Speech at Celebration Meeting of the Moscow Soviet of Working People’s Deputies and Moscow Party and Public Organizations
November 6, 1943
Comrades: To-day the people of the Soviet Union are celebrating the 26th Anniversary of the great October Socialist Revolution.
For the third time our country is marking the anniversary of her people’s revolution in the conditions of the Patriotic War.
In October 1941, our Motherland lived through hard days. The enemy was
approaching the capital and he encircled Leningrad from the land. Our
troops were compelled to retreat. It demanded enormous efforts by the
army and the exertion of all the forces of the people to check the
enemy and deal him a serious blow before Moscow.
By October 1942, the danger to our Motherland had become even greater.
The enemy stood then barely 120 kilometres (75 miles) from Moscow, had
broken into Stalingrad and had entered the foothills of the Caucasus.
But even in those grave days the army and the people did not lose
heart, but steadfastly endured all trials. They found in themselves the
strength to check the enemy and deal him an answering blow. True to the
behests of the great Lenin, they defended the achievements of the
October Revolution without sparing their strength or their lives. As is
well known, these efforts of the army and the people were not in vain.
Soon after the October days of last year, our troops went over to the
offensive and inflicted new, powerful blows on the Germans, first at
Stalingrad, in the Caucasus and in the area of the middle reaches of
the Don, and then, at the beginning of 1943, at Velikie Luki, before
Leningrad and in the area of Rzhev and Vyazma. Since then the Red Army
has never let the initiative out of its hands. Throughout the summer of
this year its blows became harder and harder, its military mastery grew
with every month. Since then our troops have won big victories, and the
Germans have suffered one defeat after another. However hard the enemy
tried, he still failed to gain any success of the least importance on
the Soviet-German front.
I. A Year Marking a Radical Turn in the Course of the War
The past year, from the 25th to the 26th anniversaries of the October Revolution, marked a turn in the Patriotic War.
It was a turning-point above all because in this year the Red Army for
the first time in the war succeeded in carrying through a big summer
offensive against the German troops, and under the blows of our forces
the German-fascist troops were compelled hurriedly to give up territory
seized by them, not infrequently saving themselves from encirclement by
flight and abandoning on the battlefield huge quantities of war
material, stores of armaments and ammunition and large numbers of
wounded officers and men.
Thus, the successes of our summer campaign in the second half of this
year continued and crowned the successes achieved in our winter
campaign at the beginning of this year.
Now, when the Red Army, developing the successes of the winter
campaign, has inflicted a mighty blow on the German troops in the
summer, it is possible to consider as finally dead and buried the fairy
tale that the Red Army is incapable of conducting a successful
offensive in summer. The past year has shown that the Red Army can
advance in summer just as well as in winter.
In the course of the past year, as a result of these offensive
operations, our troops succeeded in fighting their way forward from 500
kilometres (312 miles) in the central part of the front and up to 1,300
kilometres (812 miles) in the south (applause), liberating nearly
1,000,000 square kilometres (390,000 square miles) of territory, i.e.,
almost two-thirds of the Soviet soil temporarily seized by the enemy,
while the enemy troops were being thrown back from Vladikavkaz to
Kherson, from Elista to Krivoi Rog, from Stalingrad to Kiev, from
Voronezh to Gomel, from Vyazma and Rzhev to the approaches of Orsha and
Vitebsk.
Having no faith in the stability of their past successes on the
Soviet-German front, the Germans already, over a long period, built
powerful defence zones, particularly along the big rivers. But in this
year’s battles neither rivers nor powerful fortifications saved the
Germans. Our troops shattered the German defences, and in only three
months of the summer of 1943 skilfully forced four important water
barriers – the Northern Donets, Desna, Sozh and Dnieper. I do not even
mention such barriers as the German defences in the area of the river
Mius, west of Rostov, and the defences in the area of the river
Molochnaya, near Melitopol. At present the Red Army is successfully
battering the enemy on the other side of the Dnieper.
