The Mail on Sunday

NASTY TRUTH ABOUT LENIN’S REVOLUTION

Russia: Revolution And Civil War 1917-1921 Antony Beevor W&N £30

- Peter Hitchens

In the late summer of 1914 a small, nasty man was arrested as an enemy alien in a remote corner of the Austrian empire. Six years later that same man, by then much nastier, was the murderous ruler of one sixth of the Earth’s surface, and the Austrian empire had ceased to exist.

The man was Vladimir Lenin (right). He hated Russia, his own country, and he invented the ruthless modern form of Communism that went on to tyrannise Europe and Asia. He was the bitter enemy of all empires except his own.

Yet the Austrian and German empires thought they could use him. They appreciate­d his efforts to promote Ukrainian nationalis­m. Then, these ultra-conservati­ve monarchist­s sprang him from prison and conveyed him to safety in neutral Switzerlan­d.

Later, they arranged for him and his clique of Bolshevik agitators (whom they would normally have arrested on sight) to return to Russia across Germany. And there they supplied his movement with nine tons of gold to help him ruin Russia. Thanks to them he was able to overthrow Russia’s first liberal democracy in a ruthless putsch, which was the beginning of 70 years of police-state terror.

In return for these favours, Lenin pulled Russia out of the First World

War, so allowing Germany to send huge numbers of troops to the Western Front. There they came within an inch of breaking through to the Channel and defeating Britain and France. He also handed Germany vast slices of Russian territory, not least Ukraine, important then, as now, as a pivot of power.

All this is known, including the role in it of the most sinister and cynical secret agent ever known, the weirdly named Parvus Helphand. Yet you will barely find a word of this in Antony Beevor’s new book about the Russian Revolution. Mr Beevor is a fine historian – diligent, conscienti­ous and knowledgea­ble, with a long list of excellent books behind him. This volume is well researched and full of telling detail. I have read every word of it. But, like so many before him, he has not felt quite able to acknowledg­e the role of Germany and its Austrian ally in the deliberate crushing of Russian freedom and the creation of the

Soviet prison state.

For many decades, widespread Leftwing admiration for the Soviet Union made it hard to tell the squalid truth, that Lenin was a German agent and the much-romanticis­ed ‘revolution’ a miserable foreign-inspired coup d’etat.

Now there is a new problem. PostCommun­ist Russia, trying to grope its way back to the lost democracy of 1917, was dismissed as a pariah state by Western neo-conservati­ves such as Paul Wolfowitz long before Vladimir Putin launched his stupid, barbaric war in Ukraine. Russia and Russians are increasing­ly portrayed as paranoid and obsessed with plots to encircle and attack them. If the truth were better known, perhaps more people would realise that Russians have good reason to fear for their security and stability.

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