Russia 1917: Countdown to Revolution (2017)

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Russia 1917: Countdown to Revolution (2017)

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In October 1917,

the world changed forever.

Three men led the takeover

of the largest country on Earth.

Russia became the world's first

communist state.

It took everyone by surprise,

including its own leaders.

Revolution might not happen

in our lifetime.

Vladimir Lenin, Leon Trotsky

and Joseph Stalin had to struggle,

plot and force their way into power

through the most unlikely series

of events.

'Lenin was moving around in secret,

being hunted by the police.'

'For me, this is the real turning

point of 20th-century history.'

This is the moment when one man

makes all the difference.

The insurrection Lenin led

still inspires fierce debate.

'Did they want a Bolshevik

government led by Vladimir Lenin?'

Miserable BLEEP traitors!

I don't think so.

The masses are tired of words

and resolutions!

How the hell is that a coup d'etat?

'He is motivated by a vision

of an alternative world.'

These people should be sh*t

for their incompetence!

His object was not to convince

or persuade anyone,

it was to destroy them.

The system Lenin, Trotsky and Stalin

created a century ago

shapes the world we live in today.

Putin really understands

the October Revolution.

In many ways, he's one

of the results of it.

This is the countdown

of the 245 days

that brought three men from

obscurity to supreme power,

forging a brave and bloody

new world.

February 1917.

Russia is ready to explode.

Its royalty, the Tsars,

have ruled with an iron fist

for four centuries.

expl*si*n

Its men are dying in the millions

in World w*r I.

Its women and children are starving.

But the Tsar rejects any change.

JEERING AND SHOUTING

On February 23rd, Russia erupts.

The masses of Petrograd

take over the capital

and force the Tsar to abdicate.

Here, dramatized in October,

Sergei Eisenstein's propaganda film

made ten years after the revolution.

Yet the men we most associate

with the Russian Revolution

aren't even in the country.

Lenin, Trotsky and Stalin

miss the February Revolution.

Lenin is in Zurich, having been

exiled for nearly 17 years

as a dangerous revolutionary.

KNOCKING

Haven't you heard?

There's been a revolution!

I've heard this sort of rumour

before.

It's probably German propaganda.

Just days before the February

Revolution, Lenin had confessed...

Revolution might not happen

in our lifetime.

We must go home.

The one thing Lenin couldn't bear

was that the revolution,

now it's come,

is going to happen without him.

He was absolutely tormented

about getting back

and seizing control

before someone else did.

Lenin's drive for power may have

its origins in a family trauma.

Until 1889,

Lenin is really a fairly

average schoolboy

from a provincial town, Simbirsk.

But his brother, Aleksandr,

has been a activist in the main

t*rror1st revolutionary group,

the People's Will, involved in an

attempt to assassinate the Tsar,

arrested and ex*cuted.

And I think it's partly in revenge

for that family tragedy

that he is so bent on destruction.

Lenin becomes an ardent Marxist.

By 1903, he's head of his own

radical party, the Bolsheviks.

Soon after, Leon Trotsky hears

about the February Revolution

while avoiding the Russian

authorities in New York.

'Trotsky was very much

the showman, the orator,'

the real firebrand

of the revolution.

He was a very glamorous figure.

He was a terrific speaker, real

rabble-rouser, and he knew it.

CHEERING

Born Lev Bronstein, Trotsky has

been a Marxist rebel from youth.

He had an interesting background.

He came from the Black Sea coast,

he was the son of a very rich

Jewish farmer.

He'd had a wonderful education,

he was highly cultured,

he was an internationalist,

he'd been all over the world,

he's been in New York

and round Europe and Vienna.

He's known to be a difficult man,

abrasive, extremely charismatic,

sometimes hard to love but

absolutely impossible not to admire.

This independent revolutionary

has rivalled Lenin for 20 years.

Soon, they'll have to work together.

Days later, Joseph Stalin learns

of the February Revolution

while exiled for robbery

3,500 kilometres away

in Achinsky, Siberia.

'Just look at how attractive

Stalin was

'in the time leading up

to the revolution.'

HE LAUGHS

'Not only a published poet'

but an anthologised poet,

very handsome,

with a marvellous head of hair.

A great one for women.

He's escaped six times

from Siberian exile

and wanted what?

Universal equality and justice.

A completely attractive figure.

Until he was in power.

Stalin was the ultimate

man of action

and he became Lenin's chosen

favourite man of action.

He was the master of assassinations,

protection rackets, heists.

