Russia
The upward curve of the strike movement in Russia Print E-mail
By Misha Steklov in Moscow   
Wednesday, 14 May 2008
Although still in its early stages, there is clearly a reawakening of the Russian working class taking place with a growing number of strikes taking place. Once this picks up steam at some later stage it will cut across all the confusion and demoralisation that have been dominant features in the past.
 
Russia: A miners’ strike in Severouralsk Print E-mail
By In Defence of Marxism   
Wednesday, 14 May 2008
An example of a very militant strike in Severouralsk, one of a series in the recent period. The miners were determined but the bosses were ruthless. This experience is another indication of growing working class militancy in Russia.
 
Russia: An interview with striking train drivers, summing up their experience Print E-mail
By In Defence of Marxism   
Wednesday, 14 May 2008
We provide an interesting interview with Moscow train drivers who were recently on strike, that reveals the terrible conditions imposed on the workers but also the militant mood of the organizers.
 
Russian Presidential Elections: a caricature of bourgeois democracy Print E-mail
By Misha Steklov in Moscow   
Tuesday, 04 March 2008
Officially Putin's right hand man, Medvedev, has won the Presidential elections with over 70% of the vote on a turnout of more than 70%. But no one seriously believes this. Many Russians have commented on the meaninglessness of the elections. Putin will remain the boss. However, for all the pomp that surrounds Putin there is a strong undercurrent of hatred against capitalism. The fact that the CPRF yet again showed that it is the only opposition to the Kremlin, confirms this.
 
Molecular changes in Russian society and the CPRF Print E-mail
By Misha Steklov in Moscow   
Tuesday, 04 March 2008
As background the Presidential elections we publish an analysis of the December parliamentary elections. These reflected political consolidation following on from economic stabilization after the financial crisis of 1998. These new relations are now in turn leading to a reaction. The modest gains of the CPRF reveal both the potential for an organized opposition to Russian capitalism and the path that this opposition will take in the mass organizations.
 
Russian workers begin to organize fight back against capitalism Print E-mail
By Besedoval Yevgenii Utkin   
Tuesday, 04 March 2008
We have received a very interesting interview with A. Etmanov, the leader of the trade union of Ford (Saint Petersburg). This reveals many things, not just about the Ford strike but about the state of the Russian workers' movement, the struggle of the trade unions and their attitude towards capitalism and the political parties.
 
Russian Ford workers – a beacon to the working class as a whole Print E-mail
By Tom Rollings   
Monday, 11 February 2008
Last year's strike at the Russian Ford plant marked an important turning point for the Russian labour movement. The Russian economy is growing and this has strengthened sections of the working class. With this growing strength comes a militant mood. At some point this will lead to a wider movement of the Russian working class and with it will come important political repercussions.
 
Russia: Key strike at the Ford plant in Leningrad (St. Petersburg) Print E-mail
By Alexey Petrov, 4 December 2007   
Wednesday, 12 December 2007
The strike at the Ford plant in St. Petersburg is extremely symptomatic. After the collapse of the Russian economy in the 1990s now we have an upturn. With it comes also a renewed confidence of the working class. The victory of the Russian Ford workers would strengthen enormously the whole of the Russian working class. They need your help.
 
50th Anniversary of the Sputnik launch: Soviet science and the advances of the planned economy Print E-mail
By Rob Lyon   
Friday, 05 October 2007
50 years ago on 4 October 1957, the Soviet Union launched the world’s first artificial satellite into space - Sputnik 1. The press may scoff now at the impact of the launch and dismiss the achievements of the Soviet economy, but at the time the strategists of capitalism were genuinely alarmed, if not terrified at the remarkable advances of the Soviet Union.
 
The death of Yeltsin: the end of an epoch and the birth of a new one Print E-mail
By Misha Steklov in Moscow   
Tuesday, 24 April 2007
Yeltsin was a symbol for the capitalist system that emerged following the capitalist counter-revolution he headed. The fact that his death yesterday was met with indifference in Moscow shows just how weak support for capitalism is in the capital, a city where unlike in the provinces a layer of the population is better off than in Soviet times.
 
Kondopogi – past and future Print E-mail
By By B. F. in Russia   
Monday, 20 November 2006
In the Russian political dictionary Kondopoga has emerged as a new negative concept. Over a short period we have already experienced a number of such events, and everywhere along the same lines. Mass disturbances under nationalist slogans, which stemmed from everyday conflicts, xenophobic pogroms, public calls “to clear off the blacks” – all this is Kondopoga.
 
