s Central
Committee; should the deputies fail to comply, they were to be recalled from
the Duma. A conference of the enlarged editorial board of the Bolshevik *paper
Proletary*, held in June 1909, pointed out in its decision that "Bolshevism,
as a definite trend in the R.S.D.L.P., had nothing in common either with
otzovism or with ultimatumism". The conference urged the Bolsheviks "to wage
a most resolute struggle against these deviations from the path of
revolutionary Marxism" (*KPSS v rezolutsiyakh i resheniyakh syezdov*,
*konferentsii
i plenumov TsK* [*The C.P.S.U. in the Resolutions and Decisions of Its
Congresses*, *Conferences and Plenums of the Central Committee*], Part I,
1954, p. 221).

[15] <http://www.marxists.org/archive/lenin/works/1920/lwc/ch04.htm#bk15> On
August 6 (19), 1905, the tsar’s manifesto was made public, proclaiming the
law on the setting up of the Duma and the election procedures. This body was
known as the Bulygin Duma, after A.G. Bulygin, the Minister of the Interior,
whom the tsar entrusted with drawing up the Duma draft. According to the
latter, the Duma had no legislative functions, but could merely discuss
certain questions as a consultative body under the tsar. The Bolsheviks
called upon the workers and peasants to actively boycott the Bulygin Duma,
and concentrate all agitation on the slogans of an armed uprising, a
revolutionary army, and a provisional revolutionary government. The boycott
campaign against the Bulygin Duma was used by the Bolsheviks to mobilise all
the revolutionary forces, organise mass political strikes, and prepare for
an armed uprising. Elections to the Bulygin Duma were not held and the
government was unable to convene it. The Duma was swept away by the mounting
tide of the revolution and the all-Russia October political strike of 1905.

[16] <http://www.marxists.org/archive/lenin/works/1920/lwc/ch04.htm#bk16>Lenin
is referring to the
*all*-*Russia October political strike of 1905* during the first Russian
revolution. This strike, which involved over two million people, was
conducted under the slogan of the overthrow of the tsarist autocracy, an
active boycott of the Bulygin Duma, the summoning of a Constituent Assembly
and the establishment of a democratic republic. The all-Russia political
strike showed the strength of the working-class movement, fostered the
development of the revolutionary struggle in the countryside, the army and
the navy. The October strike led the proletariat to the December armed
uprising. Concerning the October strike, see the article by V. I. Lenin ’The
All-Russia Political Strike".

[*] <http://www.marxists.org/archive/lenin/works/1920/lwc/ch04.htm#bk*> What
applies to individuals also applies—with necessary modifications—to politics
and parties. It is not he who makes no mistakes that is intelligent. There
are no such men, nor can there be. It is he whose errors are not very grave
and who is able to rectify them easily and quickly that is intelligent.

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