This year marked a turning-point also because the Red Army was able in
a comparatively short time to grind down the most experienced veteran
cadres of the German-fascist troops, and at the same time to steel and
multiply its own cadres in successful offensive battles in the course
of the year. In the battles on the Soviet-German front during the past
year, the German-fascist Army lost over 4,000,000 officers and men,
including not less than 1,800,000 killed. Moreover, during this year
the Germans lost over 14,000 planes, over 25,000 tanks and not less
than 40,000 guns.
The German-fascist army to-day is not what it was at the outbreak of
the war. Whereas at the outbreak of the war it had sufficient numbers
of experienced cadres, now it has been diluted with newly baked, young,
inexperienced officers whom the Germans are hurriedly throwing on to
the front, as they have neither the necessary reserve of officers, nor
the time to train them.
Altogether different is the picture presented to-day by the Red Army.
Its cadres have grown and become steeled in successful offensive
battles during the past year. The numbers of its fighting cadres are
growing and will continue to grow, since the existence of the necessary
officer reserve gives it time and opportunity to train young officer
cadres and promote them to responsible posts.
It is characteristic that instead of the 240 divisions which faced our
front last year, of which 179 divisions were German, this year the Red
Army front is faced by 257 divisions, of which 207 divisions are
German. The Germans, evidently, count on compensating for the lowered
quality of their divisions by increasing their number. However, the
defeat of the Germans during the past year shows that it is impossible
to compensate for deterioration in the quality of divisions by
increasing their number.
From the purely military point of view, the defeat of the German troops
on our front by the close of this year was predetermined by two major
events: the battle of Stalingrad and the battle of Kursk.
The battle of Stalingrad ended in the encirclement of a German Army
300,000 strong, its rout and the capture of about one-third of the
encircled troops. To form an idea of the scale of the slaughter,
unparalleled in history, which took place on the battlefields of
Stalingrad, one must realize that after the battle of Stalingrad was
over, 147,200 bodies of killed German officers and men and 46,700
bodies of killed Soviet officers and men were found and buried.
Stalingrad signified the decline of the German-fascist army. After the
Stalingrad slaughter, as is known, the Germans were unable to recover.
As for the battle of Kursk, it ended in the rout of the two main groups
of the attacking German-fascist troops, and in our troops passing over
to a counter-offensive, which subsequently turned into the powerful Red
Army summer offensive. The battle of Kursk began with the German
offensive against Kursk from the north and south. This was the last
attempt of the Germans to carry out a big summer offensive and, in the
event of its success, to recoup their losses. As is well known, the
offensive ended in failure, the Red Army not only repulsed the German
offensive, but itself passed over to the offensive and, by a series of
consecutive blows, in the course of the summer period hurled the
German-fascist troops back beyond the Dnieper.
While the battle of Stalingrad heralded the decline of the
German-fascist army, the battle of Kursk confronted it with disaster.
Finally, this year marked a turning-point because the successful Red
Army offensive radically aggravated the economic and military political
situation of fascist Germany, and confronted her with a profound
crisis.
The Germans counted on carrying out in the summer of this year a
successful offensive on the Soviet-German front, to redeem their losses
and to bolster up their shaken prestige in Europe. But the Red Army
upset the Germans’ calculations, repulsed their offensive, itself
launched an offensive and proceeded to drive the Germans westwards,
thereby shattering the prestige of German arms.
The Germans counted on prolonging the war, started building defence
lines and “walls,” and proclaimed for all to hear that their new
positions were impregnable. But here again the Red Army upset the
calculations of the Germans, broke through their defence lines and
“walls,” and continued successfully to advance, giving them no time to
drag out the war.
The Germans counted on rectifying the situation at the front by means
of “total” mobilization. But here, too, events upset the Germans’
calculations. The summer campaign has already eaten up two-thirds of
the “totally” mobilized. However, it does not look as if this
circumstance has brought about any improvement in the position of the
German-fascist army. It may prove necessary to proclaim yet another
“total” mobilization, and there is no reason why a repetition of such a
measure should not result in the “total” collapse of a certain state.
(Loud applause.)