The crisis in the Russian left Print E-mail
By Misha Steklov in Moscow   
Monday, 20 November 2006
The collapse of the Soviet Union was not the end of Marxism. On the contrary it confirmed what the Marxists had stated long ago, that the bureaucracy was a threat to the very survival of the planned economy. But there was no Marxist party on the scene that could offer the workers an alternative. Thus the whole system imploded with devastating effects on industry and with it the working class, which was thrown back decades, divided and atomised. It became a passive force, which explains the impasse facing today’s Russian left. But now we can see the first signs of the working class beginning to come together again as a class.
 
Moscow picket against election falsifications in Mexico Print E-mail
By our correspondent in Moscow   
Monday, 14 August 2006
On Wednesday July 26 the supporters of the International Marxist Tendency in Moscow and comrades from Vpered organised a picket against electoral fraud in Mexico.
 
The big freeze in Russian-Ukrainian relations Print E-mail
By Misha Steklov in Moscow   
Monday, 30 January 2006
The recent conflict between Ukraine and Russia over the price of gas brought to the surface the contradictions in the Ukraine, a country which is being pulled towards the western sphere of influence. That was what the so-called Orange Revolution was about. Now the Ukraine people are disillusioned as they watch an international conflict for control of resources that stretches right across the former Soviet Union and beyond.
 
Raise solidarity with the Saint Petersburg Dockworkers' strike Print E-mail
By In Defence of Marxism   
Tuesday, 06 September 2005
A long standing dispute at the Saint Petersburg docks is escalating into what could be come an all-out strike. We have received a request for international solidarity. Please act now. Raise this in your union branch and send messages of solidarity.
 
Russia, from Revolution to Counter-Revolution Print E-mail
By Ted Grant   
Monday, 18 July 2005
This book, by Ted Grant and with a preface by Trotsky's grandson Esteban Volkov, which is in its final stages and will be approximately 500 pages long, covers the key developments in Russia since the Revolution right up to the present day. It traces the elimination of workers' democracy, the rise of Stalinism, the advances of planned economy and the eventual collapse of the bureaucratic system under Gorbachev. Using the method of Marxism, Ted Grant uncovers the contradictory developments that have shaped the Soviet Union over the last 70 years and finally led to its downfall. He also deals in detail with the present situation in Russia under Yeltsin and assesses the possibilities for a successful restoration of capitalism. Not since the publication of Trotsky's book "The Revolution Betrayed" in 1936 has such a detailed and comprehensive Marxist study of Russia been undertaken. If you want more info about the book please mail to: This e-mail address is being protected from spam bots, you need JavaScript enabled to view it . To purchase this book, click here.
 
The crisis in United Russia Print E-mail
By Misha Steklov in Moscow   
Wednesday, 15 June 2005
Putin is still holding on to his popularity among wide layers of Russian society. But his party, United Russia, is not doing so well. In a series of local elections it has done rather badly. This reflects a crisis within the Russian ruling elite. The Communist Party (CPRF) has made some gains, in spite of the total inertia of its leadership. Misha Steklov in Moscow looks at the situation facing the country.
 
The red army wins again Print E-mail
By Misha Steklov in Moscow   
Tuesday, 14 June 2005
Misha Steklov in Moscow comments on last month’s victory of the Russian team, CSKA (The Central Sporting Club of the Army) over Sporting Lisbon in the UEFA Cup final. “From the Taiga to the British seas, the red army is the strongest of all,” went the chorus of the fans. But only the words of the song reminded you of the club’s origins.
 
The Marxists at the recent Russian Social Forum Print E-mail
By Misha Steklov in Moscow   
Monday, 18 April 2005
We received this letter from our correspondent in Moscow on the recent Russian Social Forum.
 
Chechen leader Maskhadov assassinated – but nothing has been solved Print E-mail
By Misha Steklov in Moscow   
Friday, 11 March 2005
On March 8th, Aslan Maskhadov was killed. There are currently conflicting reports as to how Russian forces killed the recognised leader of Chechen resistance against the Russian state. His death has been painted as a personal victory for President Putin, who was compelled to admit the weaknesses of the Russian state following the Beslan tragedy. But there is still no end in sight for the war of attrition between Chechen independence fighters and the Russian army.
 
Russian politics after Beslan – something brewing down below Print E-mail
By Misha Steklov in Moscow   
Wednesday, 03 November 2004
In the aftermath of the Beslan massacre President Putin has used the pretext of the fight against terrorism to abolish the direct election of national deputies and regional governors. He has also introduced other measures which are an attempt to gain tight control over the state apparatus. But he is doing this as a growing disillusionments spreads among the Russian masses. At the moment this remains below the surface, but it must emerge in one form or another at some point.
 
