Socialism in One Country was a thesis put forward by Joseph Stalin in 1924 and further supported by Bukharin that given the catastrophic failures of all communist revolutions in Europe from 1917-1921 except their own, rather than relying on the idea that an underdeveloped and agrarian country like Russia would be able to build socialism with help from successful revolutionary governments in the more industrialized parts of Europe, the Soviet Union should begin to strengthen itself internally.
Stalin's position gained an apparent confirmation from failed attempts of proletarian revolutions in countries like Germany and Hungary, and might also have justified Stalin's change of focus on external policy from the Third International to tradeoffs with capitalist states.
In the first edition of the book Osnovy Leninizma (Foundations of Leninism, 1924), Stalin was still a follower of Lenin's idea that revolution in one country is insufficient. But by the end of that year, in the second edition of the book, his position started to turn around. "...proletariat can and must build the socialist society in one country". In April 1925 Bukharin elaborated the issue in his brochure Can We Build Socialism in One Country in the Absence of the Victory of the West-European Proletariat? The position was finalized as the state policy after Stalin's January 1926 article On the Issues of Leninism (К вопросам ленинизма).
In his 1915 article "On the Slogan for a United States of Europe", Lenin stated the following: "...Uneven economic and political development is an absolute law of capitalism. Hence, the victory of socialism is possible first in several or even in one capitalist country taken separately. ...". After Lenin's death, Stalin used this quote to argue that Lenin shared his view of Socialism in One Country, even though Lenin's statement here is rather vague. Despite Stalin's stance, the Soviet government under his leadership did provide aid to sympathising communists in other countries at various times.
The theory of Socialism in One Country was vigorously criticized by Zinoviev and Trotsky. In particular, Trotskyists often claimed, and still claim, that Socialism in One Country opposes Lenin's belief that while a communist revolution may happen first in one country, the final success of socialism in one country depends upon the revolution's degree of success in internationalizing itself, and would ultimately be impossible without successful proletarian revolutions in the more advanced countries of Western Europe. Trotskyists base their idea on Trotsky's theory of Permanent Revolution, which was disputed by Lenin as potentially reactionary because it appeared to discourage building socialism in the USSR at all, given that the hoped-for communist revolutions in more advanced countries like Germany and France had not been carried through. Trotsky believed that the development of the international division of labor made autarky, or economic isolation from the world, economically reactionary in its own right. Yet, Trotsky acknolwedged that dependence upon the international capitalist market leads to economic plans becoming subordinate to world capitalism. He elaborated on these theses in his works The Draft Program of the Communist International: A Criticism of Fundamentals and Permanent Revolution. Also, Trotskyists assert that Stalin's support for the Spanish Civil War was hinged on suppression of any "truly revolutionary" activity that ran the risk of delegitimizing what they characterize as his one-man dictatorship.
This was why, when it proved possible to build certain aspects of socialism in the Soviet Union despite such objections, Stalin's opposition was temporarily thrown into disarray. Stalin later characterized Trotsky's position of Permanent Revolution as asking the world to "wait" for Western workers and "simultaneous" global revolution, a position still carried by anti-revisionists and other communists who oppose Trotskyism today.
Stalin established several "communist states" in Eastern Europe after World War II, though some argue that this action was motivated more by the desire to create Russian "satellite states" than to spread the workers' revolution. In any case, neither the supporters of Stalin nor those of Trotsky succeeded in starting a revolution in the West.
Communism | Marxist theory | Joseph Stalin
Socialismo en un solo país | Socialismo in un solo paese | Socialism într-o singură ţară | สังคมนิยมประเทศเดียว
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"Socialism in One Country".
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