The Germans counted on retaining a firm hold on the Ukraine in order to
avail themselves of Ukrainian agricultural produce for their army and
population, and of Donbas coal for the factories and railways serving
the German army. But here, too, they miscalculated. As a result of the
successful Red Army offensive the Germans lost not only the Donbas
coal, but also the richest grain-producing regions of the Ukraine, and
there is no reason to suppose that they will not also lose the rest of
the Ukraine in the very near future. (Loud applause.) Naturally, all
these miscalculations could not but worsen, and in fact did radically
worsen, the economic and military-political position of fascist
Germany.
Fascist Germany is passing through a profound crisis. She is facing disaster.
II. Nation-wide Assistance to the Front
The successes of the Red Army would have been impossible without the
support of the people, without the self-sacrificing work of the Soviet
people in the factories and workshops, collieries and mines, transport
and agriculture. In the hard conditions of war the Soviet people have
proved able to ensure for their Army everything at all necessary and
have incessantly perfected its fighting equipment. Never during the
whole course of the war has the enemy been able to surpass our Army in
quality of armaments. At the same time our industry has given the front
ever-increasing quantities of war equipment.
The past year marked a turning-point not only in the trend of military
operations but also in the work of our home front. We were no longer
confronted with such tasks as the evacuation of enterprises to the east
and the switching of industry to production of armaments. The Soviet
State now has an efficient and rapidly expanding war economy. Thus all
the efforts of the people could be concentrated on increase of
production and further improvement of armaments, particularly tanks,
planes, guns and self-propelled artillery. Here we achieved big
successes. The Red Army, supported by the entire people, has received
uninterrupted supplies of fighting equipment, rained millions of bombs,
mines and shells upon the enemy and brought thousands of tanks and
planes into battle. One has every ground for saying that the
self-sacrificing labour of the Soviet people in the rear will go down
in history side by side with the Red Army’s heroic struggle and the
unparalleled feat of the people in defence of their Motherland.
(Prolonged applause.)
Workers of the Soviet Union, who in the years of peaceful construction
built up our highly developed, powerful socialist industry, have during
the Patriotic War been working with intense zeal and energy to help the
front, displaying true labour heroism.
Everyone knows that in the war against the U.S.S.R. the Hitlerites had
at their disposal not only the highly developed industry of Germany,
but also the rather powerful industries of the vassal and occupied
countries. Yet the Hitlerites have failed to maintain the quantitative
superiority in military equipment which they had at the beginning of
the war against the Soviet Union. If the former superiority of the
enemy as regards number of tanks, planes, mortars and automatic rifles
has now been liquidated, if our army to-day experiences no serious
shortage of arms, ammunition and equipment, the credit for this is due,
in the first place, to our working class. (Loud and prolonged
applause.)
The peasants of the Soviet Union, who in the years of peaceful
construction on the basis of the collective farm system transformed a
backward agriculture into an advanced agriculture, have displayed
during the Patriotic War a high degree of awareness of the common
national interest unparalleled in the history of the country-side. By
self-sacrificing labour to help the front, they have shown that the
Soviet peasantry considers the present war against the Germans to be
its own cause, a war for its own life and liberty.
It is well known that as a result of invasion by the fascist hordes,
our country was temporarily deprived of the important agricultural
districts of the Ukraine, the Don and the Kuban. And yet our collective
and State farms supplied the army and the country with food without any
serious interruptions. Of course, without the collective farm system,
without the self-sacrificing labour of the men and women collective
farmers, we, could not have coped with this most difficult task. If in
the third year of the war our army is not experiencing a shortage of
food, and if the population is supplied with food and industry with raw
materials, this is evidence of the strength and vitality of the
collective farm system, of the patriotism of the collective farm
peasantry. (Prolonged applause.)
A great part in helping the front has been played by our transport,
primarily by railway transport, and also by river, sea and motor
transport. As is known, transport is the vital means of connecting the
rear and the front. One may produce large quantities of arms and
ammunition, but if transport does not deliver them to the front on time
they may remain useless freight as far as the front is concerned. It
must be said that transport plays a decisive part in the timely
delivery of arms and ammunition, food, clothing and so on to the front.