In the aftermath of the storming of the school in Beslan Print E-mail
By Misha Steklov in Moscow   
Friday, 03 September 2004
We received this report shortly after the storming of the school in North Ossetia. It highlights the divide between the ordinary people of Beslan and the authorities, and also the responsibility of the Russian government in creating the conditions upon which terrorism flourishes. The barbarity of what happened in Beslan has struck the minds and hearts of millions of people around the world. The unfortunate thing is that all this will now be exploited by the Putins of this world, and by the Blairs and Bushes too. This barbaric act of individual terrorism will not serve the cause of the Chechen people.
 
The standoff in Chechnya continues Print E-mail
By Misha Steklov in Moscow   
Thursday, 02 September 2004
The events unfolding in Russia are of a dramatic nature. Gunmen are holding 350 children, parents and teachers in a school in Beslan, North Ossetia. The taking of these hostages is the latest in a series of attacks that have shaken Russia in the recent period. All this is a product of the ongoing conflict in Chechnya. Earlier this week there were new elections in Chechnya and another stooge of Moscow was elected president. This has not served to pacify the area.
 
Barbarism celebrates in the Caucasus Print E-mail
By A. Kramer   
Wednesday, 01 September 2004
It is clear that the Putin regime can't solve the problem of Chechnya. It is now slowly becoming a problem of all of the North Caucasus. The Russian army can't do anything about it, but Putin cannot put an end to the war either.
 
Russia: Students are driven out of their student residence Print E-mail
By In Defence of Marxism   
Tuesday, 31 August 2004
We have received this report from comrades in Russia as well as members of the Student's Residence Soviet and the Student's Union in St. Petersburg about a recent demonstration against the policies of the university administration.
See also in Russian:
Студентов и аспирантов выгоняют из общежитий
 
The split in the CPRF - Crisis in the Russian left movement Print E-mail
By A. Kramer   
Wednesday, 07 July 2004
Behind the recent split in the Communist Party of the Russian Federation (CPRF) lies the sinister hand of Putin. He wants to eliminate any kind of opposition on the left as he embarks on one of his most vicious attacks on the Russian workers. He will fail to destroy the CPRF, but the lessons for the left must be drawn.
 
Russia: Putin's plebiscite Print E-mail
By Fred Weston   
Thursday, 18 March 2004
In Sunday’s elections in Russia Putin won a “landslide victory”. No one was surprised at this. It was a foregone conclusion, as it was not really an election but a plebiscite in the tried and tested tradition of all Bonapartists. Putin had tried to eliminate all opposition parties. The only opposition party, however, that managed to muster a sizeable vote was the Communist Party. Fred Weston looks at the implications of this.
 
Putin's purge Print E-mail
By Alan Woods   
Wednesday, 25 February 2004
In a surprise broadcast address to the nation last Tuesday, just three weeks before the presidential election, Putin announced that he had sacked his government. The main aim was to get rid of the prime minister, and this has been accomplished. The short-term effect of these changes will therefore be to reinforce Putin and his Bonapartist regime. However, the “strong man” has feet of clay.
 
"We do not negotiate with terrorists. We destroy them." Print E-mail
By our Moscow correspondent   
Friday, 06 February 2004
A bomb exploded in the Moscow metro at 8:40 local time this morning, at the peak of rush-hour in the busiest underground system in the world. So far the number of casualties has reached 39, though this is bound to increase.  There will be neither lasting prosperity or peace for Russians or Chechens as long as capitalism and the national hatreds it breeds on both sides continue to exist.
 
Parliamentary Elections in Russia - Putin consolidates his Bonapartist regime Print E-mail
By our Moscow correspondent   
Wednesday, 10 December 2003
On Sunday December 7th, Russians went to the polls to choose representatives for the state Duma, the lower house of parliament. The figures given in business daily Kommersant, based on 97.87% of the total vote, are as follows: United Russia 222 seats, the CPRF 53, LDPR 38, Motherland 37, independent deputies 65, and deputies from political parties who were elected on a first past the post basis 16. This result gives Putin a free hand in controlling the parliament. It is another step towards the consolitation of a bonapartist regime.
 