Every revolutionary leader

needs a Stalin.

Stalin...

..Trotsky

and Lenin.

Three comrades in revolution

who now have barely 230 days

to change the world.

CHEERING

They return to a country in turmoil.

The overthrow of the Tsar

in the February Revolution

has unleashed wild euphoria.

People were partying in the streets,

soldiers were, sort of,

driving around in cars,

tooting their horns with, sort of,

half undressed girls.

People were having sex

in the street.

There were a multitude of political

factions and parties

and everyone was having meetings

about everything.

So, it was total anarchy.

It was an expl*si*n,

which meant all rules were destroyed

and it was a chance to start again.

We're talking about,

in aspiration, you know,

a fundamental reconfiguring of the

way human beings live in the world.

Lenin arrives at a time when there

is an enormous amount of hope

and a sense that this

is still a new Russia.

April 4th,

the Bolsheviks' few thousand

supporters await Lenin in Petrograd,

now St Petersburg.

It was Easter Monday and so

the factories weren't working

so they did manage to get

a big crowd in,

partly by the promise of free beer,

which, actually, sadly

didn't arrive for any of them.

They've got fantastic arc lighting

and it made it look terrific.

The converted, the supporters,

the acolytes, the underground,

the revolutionaries

were there to meet him.

But the vast majority of people

didn't even really know

who Lenin was.

After two decades of studying

the theory of revolution,

Lenin arrives with radical ideas

on what Russia should do now.

He had an idea of the revolution

in his head

before he'd even got back to Russia

to see what the real

possibilities were.

Lenin is ready to test his theories

on real people.

He has no time

for other politicians.

'A delegation greet him

rather nervously.

'He doesn't even answer them.'

Instead, he gives a speech

to the crowds.

Sailors...

soldiers, comrades...

..this is no time for compromise

or diplomatic phrases.

This is the time to move towards

building a socialist state.

CHEERING

As soon as he arrives

back in Russia,

he calls for his party to agitate

for a new revolution.

The piratical, imperialist w*r...

Even Lenin's own party,

the Bolsheviks, were shocked.

..and the hour is not far distant

when the people will turn their arms

against their capitalist exploiters.

'The political conversation was all

about a bourgeois democracy.'

It was all about elections

that were going to happen.

'It was all about coalitions

of groups.'

Lenin didn't want any of that.

Lenin wants a second revolution to

overthrow the provisional government

that has been set up.

He calls instead for the country

to be run by Soviets -

committees of workers,

soldiers and peasants.

He was suggesting that they should

seize power pretty much immediately.

The worldwide revolution

has already dawned.

'The party was absolutely confused,'

bewildered and amazed

by what Lenin said.

And a lot of them thought

he'd gone mad.

The people want peace.

They want bread and land.

They give you w*r and hunger.

And the landowners still have

all the land.

He coins the first big slogan -

land for the peasants,

peace, an end to w*r

and bread.

Feed the poor.

Simple words, but behind each

lies a whole set of policies.

The same way that the entire...

The crowd love it.

Those in power just laugh.

A lot of liberal politicians were

saying, "Forget it, don't worry,

"Lenin is a busted flush, he's lost

his mind, basically an anarchist,

"we don't need to worry about him."

Scant months later, this is the most

powerful single person in Russia.

Sailors, comrades...

we have to fight

for a socialist revolution.

Fight to the end!

Long live the worldwide

socialist revolution!

CHEERING

'People would recognise Lenin as a

very modern political phenomenon.'

He believed totally that the ends

justify the means.

That winning is all, that power

is all that really matters.

APPLAUSE

There was still huge disagreement

about Lenin's motives.

Power on its own for him

was nothing.

He really wasn't interested in that.

It was power to make big changes

in society.

'He is motivated by a vision

of an alternative world.'

The end of a society dominated

by profit.

What motivates Lenin is power.

Power is all that matters

in a revolution.

That is how Lenin understands

revolution.

You have to have power

before you can do anything.

So principle goes out the window

in the struggle for power,

as far as Lenin is concerned.

Spring turns to summer,

but the provisional government

is unable to solve

the country's problems.

Yet most Russians still have faith

in this man -

Minister of w*r Alexander Kerensky.

'Alexander Kerensky was really

the first love of the revolution.'

The intelligentsia adored him.

I don't care, General.

The men will manage.

'What became known as

the Kerensky cult'

becomes absolutely out of control.

So you have pamphlet after pamphlet

describing him literally

as a divine figure.

Immediately.