If in spite of war-time difficulties and a shortage of fuel, we have
been able to supply the front with everything necessary, the credit
goes in the first place to our transport workers and office employees.
(Prolonged applause.)
Nor does our intelligentsia lag behind the working class and peasantry
in their aid to the front. The Soviet intelligentsia is working with
devotion for the defence of our country, continually improving the Red
Army’s armaments and the technology and organization of production. It
helps the workers and collective farmers to improve industry and
agriculture, advances Soviet science and culture in the conditions of
war.
This is to the honour of our intelligentsia. (Prolonged applause.)
All the peoples of the Soviet Union have risen as one in defence of
their Motherland, rightly regarding the present Patriotic War as the
common cause of all working people irrespective of nationality or
religion. By now the Hitlerite politicians themselves see how
hopelessly stupid were their calculations on discord and conflict among
the peoples of the Soviet Union. The friendship of the peoples of our
country has withstood all the hardship and trials of the war and has
become tempered still further in the common struggle of all Soviet
people against the fascist invaders.
Herein lies the source of the strength of the Soviet Union. (Loud and prolonged applause.)
As in the years of peaceful construction, so in the days of war, the
leading and guiding force of the Soviet people has been the Party of
Lenin, the Party of the Bolsheviks. No other Party has ever enjoyed, or
enjoys, such prestige among the masses of the people as our Bolshevik
Party. And this is natural. Under the leadership of the Bolshevik
Party, the workers, peasants and intelligentsia of our country have won
their freedom and built a Socialist society. In the Patriotic War the
Party has stood before us as the inspirer and organizer of the
nation-wide struggle against the fascist invaders. The organizational
work of the Party has united and directed all the efforts of the Soviet
people towards the common goal, subordinating all our forces and means
to the cause of defeating the enemy. During the war, the Party has
increased its kinship with the people, has established still closer
links with the wide masses of the working people.
Herein lies the source of the strength of our state. (Loud and prolonged applause.)
The present war has forcefully confirmed the well-known statement of
Lenin to the effect that war is an all-round test of a nation’s
material and spiritual forces. The history of war teaches that only
those states withstood this test which proved stronger than their
adversaries as regards the development and organization of their
economy, as regards the experience, skill and fighting spirit of their
troops, as regards the fortitude and unity of the people throughout the
whole course of the war. Ours is just such a State.
The Soviet State was never so stable and unshakable as now, in the
third year of the Patriotic War. The lessons of the war show that the
Soviet system is not only the best form of organizing the economic and
cultural development of the country in the years of peaceful
construction, but also the best form of mobilizing all the forces of
the people for resistance to the enemy in war time. Soviet power,
established 26 years ago, has transformed our country within a short
historical period into an impregnable fortress. The Red Army has the
most stable and reliable rear of all the armies in the world.
Herein lies the source of the strength of the Soviet Union. (Loud and prolonged applause.)
There is no doubt that the Soviet State will emerge from the war even
stronger and even more consolidated. The German invaders are ruining
and devastating our land in an endeavour to undermine the power of our
State. To an even greater extent than before, the offensive of the Red
Army has exposed the barbarous, bandit character of the Hitlerite army.
In districts seized by them, the Germans have exterminated hundreds of
thousands of our peaceful civilians. Like the mediæval barbarians
of Attila’s hordes, the German fiends trample down our fields, burn
down our towns and villages, demolish our industrial enterprises and
cultural institutions. The Germans’ crimes are evidence of the weakness
of the fascist invaders, for only usurpers who themselves do not
believe in their victory would behave in this way. And the more
hopeless the position of the Hitlerites becomes, the more viciously do
they rage in their atrocities and plunder. Our people will not forgive
the German fiends for these crimes. We shall make the German criminals
answer for all their misdeeds. (Loud and prolonged applause.)
In the areas where the fascist cut-throats have temporarily held sway,
we shall have to restore demolished towns and villages, industry,
transport, agricultural and cultural institutions, and create normal
living conditions for the Soviet people delivered from fascist slavery.