Alan Woods speaks in Petersburg Print E-mail
By our Russian correspondent   
Wednesday, 15 October 2003
In the last week of September, the editor of marxist.com, Alan Woods participated in a speaking tour organised by the supporters of the Russian Marxist tendency, the Rabochaya Demokratiya (Workers’ Democracy) group.
 
The role of the masses during the October 1993 Moscow rebellion Print E-mail
By A. Kramer   
Monday, 06 October 2003
Ten years ago this month in Moscow (on October 3 and 4) the “White House” (as the Russian Parliament building is known) was bombed, and hundreds of people were killed. This was the civil war between President Yeltsin and the Parliament (the Supreme Soviet of the Russian Federation). Today the Russian authorities prefer not to remember those events, not just because of the bloody nature of what happened, but also because what happened back in 1993 questioned the legitimacy of the present Russian system.
 
Russia - Golden toilets Print E-mail
By In Defence of Marxism   
Wednesday, 02 July 2003
Lenin was said to have stated that under Communism the toilets would be lined with gold. His prediction seems to have been realised in present-day Russia- though in a way rather different to that which he originally envisaged.
 
Russia: The300th anniversary of St. Petersburg - a ruling class holiday. Print E-mail
By A. Kramer   
Monday, 16 June 2003
St. Petersburg - or Leningrad as it was known during Soviet times - is one of the most beautiful cities in Europe, but it is having a difficult time now. In 1991 during the "anti-communist" rising the city got back its old name of St. Petersburg and with this name trouble was being prepared for its people.
 
Russia after the war in Iraq Print E-mail
By Alan Woods   
Thursday, 29 May 2003
On May 16, Russian President Vladimir Putin delivered his state of the union address. In comparison with the triumphal statements of the past, it displayed unusual frankness about the country's problems. The truth of the matter is that capitalism has been a nightmare for the Russian people and the position of the masses is not improving, but getting worse.
 
Russia and America - "Peace is the continuation of war by other means" Print E-mail
By Alan Woods   
Tuesday, 27 May 2003
Clausewitz stated that war is the continuation of politics by other means. But in the present epoch peace is also the continuation of war by other means. As we predicted, the détente between Russia and America would not last for long. The underlying antagonisms flow from a real conflict of interest on a global scale.
 
Russia - the rich get richer and poor get poorer Print E-mail
By In Defence of Marxism   
Monday, 12 May 2003
 
The Moscow atrocity: ‘Chechnya and Palestine - two crimes of imperialism’ Print E-mail
By In Defence of Marxism   
Monday, 28 October 2002
An editorial statement on the recent events in Moscow and an article by A.Kramer in which he looks at the historical background to the Chechen conflict and compares it to the conflict in Israel/Palestine, outlining a socialist solution to the problem.
 
Russia: Solidarity with the struggle of the Borets collective farm workers Print E-mail
By Rabochiya Democratiya   
Wednesday, 14 August 2002
Recently the State Duma passed a law on the private ownership of land. The redivision of land is beginning all over Russia. The collective farms and state farms that are situated near big towns are subject to the greatest danger. This article highlights the situation at one farm near Moscow.
 
The USA, Russia and Europe: A "great historical breakthrough"? Print E-mail
By Alan Woods   
Friday, 31 May 2002
On May 24, 2002, in the Kremlin's gilded throne room, Putin and Bush signed an agreement reducing long-range nuclear weapons by two-thirds over ten years. As part of the deal with NATO, Russia and America were supposed to cooperate in Bush's plans to build a missile defence shield once the ABM treaty is scrapped in June. Immediately afterwards, the formation of the "NATO-Russia Council" in which was Russia is supposed to participate was announced to the world. Such an agreement between the old enemies Russia and America would have seemed utterly unthinkable just one year ago. Suddenly, the world seemed a more secure place. However, as Alan Woods explains, the relations between Russia, Europe and America are not what they appear to be.
 
Two Videos from Russia Print E-mail
By In Defence of Marxism   
Thursday, 02 May 2002
To view these you may need to install the DivX codec. The first is footage from the May Day demonstrations. It is from the bourgeois media, and shows the contingent from the Revolutionary Workers' Party on the march. Click here to play in Real Player or here to open the video normally. The second is footage of the protests in Voronezh on April 11. It shows the official demonstration called by the unions and the Communist Party. However the mood of the protestors was of tremendous anger, which suddenly boiled over. On the video you can see an old woman gets on to the platform and grabs the microphone. Working class women can be seen protesting angrily to the TV commentator that they cannot pay the increase in rent. The mood of desperation is palpable. The people break through the police lines to storm the governor's office. Click here to play in Real Player or here to open video normally.
 