'He is convinced of his own

historical mission'

and part of his historical mission

is to turn the w*r around.

Despite the popular opposition

to the w*r,

Kerensky orders a new offensive.

So the offensive is launched

on the 16th of June.

It goes forward for a couple of

days, the Germans counterattack,

the Russians run back.

There's chaos.

They lost hundreds of thousands

of men within a week

and this played totally

into the hands of Lenin.

Lenin, who'd been saying

that w*r is a bad thing,

that he would provide instant peace,

suddenly became incredibly popular.

And so did the Bolshevik Party.

When Kerensky orders more soldiers

to leave Petrograd for the front,

they refuse to obey.

Their determined resistance

spreads to front-line troops.

By July the 4th,

thousands of deserters join

anti-government demonstrations

in Petrograd.

It looks like Lenin's second

revolution has arrived.

But are Lenin and the Bolsheviks

ready to take power?

The front-page editorial

in the party paper, Pravda,

had meant to tell the crowds

to stay home.

You should all be thrashed for this.

'When it becomes clear that

this will simply look ridiculous

'with this enormous

mass demonstration,

'it is too late for the Bolsheviks

to come up with another line.'

They just pull it and they

have no time to replace it,

so it comes out with a rather

pregnant blank right at its front.

The Bolsheviks look utterly

confused.

Lenin had been calling for

the provisional government

to be thrown out and replaced

by the more radical Soviets.

Now, thousands are ready

to do just that...

is he?

'They were screaming,

'"Show us leadership.

Seize power right now, Lenin."

'And Lenin was hedging.

'He was wondering what the hell

to do, how to manage this.'

Because he realised that if this

went wrong he could be destroyed.

'When Lenin steps out

onto that balcony,'

perhaps he loses his nerve.

He doesn't really know what to say.

We always wanted this

to be peaceful.

With no v*olence.

The Bolshevik call to give power

to the Soviets will win one day.

Despite the zigzags of history.

But maybe not today.

Why did Lenin hesitate?

'Perhaps he's slightly intimidated.'

This is a man who lived

in books and libraries,

a man who'd been abroad

for 15 years,

who'd never really confronted

angry workers like that before.

And perhaps also an element

of cowardice creeps in here.

He was not one for mounting

the barricades.

He was, often it was remarked,

the first to run

when the going got dangerous.

'He was not intimidated at all.'

To be able to say to a whirling mass

of 20,000, to 30,000,

to 40,000 workers, no.

There is a time to strike and there

is a time to bite our lips.

'That, to me,

is a sign of greatness.'

One wrong move on our part

could wreck everything.

'He just knew that...'

this would be used as a provocation

by the counterrevolution

to crush them.

That the movement wasn't strong

enough to take power.

We are still an insignificant

minority.

Time is on our side.

It was a little more

than a demonstration.

A lot less than a revolution.

Perhaps the fact that he bottles it,

essentially, on the 4th of July,

is because in the back of his head

he's thinking,

"Crikey, this could fail

and then they'll come for me."

g*nf*re

For Lenin, timing is everything,

and he proves correct.

The revolt collapses the next day

amidst a hail of b*ll*ts

from government sn*pers.

Kerensky then goes after

the Bolshevik Party.

He ordered the arrest of 800

party members, including Lenin,

for high treason.

The July days left Lenin isolated.

To stay in Petrograd, he'd face

arrest and possibly being sh*t,

and he knew he had to escape

somewhere.

He felt all chance had gone.

With the Bolsheviks in ruins,

Lenin goes into hiding.

There is a 200,000 rouble bounty

on his head.

He must now rely on his Lieutenant,

Joseph Stalin,

to mastermind his escape.

'Now they were going underground

again.

'Stalin, the master of the black

arts, was essential to Lenin.'

'Stalin was the boy in the back room

who watched what was happening'

and made himself useful as

and when the moment came.

'There he was, helps Lenin shave off

his very distinctive little goatee.

'They give him a dreadful wig

and a worker's cap,'

and smuggle him out

across into Finland.

With Lenin gone

and Trotsky arrested,

Stalin finds himself

the unlikely leader

of the shattered Bolshevik Party.

'Lenin trusted Stalin.'

He carried secret messages,

he set up by the machinery

whereby Lenin could communicate

from a barn out in Finland

with the Bolshevik machine

inside Petrograd.

All of these things, Stalin managed.

And it was now that Stalin

became the key person

behind Lenin in the revolution.

The interesting thing about Stalin,

he played this incredibly subtle

waiting game.