Work is already in full swing for the restoration of economy and
culture in areas liberated from the enemy. But this is only the
beginning. We must completely eliminate the consequences of the rule of
the Germans in areas liberated from German occupation. This is a great,
national task. We can and must cope with this difficult task within a
short time.
III. Consolidation of the Anti-Hitlerite Coalition and Disintegration of the Fascist Bloc
The past year has marked a turning-point not only in the Patriotic War of the Soviet Union, but also in the whole world war.
The changes which have taken place during this year in the military and
international situation have been to the advantage of the U.S.S.R. and
the Allied countries friendly to it and detrimental to Germany and her
accomplices in the plundering of Europe.
The victories of the Red Army have had results and consequences far
beyond the limits of the Soviet-German front. They have changed the
whole further course of the world war and acquired great international
significance. The victory of the Allied countries over the common enemy
has come nearer, while relations among the Allies and the fighting
partnership of their armies, far from weakening, have, contrary to the
expectations of the enemy, become stronger and more consolidated. The
historic decisions of the Moscow Conference of representatives of the
Soviet Union, Great Britain and the United States of America, published
recently in the Press, are eloquent testimony of this. Now the united
countries are filled with determination to strike joint blows against
the enemy which will result in final victory over him.
This year the Red Army’s blows at the German-fascist troops were
supported by the military operations of our Allies in North Africa, in
the Mediterranean Basin and in Southern Italy. At the same time the
Allies subjected and are still subjecting important industrial centres
of Germany to heavy air bombing and thus considerably weakening the
enemy’s military power. If we add to all this the fact that the Allies
are regularly supplying us with various armaments and raw materials, it
can be said without exaggeration that, by doing all this, they have
considerably facilitated the successes of our summer campaign. Of
course, the present operations of the Allied armies in south Europe
cannot yet be regarded as a second front. But still it is something in
the nature of a second front. Obviously, the opening of a real second
front in Europe, which is not far off, would considerably hasten
victory over Hitlerite Germany and still further consolidate the
comradeship-in-arms of the Allied countries.
Thus, the events of the past year show that the anti-Hitlerite
coalition is a firm union of the peoples and rests on a solid
foundation. By now it is obvious to everybody that, by unleashing the
present war, the Hitlerite clique has led Germany and her satellites
into a hopeless impasse. The defeats of the fascist troops on the
Soviet-German front and the blows of our Allies at the Italy-German
troops have shaken the whole edifice of the fascist bloc, and it is now
crumbling before our very eyes. Italy has irrevocably dropped out of
the Hitlerite coalition. Mussolini can change nothing, for he is in
actual fact a prisoner of the Germans. Next comes the turn of the other
participants of the coalition. Finland, Hungary, Rumania, and the other
vassals of Hitler, discouraged by Germany’s military defeats, have now
finally lost faith that the outcome of the war will be favourable to
them and are anxious to find a way out of the quagmire into which
Hitler has dragged them. Now that the time has come to answer for their
plundering, Hitler-Germany’s accomplices in plunder, but recently so
obedient to their master, are now in search of a favourable moment to
creep away unnoticed from the robber band. (Laughter.)
When they entered the war, the partners in the Hitlerite bloc counted
on a rapid victory. Already beforehand they had decided on who would
receive what – who would got the puddings and pies, who would get the
bruises and black eyes. Of course they intended the bruises and black
eyes for their adversaries and the puddings and pies for themselves.
But now it is clear that Germany and her flunkeys will get no puddings
and pies, but will have to share the bruises and black eyes. (Laughter
and applause.)
Foreseeing this unattractive prospect, Hitler’s accomplices are now
racking their brains to find a way out of the war with as few bruises
and black eyes as possible. (Laughter.)
Italy’s example shows Hitler’s vassals that the longer they postpone
their inevitable break with the Germans and allow them to lord it in
their states, the greater the devastation in store for their countries,
the greater the sufferings their peoples will have to endure. Italy’s
example also shows that Hitlerite Germany has not the least intention
of defending her vassal countries, but intends to convert them into a
scene of devastating war, if only she can stave off the hour of her own
defeat.