The Revolution Betrayed - a Marxist Masterpiece Print E-mail
By Alan Woods   
Wednesday, 06 June 2001
The Revolution Betrayed is one of the most important Marxist texts of all time. It is the only serious Marxist analysis of what happened to the Russian Revolution after the death of Lenin. Without a thorough knowledge of this work, it is impossible to understand the reasons for the collapse of the Soviet Union and the events of the last ten years in Russia and on a world scale. For Marxists, the October Revolution of 1917 was the greatest single event in human history. If we exclude the brief but glorious episode of the Paris Commune, for the first time the working class succeeded in overthrowing its oppressors and at least began the task of the socialist transformation of society.
 
The New Information Policy of the Russian government Print E-mail
By Marina Lvova   
Wednesday, 14 March 2001
The active liberalization of the Russian economy is being carried out simultaneously with moves to strengthen the power of the state. The state is consolidating itself on all fronts, of which the media is one of the most important. The government, evidently, has unleashed a war for the restoration of its monopoly over the distribution and presentation of information.
 
The Lessons of Defeat: The New Russian Labour Code Print E-mail
By Ivan Lokh   
Wednesday, 14 February 2001
On February 1, Putin's government introduced new labour laws which curtail workers' rights. The laws were introduced in part by pressure from the IMF although Russia's bourgeoisie is not in the habit of respecting any laws, preferring to settle disputes with workers with the fists of their security guards.
 
Putin, Rasputin and Kerensky Print E-mail
By Alan Woods   
Friday, 26 May 2000
On Sunday May 7, Vladimir Putin was inaugurated as President of Russia with all the pomp and ceremony of a tsar. Nothing was missing: twenty-one gun salute, goose-stepping soldiers with uniforms that seemed to have been borrowed from a Hollywood musical, and even the Patriarch of the Russian Orthodox Church. Such empty show and tasteless pomp is very typical of the so- called New Russians--a class of upstarts and usurpers who are anxious to ape what they imagine to be the splendours of the western bourgeoisie. To students of history this will be quite familiar. The Thermidorian counter-revolutionaries in France also tried to ape the life style old aristocrats after they had sent the Jacobins to the guillotine.
 
Provocation Against One of the Leaders of the Russian Dockers Union Print E-mail
By In Defence of Marxism   
Thursday, 18 May 2000
Article translated from issue 7 (65), May 2000 of the The Russian Marxist paper Workers Democracy
 
On the tragedy at the "Komsomolyets" mine Print E-mail
By Rabochiya Democratiya   
Wednesday, 12 April 2000
During the methane explosion at the "Komsomolyets" mine in Kemerovo province 12 people were killed. This tragedy occurred soon after another terrible tragedy in the Donbass in the Ukraine. The Russian Marxist paper Workers Democracy (April 2000) blames the restoration of capitalism for these miners' deaths.
 
Azerbaidzhan's economic collapse Print E-mail
By Rabochiya Democratiya   
Wednesday, 15 March 2000
A short description of the terrible collapse of the economy in Azerbaidzhan from the Russian Marxist paper Workers Democracy (March 2000)
 
Russia: Astrakhan workers on strike Print E-mail
By Rabochiya Democratiya   
Wednesday, 08 March 2000
From the Russian Marxist paper Workers Democracy an account of this strike in Astrakahan (March 2000)
 
Yeltsin departs as Russia falls apart Print E-mail
By Ted Grant and Phil Mitchinson   
Wednesday, 12 January 2000
Ted Grant and Phil Mitchinson look at the reasons behind Yeltsin's sudden resignation and the implications of the new Putin regime for the future of Russia and international relations.
 
Bureaucratism or Workers' Power Print E-mail
By Ted Grant and Roger Silverman   
Wednesday, 08 December 1999
This document was written by Ted Grant together with Roger Silverman in 1967 to mark the fiftieth anniversary of the Russian revolution. The article explains how Stalinism arose and clearly shows how even at that time the Stalinist bureaucracy was facing a serious crisis and confidently predicted its inevitable downfall at some stage.
 
Russia’s Chechen war—storm clouds over the Caucasus Print E-mail
By Alan Woods   
Wednesday, 17 November 1999
The new war in Chechnya is a further evidence of a shift of power in Russia in the direction of the military. The generals are now clearly in the saddle. Not only are they deciding the war agenda in Chechnya, but they are doing so without regard to the opinions of the Kremlin clique. Boris Yeltsin is now an irrelevance.