He was very much there

in the shadows,

watching, waiting, learning.

While the Bolsheviks rot in jail,

flee or go underground,

things are looking up

for Alexander Kerensky.

He is now Prime Minister.

After the aborted

Bolshevik uprising,

he appoints Siberian General

Lavr Kornilov

to restore order in Petrograd.

'Kornilov could see that the

Bolsheviks were gearing up

'to try and take over.

'He desperately wanted to round up

the belligerent revolutionaries,

'the Bolsheviks, slam them in jail

'and impose almost a m*llitary

government on the city'

because he saw that as the only way

of saving the situation.

'The right-wing, the conservatives,

'are beginning to rally around

Kornilov quite explicitly

'as a figure who can bring order

to Russia.'

Kerensky worries the General

wants to rule Russia

as a m*llitary dictator.

'There's no question that Kerensky

was quite paranoid,'

but there's also not much question

that people were out to get him.

Just days after appointing

the General,

Kerensky dismisses him

in a telegram.

But the General's troops

advance on Petrograd.

Ironically, it takes Bolshevik

activists to save the city.

Bolshevik agitators from within

the army, soldiers,

went and spoke to the Kornilov

soldiers and said,

"Do you know why you're being

brought to Petrograd?

"To att*ck us, to k*ll

your brothers and sisters.

"Is this what you're coming to do?"

And the descriptions of this event

are that Kornilov's army

melted away

in front of his very eyes.

In an extraordinary reversal

of fortune,

the Bolsheviks are now seen

as the saviours of Petrograd.

MUSIC

Kerensky's credibility

lies in tatters.

He's reduced to keeping himself

going with cocaine and morphine.

'So, rather than buttress

his power base, in fact,

'the defeat of Kornilov only played

into the hands of the left.'

It's hard for me.

I struggle with the left

and with the right.

The people demand that I lean

on one and then the other.

I want to take a middle road

but nobody will help me.

'How could you roll out democracy

in a country like that?'

So I think it was always inevitable

that this anarchic force

which splintered the country

into revolution

was never going to quickly shuffle

the pieces and put them back

into a neat jigsaw puzzle

which was a proper democracy.

That wasn't going to happen.

The Kornilov coup created

the situation

where you had a government

with no real power.

With power ebbing away.

A leader with no real prestige.

And the opportunity, the vacuum,

into which someone, somewhere,

could seize power.

And that someone, Lenin was

determined, would be the Bolsheviks.

The Bolshevik resurgence begins when

Kerensky releases them from jail.

While locked up, Leon Trotsky has

finally joined Lenin's party.

Crowds flock to hear him speak.

Trotsky was the great celebrity

of the revolution.

He was much more famous than Lenin,

not to speak of Stalin.

'Trotsky was probably the most

brilliant intellectual mind'

produced in tsarist Russia,

including Lenin.

'Lenin knew that Stalin and Trotsky

were his two chief supporters

'in pushing for

the October Revolution,

'so Stalin and Trotsky had actually

had a lot in common politically.'

But it was personally that they

absolutely loathed each other.

Their animosity only grows when

Trotsky replaces Stalin

as interim leader.

Stalin was very valuable

behind the scenes.

He did have a knack of convincing

the average run of leaders,

especially the provincials.

APPLAUSE

The time for words has passed.

The country stands on the edge

of ruin.

The Army demand peace.

The peasants demand land.

The workers demand work and food.

The coalition government

is against the people.

The government is a tool in the

hands of the enemies of the people.

CHEERING AND APPLAUSE

The time for words has passed!

Trotsky's individualism and panache

is not always trusted by Lenin.

'Trotsky writes,

"Lenin was worried,'

"suspicious of

my non-Bolshevik past,'

"wondering, have I got

the capacity to do it,

"and I had to constantly reassure

him, do not worry, Comrade Lenin,

"it's going to happen.

We are doing it."

All power to the Soviets!

CHEERING

Immediate Armistice on all fronts!

Land to the peasants!

CHEERING

He's sort of arrogant

and that's his Achilles heel

because people don't like arrogance

in the party.

Trotsky felt it should all

be delivered to him

because of that brilliance.

And he would read...

ostentatiously read French novels

during meetings of the politburo,

to show how, erm,

above all this he was.

When Lenin was asked what had kept

he and Trotsky apart for so long,

he answered...

Don't you know?

Ambition.

Ambition.

Ambition.

Now they share an ambition -

real power.

While hiding in Finland, Lenin makes

the biggest decision of his life.

