Miliukov's Speech to the Duma, November 14, 1916

Similar documents
Reading Essentials and Study Guide

th CP U.S. and the World History First Assignment: Reading and Composing Responses to Questions

Neutrality and War (Delivered October 13, 1939)

Franklin Delano Roosevelt, the Four Freedoms Speech (excerpt)

Harry S. Truman. The Truman Doctrine. Delivered 12 March 1947 before a Joint Session of Congress

Franklin Delano Roosevelt Annual Message to Congress Four Freedoms (1941) [Abridged]

Democracy: The Never-Ending Battle A Conversation with Lech Walesa

from The Four Freedoms Speech

AMERICA MOVES FORWARD

President Wilson's Declaration of Neutrality

James Madison's Defense of the Constitution at the Virginia Convention (1788)

March 12, 1947 Truman Doctrine, 'Recommendations for Assistance to Greece and Turkey'

The Cold War: Why did the United States and the USSR enter into the Cold War after World War II?

Achieving an Atmosphere of Mutual Trust and Confidence Henry A. Wallace Offers an Alternative to Cold War Containment

Topic 3: The Rise and Rule of Single-Party States (USSR and Lenin/Stalin) Pipes Chapter 4

THE MEANING OF IDEOLOGY

The Socialist Party by Job Harriman Published in The Western Comrade [Los Angeles], vol. 3, no. 12 (April 1916), pp

THE rece,nt international conferences

H.E. Mr. Lech KACZYŃSKI

The Kornilov Affair: Unusual Alliances and External Enemies

John T. Flynn, The Road Ahead, 1949.

UNIT Y219 RUSSIA

Origins of the Cold War. A Chilly Power Point Presentation Brought to You by Ms. Shen

Mr. President, Mr. Speaker, Members of the Congress of the United States:

Address by Leonid Brezhnev (24 June 1973)

Address by the Soviet Representative (Andrei Gromyko) to the United Nations Atomic Energy Commission June 19, 1946

TEKS 8C: Calculate percent composition and empirical and molecular formulas. Reform and Reaction in Russia

Srictly embargoed until 24 April h00 CET

Remarks by. The Honorable Aram Sarkissian Chairman, Republic Party of Armenia. Carnegie Endowment for International Peace. Tuesday, February 13 th

A union, not a unity: The Briand Memorandum

Mikhail Gorbachev s Address to Participants in the International Conference The Legacy of the Reykjavik Summit

Woodrow Wilson on Socialism and Democracy

Our Journey to the New Millennium

5.1d- Presidential Roles

Case Study 5.1: Group draft and final answers: examples

The French Revolution Timeline

UNIT 10 The Russian Revolution (1917)

The EU and Russia: our joint political challenge

SOURCE #1: The "Peace Ballot" of million votes cast; 38.2% of U.K. population over age 18.

On incorrupt government connotation of pre-qin Confucianism s idea of moral and profit Shaohua Yan

The Role of National Human Rights Institutions (NHRI) in Promoting and Protecting Human Rights in the OSCE Area OSCE Human Dimension Seminar

The Declaration of Independence

Running Head: CASE STUDY: NOBEL PEACE PRIZE SPEECH 1. Case Study: President Obama s Nobel Peace Prize Speech. Josh Murphy

2016 OSCE-wide Counter-Terrorism Conference. Preventing and Countering Violent Extremism and Radicalization that Lead to Terrorism

US History, Ms. Brown Website: dph7history.weebly.com

Minister of Foreign Affairs of the Republic of Latvia,

In Your Notebook-- What do you remember about the causes of the Russian Revolution? What were the revolutionaries trying to achieve?

September 11, 1964 Letter from the Korean Workers Party Central Committee to the Central Committee of the CPSU

Dr. Frank-Walter Steinmeier: Address to the OSCE Permanent Council on 2 July 2015

ADDRESS. H.E. Dr. GJORGE IVANOV PRESIDENT OF THE REPUBLIC OF MACEDONIA. United Nations General Assembly. New York, 25 September, 2009

Pre-Revolutionary Era Michelle Hubenschmidt Mulberry High School

AND GRADUATED DETERRENCE

Primary Sources: Woodrow Wilson's 14 Principles to End WWI

OBJECTIVE 7.2 IRON CURTAIN DESCENDS THE ANALYZING THE EVENTS THAT BEGAN THE IDEOLOGICAL CONFLICT BETWEEN THE UNITED STATES AND THE SOVIET UNION

CHAPTER 21: The Road To War

Chapter 14 Section 1. Revolutions in Russia

Famous Speeches: Winston Churchill's "Blood, Toil, Tears and Sweat"