The cause of German fascism is lost, and the sanguinary “New Order” it
has established is approaching collapse. In the occupied countries of
Europe an outburst of the people’s wrath against the fascist enslavers
is developing. Germany’s former prestige in the countries of her allies
and in the neutral countries is lost beyond recovery; and her economic
and political ties with neutral states have been undermined.
The time is long past when the Hitlerite clique made a great noise
about the Germans winning world domination. Now as is known, the
Germans have other matters than world domination to worry about. They
have to think about keeping body and soul together. (Laughter and
applause.)
Thus, the course of the war has shown that the alliance of the fascist
states did not and does not rest on a reliable foundation. The
Hitlerite coalition was formed on the basis of the predatory, rapacious
ambitions of its members. As long as the Hitlerites were gaining
military successes, the fascist coalition appeared to be a stable
association. But the very first defeats of the fascist troops resulted
in the actual disintegration of the bandit bloc.
Hitlerite Germany and her vassals stand on the verge of catastrophe.
The victory of the Allied countries over Hitlerite Germany will put on
the agenda the important questions of organizing and rebuilding the
state, economic and cultural life of the European peoples. The policy
of our Government. on these questions remains constant. Together with
our Allies, we must:
(1) Liberate the peoples of Europe from the fascist invaders and
help to rebuild their national States, dismembered by the fascist
enslavers-the peoples of France, Belgium, Yugoslavia, Czechoslovakia,
Poland, Greece and other States now under the German yoke, must once
more become free and independent;
(2) grant the liberated peoples of Europe the full right and freedom to determine their own form of government;
(3) adopt measures to ensure that all the fascist criminals
responsible for the present war and the sufferings of the people,
should bear stern punishment and retribution for all the crimes
perpetrated by them no matter in what country they may hide;
(4) establish such an order in Europe as will completely exclude
the possibility of fresh aggression on the part of Germany;
(5) establish lasting economic, political and cultural
collaboration among the peoples of Europe, based on mutual confidence
and mutual assistance for the purpose of restoring economic and
cultural life destroyed by the Germans.
The Red Army and the Soviet people during the past year have achieved
great successes in the struggle against the German invaders. We have
achieved a radical turning-point in the war in favour of our country,
and the war is now proceeding to its final climax. But it is not the
habit of Soviet people to rest satisfied with their achievements, to
exult over their successes. Victory may elude us if complacency appears
in our ranks. Victory cannot be won without struggle and effort. It is
achieved in fighting. Victory is now near, but to win it there must be
a fresh strenuous effort, self-sacrificing work throughout the rear and
skilful and resolute actions of the Red Army at the front. It would be
a crime against the Motherland, against the Soviet people who have
fallen temporarily under the fascist yoke, against the peoples of
Europe, languishing under German oppression, if we failed to use every
opportunity of hastening the enemy’s defeat. The enemy must not be
allowed any respite. That is why we must exert all our strength to
finish off the enemy.
The Soviet people and the Red Army clearly see the difficulties of the
forthcoming struggle. But to-day it is already clear that the day of
our victory is approaching. The war has entered the stage when it is a
question of completely expelling the invaders from Soviet soil and
liquidating the fascist “New Order in Europe.” The time is not far off
when we shall completely expel the enemy from the Ukraine and
Byelorussia, from the Leningrad and Kalinin Regions, and liberate from
the German invaders the peoples of the Crimea, Lithuania, Latvia,
Esthonia, Moldavia and the Karelo-Finnish Republic.
Comrades!
For the victory of the Anglo-Soviet-American fighting alliance! (Applause.)
For the liberation of the peoples of Europe from the fascist yoke! (Applause.)
For the complete expulsion of the German fiends from our soil! (Applause.)
Long live our Red Army! (Applause.)
Long live our navy! (Applause.)
Long live our gallant men and women guerillas! (Applause.)
Long live our great Motherland! (Applause.)
Death to the German invaders! (Loud and prolonged applause. All stand.)
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