The time is ripe for his revolution.

'By then, everyone was sick

of the w*r.'

They were sick

of the food shortages.

People were openly saying

on the streets,

"Do you know what,

we don't care who's in power.

"If they like, the Germans

can come and take Petrograd."

From mid-September,

Lenin bombards the Bolsheviks with

letters insisting they seize power.

"The present task must be an armed

uprising in Petrograd and Moscow,

"the seizing of power and the

overthrow of the government."

'Lenin was a complete monomaniac.'

He's like a boiling pot.

All the time, you can hear

the lid rattling.

He gets more and more furious

and the bubbles are bubbling up.

"It would be naive to wait for a

formal majority for Bolsheviks.

"No, revolution ever waits

for that."

He brewed himself up

extraordinarily

and twisted himself up into anger

and his flashes of anger

were terrifying.

"History will not forgive us

if we do not assume power now.

'Lenin is raging

that we are about to lose'

the one-off opportunity to seize

power, to seize Russia.

"To wait would be utter idiocy."

'The Bolshevik leadership

doesn't know what to do with these.

'It thinks that they might be

inflammatory

'and provoke an uprising

prematurely,'

so they go as far as to destroying

these letters if they can.

BLEEP traitors

to the proletarian cause!

'When you read the letters,'

my God, he could swear like

a trooper when he wanted to.

He had a vicious tongue.

Lenin realises that writing these

letters from his hiding place

'is not enough. He's going to have

to face the central committee

'to argue for this properly

and to win the argument.

'And then he's going to have to

seize power immediately.'

Suddenly we're in a state

of high drama here.

You know, something has got to give.

If the Bolsheviks don't seize power

now, somebody else might.

By the beginning of October, Lenin

is beside himself with impatience.

INDISTINCT CHATTER

Comrade Lenin?

On the night of October the 10th,

Lenin suddenly reappears,

disguised as a Lutheran minister to

avoid capture by the authorities.

The significance of the meeting

is world historical.

History isn't always made

on battlefields.

They're made in small meeting rooms.

Since the beginning of September,

there has been a certain...

..indifference to the idea

of seizing power.

We must seize power now

and not wait for the Soviets

or any congresses.

The time is right now.

The moment of decision has arrived.

The masses are tired of words

and resolutions.

The majority are behind us.

The success of Russian

and worldwide revolution

depends on two or three

days' struggle.

If I may, Comrade Lenin.

Trotsky wants to wait

to launch the uprising

until after the upcoming

Congress of Soviets.

This way, socialist delegates

from all over the country

can back the insurrection.

But Lenin disagrees.

It's difficult for a large,

organised body of men

to take swift, decisive action.

We must act on the 25th,

the day that Congress sits,

so that we may say to it,

"Here is our power.

"What are you going to do with it?"

'He hammers and hammers

and hammers the point

'that if we don't act now

we'll lose our moment,'

we'll never have a chance again.

This is the only time

we will succeed.

I don't think Lenin

was browbeating anyone.

He was just arguing

that this is the time.

Of course, they were vigorous

arguments.

The argument is essential.

Whether to seize power

or to form democratic alliances.

'At this very moment,

the top Bolsheviks'

start to say,

we should negotiate a coalition

with other parties like the

Mensheviks, other rival factions.

'This isn't the time to seize power,

'we might lose everything

we have already.'

I say we put it to the vote.

When they began, at least half

the central committee

was against armed insurrection.

After ten hours arguing,

the result goes 10-2

in Lenin's favour.

'This is just the moment

when you realise'

the absolute paramount power

of the individual in history,

because, you know,

half the central committee,

or even a majority of the central

committee of the Bolshevik Party

doesn't want to seize power

in October 1917.

'The fact that Lenin got the vote

and won the permission to go ahead

'was entirely decisive.

'This was indeed the cocking

of the p*stol of revolution.'

By October the 24th, Kerensky

is expecting an uprising,

but he's still confident

he will prevail.

It'll be like July again.

I'll be prepared to offer prayers

to produce this uprising.

I'll have greater forces

than necessary.

They will be utterly crushed.

LOUD THUD

Kerensky's overconfidence

plays right into Lenin's hands.

With Stalin in charge

of the Bolshevik press,

Kerensky orders two

of the newspapers closed.

Within hours, Stalin is free to get

the newspapers running again...

..announcing Kerensky's censorship

as the start of a full-blown

counterrevolution.

Now, the Bolsheviks can start

their uprising

under the pretext

of defending freedom.