DOWNLOAD OR READ : WAR AND REVOLUTION IN THE WEST OF IRELAND PDF EBOOK EPUB MOBI

Origins of the Cold War. A Chilly Power Point Presentation Brought to You by Ms. Shen

Guided Readings: World War I

Tenth Japan-Singapore Symposium Keynote Speech by Mr Minoru Kiuchi State Minister for Foreign Affairs of Japan

Preparing the Revolution

Monroe Doctrine - Section 1

KIM IL SUNG FOR THE STRENGTHENING OF COOPERATION BETWEEN THE NON-ALIGNED COUNTRIES IN THEIR NEWS SERVICES

THE RUSSIAN REVOLUTION (1917)

Washington and Adams Administrations

Final Statement of the 4th Global Inter-religious Conference on Article 9 From Seoul and Okinawa to Tokyo December 5, 2014 YMCA Asia Youth Center

A Level History. Independent Summer Learning Introductory Assignment

THE HOMELAND UNION-LITHUANIAN CHRISTIAN DEMOCRATS DECLARATION WE BELIEVE IN EUROPE. 12 May 2018 Vilnius

There have been bleak moments in America s history, battles we were engaged in where American victory was far from certain.

General Assembly Security Council

Communist International Sept. (9), 1936, pp

Introductory Remarks. Michael Schaefer, Chairman of the Board, BMW Foundation. Check against delivery!

Vladimir Lenin, Extracts ( )

I am particularly pleased to be here today.

1. In 1914, combined to drag Europe into a world war. 1. Among the powers of Europe, nationalism caused a desire to.

Redrawing The Line: The Anarchist Writings of Paul Goodman

The Mediterranean Chapter of the Helsinki Final Act and the Future of Mediterranean Co-operation Tuesday, 10th November 2015, 9:30am

Manifesto of October 17, 1905

RUSSIAN INFORMATION AND PROPAGANDA WAR: SOME METHODS AND FORMS TO COUNTERACT AUTHOR: DR.VOLODYMYR OGRYSKO

REMARKS BY RT HON NGOGA KAROLI MARTIN AT THE OCCASSION OF THE NATIONAL HEROES DAY, FEB 1 ST, 2018

THE WHITE HOUSE Office of the Press Secretary. FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE April 5, 2009 REMARKS BY PRESIDENT BARACK OBAMA

THE TWO REPORTS PUBLISHED IN THIS DOCUMENT are the

State Counsellor Daw Aung San Suu Kyi s Speech on the occasion of the one Year Anniversary of the government (30 March 2017)

Resolution 211 (1965)

1. Militarism 2. Alliances 3. Imperialism 4. Nationalism

Origins of the Cold War. A Chilly Power Point Presentation Brought to You by Mr. Raffel

From The Collected Works of Milton Friedman, compiled and edited by Robert Leeson and Charles G. Palm.

BACKGROUND: why did the USA and USSR start to mistrust each other? What was the Soviet View? What was the Western view? What is a Cold War?

Source:

Document A: Source: Wikimedia Commons

NOTE TO MR GÜNTHER OETTINGER COMMISSIONER IN CHARGE OF BUDGET AND HUMAN RESOURCES

But we need to recall that what we did was in the main emergency action, imposed on us by our enemies.

The French Revolution

4: TELESCOPING THE TIMES

CARLA CANTONE. 7 CONGRESS FERPA Budapest 9-11 September Strategic Program. Designated General Secretary

Remarks by Under-Secretary-General Jayantha Dhanapala to DPI/NGO Conference, 11 September: Session on Demobilizing the War Machines: Making Peace Last

Bell Work. Describe Truman s plan for. Europe. How will his plan help prevent the spread of communism?

Distinguished Representatives of the United Nations Organisations, Excellencies, Members of the Diplomatic Corps,

Transcription:

