- PII
- S013038640021232-3-
- DOI
- 10.31857/S013038640021232-3
- Publication type
- Article
- Status
- Published
- Authors
- Volume/ Edition
- Volume / Issue 6
- Pages
- 108-125
- Abstract
After coming to power in 1917, the Bolsheviks began to form their own system of foreign policy decision-making, rejecting the traditions and standards of bourgeois diplomacy in the Decree on Peace, and refusing to use the personnel of the Russian Ministry of Foreign Affairs. The first trial of the new system, built on the principles of revolutionary Marxism, took place during the Brest negotiations and ended in defeat for Soviet Russia. The signing of the Treaty of Brest-Litovsk on 3 March 1918 paved the way for the transition from war to peace between the two countries and, consequently, for the exchange of diplomatic representatives. The Soviet legation in Germany, headed by Joffe, was in fact the only 'window to Europe' for the Bolsheviks.
Because of the lack of a fine-tuned foreign policy decision-making mechanism and the highly unstable communication between Moscow and Berlin, and because Joffe was not a professional diplomat, the activities of his plenipotentiary representation were determined by his prerevolutionary political experience and personal qualities. Rejecting the hierarchy of the old regime and making no secret of his own ambitions, Joffe came into continuous conflict with his immediate superior, the People' Commissar for Foreign Affairs, Chicherin, and this conflict continued until the Soviet plenipotentiary representative was expelled from Berlin in 1918.
The author reconstructs the formation of key decisions in the sphere of Soviet-German relations at the end of the Great War on the basis of official correspondence between the People's Commissar and the Plenipotentiary, shows the role of human factor in the process and the mechanism of departmental and personal conflicts resolution, the core of which was the authority of Lenin. The author concludes that the process of shaping the Soviet foreign policy in 1918 was extremely rapid, generally in line with the pace of events, and developed by trial and error. The traditions and norms laid down in the first year of the work of the People's Commissariat largely influenced the subsequent history of Soviet diplomacy.
- Keywords
- World War I, Soviet-German relations, the Brest treaty, Bolsheviks, Germany, Russian federation, foreign policy, Commissariat for Foreign Affairs, Georgy Chicherin, Adolf Joffe, civil war, intervention
- Date of publication
- 19.12.2022
- Number of purchasers
- 10
- Views
- 464
References
- 1. Botmer K. fon. S grafom Mirbakhom v Moskve [With Count Mirbach in Moscow]. Moskva, 2010. (In Russ.)
- 2. Chicherin G.V. Leninskaya vneshnya politika [Lenin's foreign policy] // Mirovaya politika v 1924 g. [World Politics in 1924]: sb. Statej / pod red. F. Rotshtejna. Moskva, 1925. (In Russ.)
- 3. Ioffe N.A. Vremya nazad. Moya zhizn', moya sud'ba, moya ehpokha [Time ago. My life, my destiny, my epoch]. Moskva, 1992. (In Russ.)
- 4. Lannik L.V. Missiya Gel'ferikha v Moskve: zabytaya fluktuatsiya sovetsko-germanskikh otnoshenij letom 1918 g. [Gelferich's mission in Moscow: the forgotten fluctuation of Soviet-German relations in the summer of 1918] // Rossiya i sovremennyj mir [Russia and the modern world]. 2020. № 4. S. 189–212. (In Russ.)
- 5. Lenin V.I. Polnoe sobranie sochinenij [Complete works]. T. 50. Moskva, 1982. (In Russ.)
- 6. Lenin V.I. Neizvestnye dokumenty. 1891–1922 [Unknown documents. 1891–1922]. Moskva, 2000. (In Russ.)
- 7. Solomon G.A. Sredi krasnykh vozhdej. Lichnou vidennoe i perezhitoe na sovetskoj sluzhbe [Among the Red Leaders. Personally seen and experienced in the Soviet service]. Moskva, 2015. (In Russ.)
- 8. Sovetsko-germans kieotnosheniya ot peregovorov v Brest-Litovske do podpisaniya Rapall'skogo dogovora [Soviet-German relations from negotiations in Brest-Litovsk before the signing of the Rapallo Treaty]. T. 1. 1917–1918. Moskva, 1968. (In Russ.)
- 9. Tomas L.Ya. Zhizn' G.V. Chicherina [The Life of G.V. Chicherin]. Moskva, 2010. (In Russ.)
- 10. Trotskij L.D. Portrety revolyutsionerov [Portraits of Revolutionaries]. Moskva, 1991. (In Russ.)
- 11. Vatlin A.Iu. “V prochnost' polozheniia bol'shevikov ia ne ochen'-to veriu” [“I don't really believe in the strength of the Bolsheviks' position”] // Vorontsovo pole [Vorontsovo Pole]. 2020. № 4. S. 32–37. (In Russ.)
- 12. Vatlin A.Yu., Lannik L.V. Tajnyenoty k Dobavochnomu dogovoru 27 avgusta 1918 g.: neizvestnyj syuzhet iz istorii sovetsko-germanskikh otnoshenij na iskhode Pervoj mirovoj vojny [Secret notes to the Supplementary Agreement of August 27, 1918: an unknown plot from the history of Soviet-German relations at the end of the First World War] // Novaya i novejshaya istoriya [Modern and Contemporary History]. 2021. № 5. S. 208–230. (In Russ.)
- 13. Baumgart W. Deutsche Ostpolitik 1918: von Brest-Litowsk bis zum Ende des Ersten Weltkrieges. Wien; München, 1966.
- 14. Gutjahr W.-D. Revolution muss sein: Karl Radek – die Biographie. Köln; Weimar; Wien, 2012.