A lie always has a stronger effect

than the truth.

The main thing is to obtain

one's objective.

You've come a long way, comrades.

As head of the Petrograd Soviet,

Trotsky plays his part

in the deception.

He orders that bridges

and key government buildings

be seized to protect the city.

He claims...

This is defence, comrades,

this is defence.

He goes so far as to say...

An armed conflict,

today or tomorrow,

on the eve of the Soviet Congress,

is not in our plans.

By that evening,

Lenin is convinced the hour,

indeed the moment to seize power,

has finally arrived.

Everything now hangs by a thread.

The matter must be decided

without fail...

..this evening.

'Lenin has been told very

categorically by his comrades'

to stay put

and he is crawling the walls.

'He is desperate to be there,

to be in the thick of it.

'Lenin's face is notorious

'so what he does is

he puts on his disguise.

'He puts on glasses, he puts on

a fairly ridiculous wig,

'he puts on a battered worker's cap.

'And finally he, sort of, swathes

some bandages around his face

'to, sort of, look injured

in some way

'and also simply to obscure

those notorious features.'

He is wanted for high treason.

Government troops are searching

the city for him.

Now, he must risk capture to get

to Bolshevik headquarters.

DOG BARKS

'On his way, they're stopped by

one of the last police patrols'

of the provisional government.

HE MUMBLES

'And they look at this man and think

he's some sort of drunk tramp...'

What do you think? He's just drunk.

..and let him go.

Get out of here.

For me, this is the real turning

point of 20th century history.

This is the moment when one man

makes all the difference.

'If Lenin had been arrested...

'..they probably never would have

launched an insurrection.

'But because those policemen

failed to recognise Lenin,'

for whom there was a warrant

for arrest...

..the insurrection took place.

'Everything is happening

in a series of rooms

'in the splendid Smolny Institute.

'Lenin arrived at room 36, which

was the key room, the headquarters,'

the engine room, the b*ating heart

of the revolution,

'and there he found

all the key players.

'There's Trotsky.

'There's Stalin.

'And they're running everything

from here.

'There were soldiers playing cards,

smoking.

'People sleeping.

'People drinking vodka.

Some people drunk.

'Soldiers rushing in with news'

that this building or that building

had fallen.

'At this moment in Russian history,

in world history,

'these series of shambolic rooms

'half encampment, half m*llitary

headquarters, half student bivouac,

'are the centre of the world

and Lenin has to be in this room.'

Lenin has always been called

the Father of the Revolution.

But the man who ran the October

Revolution was not Lenin or Stalin.

'Trotsky wasn't just a handsome face

and a great orator,

'he was also

an organisational genius.

'He put together the machinery,

the personnel, the plan.

'It was Trotsky that gave

the orders.'

Trotsky was the man of the hour.

The Bolsheviks take control

of Petrograd overnight,

just hours before the Congress

of Soviets is to meet.

By the morning of October the 25th,

only the Winter Palace

remains in the hands

of the provisional government.

'Kerensky is in cloud cuckoo land,

quite frankly.

'And on the morning

of the 25th of October,

'thinks, well, it might be time

to go and summon troops.

'He can't get any on the telephone.'

Of course, the Bolsheviks are

already in control of virtually

'every means of communication

in the capital.'

Though the provisional government

still occupies the Winter Palace,

that afternoon, Trotsky announces

that the government has fallen.

In the name of the m*llitary

revolutionary committee,

I declare that the provisional

government is no more!

CHEERING

Well, talk about fake news.

It hasn't happened at all.

It had meant to happen

by that point.

The authority of

the provisional government,

presided over by Kerensky,

was a corpse

that only awaited the broom

of history to sweep it away.

Well, this was the first

Bolshevik lie

of...of many of the next,

erm, the next 70 years.

The Winter Palace is not yet taken

but its fate will be settled in

the course of the next few minutes!

CHEERING

But the minutes drag into hours.

Why haven't they seized power?

'He was promised,

he was told by his m*llitary'

that it would take

just three or four hours.

For heaven's sake,

why aren't shells being fired

into the Winter Palace?

Why haven't they stormed it?

'They couldn't find the a*tillery,

the g*ns didn't work,'

they were blocked, could

anyone find anyone to work them?

They needed a lantern

to give the signal

but no-one could find a lantern.

'There's a sort of hilarious crisis

where the Mayor of Petrograd

'actually marches

in front of the troops

'and stops the whole seizure

of the Winter Palace.