Miliukov's Speech to the Duma, November 14, 1916 As the war continued into its third year, concerns about the Russian campaign and the regime's refusal to work with loyal political and social groups intensified among Russia's parliamentarians. In this famous speech, the leader of the liberal "Kadet" party, Pavel Miliukov, articulated the frustration of many with Russia's failure to prevail in the war. His challenge to the government "What is it, stupidity or treason?" demonstrated the growing crisis that Tsar Nicholas faced on the domestic front by the end of 1916. November 14, 1916 Gentlemen, Members of the State Duma! With a heavy heart, I ascend this tribune today. You remember the circumstances under which the Duma met over a year ago, August 1, 1915. The Duma was then suffering from the blows of our military failures. These were due to the scarcity of munitions; and for this scarcity the Minister of War, Sukhomlinov, was responsible. You recall how at that moment the country, under the influence of the terrible peril that had become obvious to all, demanded a union of the national forces and the formation of a Ministry composed of persons in whom the country had confidence. And you recall how even Minister Goremykin, at that time, admitted from this very platform that "the course of the war demands an immense, extraordinary spiritual and physical effort." You remember that the Government then yielded. The Ministers who were odious to the public were then removed before the convocation of the Duma. Sukhomlinov, whom the country regarded as a traitor, was removed. (Cries on the left: "He is a traitor"), and, in response to the demand of the popular representatives, Polivanov, at the session of August 10 announced to us, amid general applause, as you may recall, that a commission of investigation had been appointed and a beginning made toward bringing the former Minister of War to justice. And, gentleman, the public agitation at that time was not without consequences, Our army obtained what it needed, and the nation entered upon the second year of the war with the same enthusiasm as in the first year. What a difference, gentlemen, there is now, in the 27th month of the war! A difference which is especially striking to me, after several months spent abroad. We are now facing new difficulties, and these difficulties are not less complex and serious, not less profound, than those that confronted us in the spring of last year. The Government

needed heroic measures to combat the general disorganization of the national economy. We ourselves are the same as before; we, in this 27th month of the war, are the same as we were in the tenth and in the first month. As heretofore, we are striving for complete victory; as heretofore, we are prepared to make all the necessary sacrifices; and, as heretofore, we are anxious to preserve our national unity. But, I must say this candidly: there is a difference in the situation. We have lost faith in the ability of this Government to achieve victory (Cries: "That's true"), because, as far as this Government is concerned, neither the attempts at correction nor the attempts at improvement, which we have made here, have proved successful. All the Allied Powers have summoned to the support of the Government the best men of all parties, all the confidence, and all those organizing elements present in their countries, which are better organized than our own country. What has our own Government accomplished? Our declaration has told that. When there was formed in the Fourth Duma a majority [Progressive Bloc], which the Duma lacked before, a majority ready to vote its confidence in a cabinet worthy of such confidence, then nearly all those men who might in some slight degree have expected confidence were forced, systematically, one after another, every one of them, to leave the cabinet. And, if we have formerly said that our Government had neither the knowledge nor the ability which were indispensable at the moment, we say now, gentlemen that this present Government has sunk beneath the level on which it stood in the normal times of Russian life. (Cries on the left: "True! Right!") And now the gulf between us and that Government has grown wider and impassable. (Cries on the left: "True!") Gentlemen, a year ago, Sukhomlinov was placed under judicial investigation. Then the hateful Ministers were removed before the opening of the [Duma] session, but now the number of such ministers has been augmented by one. (Cries on the left: "True!" A voice on the right: "Protopopov?") At that time, we did not appeal to the reason and the knowledge of the Government, but, instead, to its patriotism and its conscience. Can we do so now? (Cries on the left: "Of course, not!") In the French Yellow Book there has been published a German document in which rules are laid down for the disorganization of the enemy's country, showing how to stir up trouble and disorder. Gentlemen, if our own Government wanted deliberately to set itself a task, or if the Germans wanted to employ their own means for the same purpose the means of influencing and of bribing they could not do better than to act as the Russian Government has acted. (Cries on the left: "Correct!" Rodichev: "Unfortunately, that is true.") And now, gentlemen, you have the consequences. As early as the 26th of June,

1915, I uttered a warning from this platform that, "the poisonous seed of suspicion is already yielding abundant fruit," and, "from one end of the Russian land to the other, there are spreading the dark rumors of treachery and treason." I am quoting the very words which I then used. I pointed out at the time and I am again quoting my own words that, "these rumors reach high and spare none." Alas, gentlemen, that warning, like all the others, was not heeded. Consequently, we find the following statements in the declaration of the twenty-eight presidents of provincial zemstvo boards who met at Moscow on the 11th of November of the present year: "Painful, terrible suspicions, sinister rumors of treachery and treason, of occult forces fighting for the benefit of Germany and striving, through the destruction of national unity and the sowing of dissention, to prepare the ground for a disgraceful peace, have reached a point where it is generally felt that an enemy hand is secretly influencing the course of our State affairs. It is but natural that from such foundation there should arise the rumor that our governing circles have admitted the uselessness of further struggle, the timeliness for ending the war, and the necessity of a separate peace." Yes, gentlemen, there is a vast difference between that meeting of ours, under Goremykin, which took place on the first of August, 1915, and even in February, 1916, and the meeting taking place today. These meetings are just as different as is the general condition of the country. At that time we could talk about organizing the country with the help of Duma legislation. Had we then been given the opportunity to carry through the laws which we had planned and prepared for passage, including the law on the volosts, Russia would not now be so helpless in the face of the food supply problem. That was the situation then. But now, gentlemen, the problem of legislation has been shifted to the background. Today we see and understand with this Government we cannot legislate, any more than we can with this Government, lead Russia to victory. (Cries on the left: "Correct!") Formerly, we tried to prove that it was impossible to start a fight against all the vital forces of the nation, that it was impossible to carry on warfare within the country when there was war at the front, that it was necessary to utilize the popular enthusiasm for the achievement of national tasks, and that otherwise there could be only killing oppression, which would merely increase the very peril that they were trying to avert by such oppression. Today, gentlemen, it seems that everybody feels convinced that it is useless to go to them with proofs; useless when fear of the people, fear of their own country, blinds their eyes, and when the fundamental problem has become that of hastening the end of the war, were it even without gain, merely to be freed from the necessity for seeking popular

