THE MARXIST-LENINIST RESEARCH BUREAU
Report No. 11

THE ALEKSANDR SMIRNOV CASE (1928-38)




The Formation of the Smirnov Group (1928-29)

In February 1928, Aleksandr Smirnov*, who had been People's Commissar of agriculture in the Russian Republic, was promoted to the position of Secretary of the Central Committee of the CPSU:

and shortly afterwards Smirnoy took the initiative in forming an opposition group. At his public trial in March 1938, the defendant Izaak Zelensky*, a former agent of the tsarist secret service, admitted: The A. P. Smirnov group: but separate from the Bukharinist leadership: Their programme included the dissolution of most collective farms, the idependence of the trade unions from Party leadership and the removal of Stalin from the post of General Secretary of the CPSU: The defendant Izaak Zelensky admitted at the 1938 treason trial that the programme of the A. P. Smirnov group also included wrecking and terrorism: From the outset, the A. P. Smirnov group was underground and illegal: Among prominent members of the A. P. Smirnov group were Nikolay Uglanov* (discussed in the paper on the Ryutin Affair) and Lev Karakhan* - later exposed as a German agent, as was admitted by defendants in the 1938 treason trial: The importance of the A. P. Smirnoy affair lay, firstly, in the fact that it embraced senior officials who had never before been associated with any opposition: and, secondly, in the fact that it: The CCICCC Resolution on the A. P. Smirnov Affair (1933)

In January 1933, the A.P. Smirnov group was condemned at a joint plenary meeting of the Central Committee and Central Control Commission of the Party. Bukharin dissociated himself from the group:

A resolution of the Plenum charged the group with forming an underground opposition group: Nevertheless, the members of the group: The Plenum removed Smirnov from the Central Committee: The Expulsion and Trial of A. P. Smirnov (1934-35) In December 1934.

Nonetheless Smirnov was expelled from the Party in 1934:

Early in 1935 Smirnov was arrested, tried for and found guilty of anti-Soviet activity and sentenced to imprisonment. He died in imprisonment in 1938.

The Trials of Uglanov and Karakhan (1936-37)

In 1936,

while Karakhan was tried in 1937 for treason, found guilty and executed:


 Published by: THE MARXIST-LENINIST RESEARCH BUREAU, Ilford, Essex,


BIOGRAPHICAL NOTES

KARAKHAN, Lev N., Soviet revisionist lawyer and diplomat (1889-1937); RSFSR People's Commissar of Foreign Affairs (1918-20, 1922); USSR Ambassador to china (1923-26); USSR Deputy People's Commissar of Foreign Affairs (l93~ 34); USSR Ambassador to Italy (1934-37); arrested, tried for and found guilty of espionage and treason, sentenced to death and executed (1937).

SMIRNOV, Aleksandr P., Soviet revisionist politician (1877-1938); RSFSR People's Comissar of Agriculture1 and simultaneously Secretary-General, Peasants' International (1923-28); RSFSR, Deputy Premier (1928-30); Secretary, Central Committee, CPSU (1928-30); expelled from Party (1934); arrested, tried for and found guilty of anti-Soviet activity and sentenced to imprisonment (1935); died in imprisonment (1938).

UGLANOV, Nikolay A., Soviet revisionist politician (1886-1940); secretary, Petrograd Party Committee (1921-22); secretary, Nizhny Novgorod Party Committee (1922-24); secretary, Moscow Party Committee (1924-28); USSR People's Commmissar of Labour (1928-30); expelled from Party (1932); reinstated in Party (1934); re-expelled from Party, arrested, tried for and found guilty of anti-Soviet activity, and sentenced to imprisonment (1936); died in imprisonment (1938).

ZELENSKY, Izaak A., Soviet revisionist politician (1890-1938); Secretary, Moscow Party Committee (1920-21, 1924-31); Secretary, Central Asian Party Bureau (1924-31); Chairman, Central Union of Consumer Co-operatives (1931-37); arrested (1937); tried for and found guilty of treason, sentenced to death and executed (1938).



BIBLIOGRAPHY

AVTORKHANOV, Abdurakhman: 'Stalin and the Soviet Communist Party: A Study in the Technology of Power'; Munich; 1959.
COHEN, Stephen F.: 'Bukharin and the Bolshevik Revolution: A Political
Biography: 1888-1938'; London; 1974.
CONQUEST, Robert: 'The Great Terror; Stalin's Purge of the Thirties'; London;
1968.
DANIELS, Robert V.: 'The Conscience of the Revolution'; Cambridge (USA); 1960.
GREY, Ian: 'Stalin: Man of History'; London; 1979.
McNEAL, Robert H.: 'Stalin: Man and Ruler'; Basingstoke; 1988.
MEDVEDEV, Roy A.: 'Let History Judge: The Origins and Consequences of Stalinism'; London; 1972.
ISCHULZ, Heinrich E., URBAN, Paul K. & LEBED, Andrew I. (Eds.): 'Who was Who in the USSR: 'Biographic Dictionary'; Methuen (USA); 1972.
Report of Court Proceedings in the Case of the Anti-Soviet 'Bloc of Rights and Trotskyites'; Moscow; 1938.



FOR OTHER MARXIST LENINIST RESEARCH BUREAU STUDIES ON SOVIET ESPIONAGE CASES:
KIROV
RYUTIN
SMIRNOV
SYRTSOV-LOMINADZE AFFAIR
"INDUSTRIAL PARTY'


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