'An entire group of men in frock

coats start waving their umbrellas

'and saying, "You're not going to

seize power now."'

They have to be moved out of the way

and still nothing has happened.

By this point, Lenin is apoplectic.

What the hell's going on?

These people should be sh*t

for their incompetence!

As long as ministers

are in the Palace,

the provisional government

still stands.

I think the seizure of

the Winter Palace is the key,

'because until then

there's a Cabinet

'sitting around a Cabinet table,

still running Russia.'

And Lenin himself recognises this.

This is why Lenin doesn't go to

the Congress or do anything else.

Trotsky deals with

the other socialist parties

at the Congress of Soviets.

Having travelled

from all over Russia,

they are shocked to find Petrograd

already seized by the Bolsheviks.

But their protests are shouted down

by Trotsky's men.

Trotsky has another strategy ready.

'Trotsky's order of the day was that

if the people in the Winter Palace'

didn't surrender,

'the battleship Aurora

should fire blanks at them.

'He said that very noise

of the battleship,

'which they could all see

with its g*ns pointing,'

would be enough to send them out

scurrying like rabbits.

At 10:40pm, the warning sh*t

is fired from the Aurora.

And is heard as far away

as the Congress.

The other socialist parties

are outraged by the aggression...

..and walk out.

Without realising it, they have just

handed power to the Bolsheviks.

'It was a godsend that his chief

opponent just walked out,

'leaving the field of battle.'

So many socialist delegates leave

that the Bolsheviks are now

in the majority

and can do as they please.

'I think we have to agree

with the great memoirist,'

Nikolai Sukhanov, who was at

the Soviet Congress himself,

when he said, it was just

a huge gift to Lenin.

As the delegates leave,

Trotsky mocks his one-time allies

in one of the most quoted speeches

of the 20th century.

The rising of the masses

of the people

requires no justification.

What has happened is an uprising,

not a conspiracy.

Trotsky's the real star

of the Petrograd Soviet.

He's a brilliant orator.

The masses of the people

moved under our banner

and our uprising

has won victory.

But he's also

a brilliant theoretician

who understands how rhetoric

and politics are intertwined

and how he can play on an audience

to mobilise them.

Trotsky is able to make

the Bolshevik view

sound like everyone's view.

And now...

..we are told...

to renounce our victory.

Make concessions.

Compromise.

With whom?

With that wretched group

who've just left us?

No-one in Russia

is with them any more.

No.

No compromise is possible.

The Bolshevik position

becomes the Soviet position.

To those who have left

and those who make these proposals,

we say,

you are pathetic individuals!

You are bankrupt!

Your role is played out.

Go off to where you belong

from now on.

To the dustbin of history!

CHEERING

'His kind of dripping contempt lets

them know that power is moving now,'

minute by minute,

erm, to the Bolsheviks,

and to the creation

of an entirely new world.

At virtually the same moment,

Lenin's wish is becoming reality.

The Winter Palace

is about to be taken.

Though its capture may not

have been quite as spectacular

as Sergei Eisenstein's film,

October, portrayed it.

First of all, it wasn't even locked.

Secondly, it was guarded by a group

of adolescent boys

who were about 15 years old -

cadets,

and by a group of female soldiers

who were getting more

and more terrified.

So when they finally did, on that

evening, enter the Winter Palace...

..when the doors were open,

no-one stopped them.

There was no fighting,

there was no storming.

The heroic scale of that film

is creating a myth of October,

far from the reality.

'The storming of the Winter Palace

creates this foundation myth

'of it being a mass uprising.

'That the thousands who stormed

the Winter Palace,'

instead of the few dozen

who actually did so,

were representatives

of the whole people.

'Revolutions are, by nature,

illegitimate.'

So you need to create

foundation myths.

The moment that power passes to

the Bolsheviks is an epic example.

They walked into

the Cabinet meeting.

'And the Cabinet looked up and said,

"What do you want us to do?"

'And the Bolsheviks said,

"You're under arrest."'

That is the moment

the October Revolution happens.

CHEERING

An heroic new world is born.

At least in Eisenstein's

version of events.

In reality, Lenin is in room 36

when he gets the news,

far from the action.

It is finally done.

Russia is his.

But did Lenin just grab power

in a coup

or did he have popular support?

'I think it was a coup d'etat.'

There were people who wanted

bread and land

and all power to the Soviets,

but did they want a Bolshevik

government led by Vladimir Lenin?

I don't think so.

Was there an element

of conspiracy in it?