support. (Cries on the left: "Correct!") On the 23rd of February, 1916, I concluded my speech with the statement that we no longer dared to address our appeal to the "political wisdom of the Government" and that I did not expect any answer from the existing Cabinet to the questions which agitated us. At that time, my words appeared to some people too pessimistic. But now we go further, and perhaps those words will sound clearer and more hopeful. We are telling this Government, as we told it in the declaration of the Bloc: "We shall fight you; we shall fight with all legitimate means until you go!" (Cries on the left: "Right! Correct!") It is said that a member of the Council of Ministers, and this was correctly heard by Duma Member Chkheidze on being told that the State Duma would on this occasion speak of treason, exclaimed excitedly: "I may, perhaps, be a fool, but I am not a traitor." (Laughter) Gentlemen, the predecessor of that Minister was undoubtedly a clever Minister, just as the predecessor of our Minister of Foreign Affairs was an honest Minister. But they are no longer in Cabinet. And, does it matter, gentlemen, as a practical question, whether we are, in the present case, dealing with stupidity or treason? When the Duma keeps everlastingly insisting that the rear must be organized for a successful struggle, the Government persists in claiming that organizing the country means organizing a revolution, and deliberately prefers chaos and disorganization. What is it, stupidity or treason? (A voice from the left: "Treason!" Adjemov: "Stupidity!" Laughter). Furthermore, gentlemen, when the authorities, in the midst of this general discontent and irritation, deliberately set to work stirring up popular outbreaks, that is to say, when they purposely provoke unrest and outbreaks, is that being done unconsciously or consciously? We cannot, therefore, find much fault with the people if they arrive at conclusions such as I have read here, in the words of those representatives of provincial administrative boards. You must realize, also, why it is that we, too, have no other task left us today, than the task which I have already pointed out to you: to obtain the retirement of this Government. You ask, "How can we start a fight while the war is on?" But, gentlemen, it is only in wartime that they are a menace. They are a menace to the war, and it is precisely for this reason, in time of war and in the name of war, for the sake of that very thing which induced its to unite, that we are now fighting them. (Cries on the left: "Bravo!" Applause.) Gentlemen, you understand that I can deal with no other theme today than this one. I cannot emulate Duma Member Chkheidze and occupy myself with our internal [Duma] controversies. This is not the time for it, and I shall make no reply to his references and attacks upon me. For me, answer has been given in that declaration which we read there. We have many, very many, different reasons for dissatisfaction with the

Government. When we have time, we shall speak of them. But all those various reasons come down to this one general reason: the incapacity of the Government as at present composed. (Cries on the left: "Right!") This is our main evil, the overcoming of which will be tantamount to the winning of the whole campaign. (Cries on the left: "Right!") And, therefore, gentlemen, for the sake of the millions of victims and the torrents of blood poured out, for the sake of the achievement of our national interests, which Sturmer does not promise us in the name of our responsibilities to that nation which has sent us here, we shall fight on until we achieve that genuine responsibility of government which has been defined by the three points of our common declaration: an equal understanding by all the members of the Cabinet of the immediate problems of the present; their agreement and readiness to execute the program of the majority of the State Duma; their obligation, not only in the realization of this program, but throughout their activity to look to the majority of the State Duma for support. A Cabinet which does not satisfy these three standards does not merit the confidence of the State Duma and must go. (Cries: "Bravo!" Stormy and prolonged applause on the left, in the center, and the left section of the right.) Source: Frank Alfred Golder, ed., Documents of Russian History, 1914-1917, translated by Emanuel Aronsberg (New York: The Century Co., 1927): 154-166; Rech', No. 330, December 13, 1916.