Well, of course, because you

can't plan an insurrection

by publishing the details

the day before.

But everything till then,

till the day before,

had been discussed in Lenin's

speeches, in his writings,

and those of Trotsky,

what he was saying,

they were saying, yes,

we are making a revolution.

How the hell is that a coup d'etat?

For sure, the coup d'etat of

October, which is what it was,

based itself on the underpinnings

of a mass social revolution

which originated in February 1917.

And we see the radicalisation

of peasants, workers, soldiers,

across the country, giving a mandate

for Soviet power by October.

But Soviet power

is not what Lenin makes

of the events

of the 25th of October.

Lenin is using the cloak

of Soviet power

to establish

a Bolshevik dictatorship.

APPLAUSE

The next day, Lenin appears at the

Congress of Soviets to announce...

We shall now proceed

to construct the socialist order.

'This is a man who had spent years

working out the theory

'of exactly what he was

going to do.'

And so the moment that they took

over, he was ready.

Trotsky is named the People's

Commissar for Foreign Affairs.

Stalin, the People's Commissar

for Nationalities.

And Lenin becomes

the leader of the government.

A new era in the history of Russia

and of the world begins.

Lenin issues scores of decrees

that transform Russia in days.

'You start to see the first

stirrings of a different kind

'of social control, for example.

'Workers' control and peasantry

having control of their own lives.

'Equal rights of men and women,

of divorce law,

'decriminalising h*m*.'

To me, there's no question that

October represents a moment of hope.

'Just weeks after

the October Revolution,'

Lenin created a one-party state,

a totalitarian state.

'He also created the Cheka,

the secret police,

'with power over life and death,

to k*ll enemies of the revolution.'

He repeatedly ordered mass sh**t

of thousands of innocent people.

'He specified that, you know,

'annihilation was the only way

for the party to keep power.

'So, gradually,

he created a dictatorship'

that was inherited by Stalin, and

made much more intense by Stalin.

'When the ideologue

is confronted with reality,

'that doesn't fit into his scheme,'

he can't defeat reality

with argument,

so the fist tightens.

Vladimir Lenin dies of a stroke

in 1924.

Joseph Stalin rises to power.

He eliminates his rivals.

Notably, Leon Trotsky,

who was assassinated in 1940.

Joseph Stalin,

the quiet backroom fixer,

outlasts both Lenin and Trotsky.

His reign becomes the Great Terror

that lasts for over a quarter

of a century.

The Tsars,

in their last half century,

were averaging 17 executions a year.

Within a month...

a few months of Lenin taking power,

erm, it was 1,000 a month,

executions.

And during the Great Terror,

it was more like 1,000 a week.

'Under Stalin, something like

20 million people'

would go through the concentration

camps, the Gulag camps.

Somewhere between 20 and 30 million

people were k*lled.

These were on the orders

not just of Stalin,

but of Lenin

and the Bolshevik Party.

Stalin is not Lenin's heir.

In his last will and testament,

Lenin made it very clear

that he should be removed

as General Secretary of the party.

Said he was not the right sort

of person to be leading the party.

Stalin's impact on Russia

lasts beyond his death in 1953

or even the death

of the Soviet Union in 1991.

ANNOUNCED IN RUSSIAN

'Putin really understands

the October Revolution.

'In many ways, he's a result of it,

one of the results of it.

'When he looks back at history,

he's really interested,'

not in Marxism or Bolshevism,

'he's most impressed

by the Red Tsar, by Stalin.

'Because Stalin

is the successful manager

'of the Russian nation.'

HE SPEAKS RUSSIAN

'Putin's not interested in the chaos

caused by Lenin and Trotsky.

'He's interested in the prestige

and the victory'

delivered by Joseph Stalin.

So, has history proved Stalin

to be more influential

than Lenin or Trotsky?

For so many years,

70 years of the Soviet Union,

it was Lenin who was always

invoked as the godlike figure,

the Father of the Revolution.

And now, in the Putin era, he's been

sort of left to one side a bit.

The statues are still there,

but somehow he's not

talked about as much.

When there was a poll recently

about some of the greatest leaders

or figures in Russia, it was Stalin

who figured, not Lenin.

But is Lenin's time coming again?

'We live today in a world of rampant

populism, of post-factual politics,

'and much of this can be

traced back to Lenin.

'That ultimate

political manipulator...'

..who, though he was

a fanatical Marxist,

was also the master of pragmatism.

'He understood that politics

was all about who controls who

'and any means were suitable

to achieving his ends.'
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