by Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn
Russian exile Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn,
in Washington, D.C., on June 30, delivered a dramatic warning to
all the world - and to Americans in particular. The Nobel Prize
winning author, in his first major public address since his expulsion
from the Soviet Union in 1974, stripped bare the crimes and excesses
of the Communist masters in his native land. And he denounced the
West for a "senseless process of endless concessions to aggressors
in the Kremlin. The text of the 90-minute address that follows is
the translation approved by the author, reprinted with permission
of the AFL-CIO, which invited him to speak.
A WARNING TO THE WEST
Most of those present here today are workers. Creative workers.
And I myself, having spent many years of my life as a stone cutter,
as a foundryman, as a manual worker, in the name of all who have
shared this forced labor with me, like the two Gulag prisoners whom
you just saw, and on behalf of those who are doing forced labor
in our country, I can start my speech today with the greeting: "Brothers!"
"Brothers in Labor"
And not to forget, also, the many honored guests present here tonight,
let me add: "Ladies and Gentlemen."
"Workers of the world unite!" Who of us has not heard this slogan,
which has been sounding through the world for 125 years? Today you
can find it in any Soviet pamphlet as well as in every issue of
Pravda. But never have the leaders of the Communist revolution
in the Soviet Union made application of these words sincerely and
in their full meaning.
When many lies have accumulated over the decades, we forget the
radical and basic lie which is not on the leaves of the tree, but
at its very roots. Now, it's almost impossible to remember or to
believe . . . For instance, I recently published - had reprinted
- a pamphlet from the year 1918. This was a precise record of a
meeting of all representatives of the Petrograd factories, that
being the city known in our country as the "cradle of the Revolution."
I repeat, this was March 1918 - only four months after the October
Revolution - and all the representatives of the Petrograd factories
were cursing the Communists, who had deceived them in all of their
promises. What is more, not only had they abandoned Petrograd to
cold and hunger, themselves having fled from Petrograd to Moscow,
but had given orders to machinegun the crowds of workers in the
courtyards of the factories who were demanding the election of independent
factory committees. Let me remind you, this was March 1918.
Scarcely anyone now can recall the crushing of the Petrograd strikes
in 1921, or the shooting of workers in Kolpino in the same year.
Among the leadership, the Central Committee of the Communist Party,
at the beginning of the Revolution, all were emigre intellectuals
who had returned, after the uprisings had already broken out in
Russia, in order to carry through the Communist Revolution. One
of them was a genuine worker, a highly skilled lathe operator until
the last day of his life. This was Alexander Shliapnikov. Who knows
that name today? Precisely because he expressed the true interests
of the workers within the Communist leadership. In the years before
the Revolution it was Shliapnikov who ran the whole Communist Party
in Russia - not Lenin, who was an emigre.
In 1921, he headed the Workers' Opposition which was charging the
Communist leadership with betraying the workers' interests, with
crushing and oppressing the proletariat and transforming itself
into a bureaucracy. Shliapnikov disappeared from sight. He was arrested
somewhat later and since he firmly stood his ground he was shot
in prison and his name is perhaps unknown to most people here today.
But I remind you: before the Revolution the head of the Communist
Party of Russia was Shliapnikov-not Lenin.
Since that time, the working class has never been able to stand
up for its rights, and in distinction from all the western countries
our working class only receives what they hand out to it. It only
gets handouts. It cannot defend its simplest, everyday interests,
and the least strike for pay or for better living conditions is
viewed as counter-revolutionary.
Thanks to the closed nature of the Soviet system, you have probably
never heard of the textile strikes in 1930 in Ivanovo, or of the
1961 worker unrest in Murom and Alexandrovo, or of the major workers'
uprising in Novocherkassk in 1962 - this in the time of Khrushchev,
after the thaw. This story will shortly be published in detail in
your country in Gulag Archipelago, volume 3. It is a story of how
workers went in a peaceful demonstration to the Party City Committee,
carrying portraits of Lenin, to request a change in economic conditions.
They fired at them with machine guns and dispersed the crowds with
tanks. No family dared even to collect its wounded and dead, but
all were taken away in secret by the authorities.
Precisely to those present here I don't have to explain that in
our country, since the Revolution, there's never been such a thing
as a free trade union. The leaders of the British trade unions are
free to play the unworthy game of visiting Russia's so-called trade
unions and receiving visits in return. But the AFL-CIO has never
given in to these illusions. The American workers' movement has
never allowed itself to be blinded and to mistake slavery for freedom.
And I, today, on behalf of all of our oppressed people, thank you
for this!
When liberal thinkers and wise men of the West, who had forgotten
the meaning of the word "liberty," were swearing that in the Soviet
Union there were no concentration camps at all, the American Federation
of Labor, published in 1947, a map of our concentration camps, and
on behalf of all of the prisoners of those times, I want to thank
the American workers' movement for this. But just as we feel ourselves
your allies here, there also exists another alliance - at first
glance a strange one, a surprising one - but if you think about
it, in fact, one which is well-grounded and easy to understand:
this is the alliance between our Communist leaders and your capitalists.
This alliance is not new.
The very famous Armand Hammer, who is flourishing here today, laid
the basis for this when he made the first exploratory trip into
Russia, still in Lenin's time, in the very first years of the Revolution.
He was extremely successful in this intelligence mission and since
that time for all these 50 years, we observe continuous and steady
support by the businessmen of the West of the Soviet Communist leaders.
Their clumsy and awkward economy, which could never overcome its
own difficulties by itself, is continually getting material and
technological assistance. The major construction projects in the
initial five- year plan were built exclusively with American technology
and materials. Even Stalin recognized that two-thirds of what was
needed was obtained from the West. And if today the Soviet Union
has powerful military and police forces - in a country which is
by contemporary standards poor - they are used to crush our movement
for freedom in the Soviet Union - and we have western capital to
thank for this also.
Let me remind you of a recent incident which some of you may have
seen in the newspapers, although others might have missed it: Certain
of your businessmen, on their own initiative, established an exhibition
of criminological technology in Moscow. This was the most recent
and elaborate technology, which here, in your country, is used to
catch criminals, to bug them, to spy on them, to photograph them,
to tail them, to identify criminals. This was taken to Moscow to
an exhibition in order that the Soviet KGB agents could study it,
as if not understanding what sort of criminals, who would be hunted
by the KGB. The Soviet government was extremely interested in this
technology, and decided to purchase it. And your businessmen were
quite willing to sell it.
Only when a few sober voices here raised an uproar against it was
this deal blocked. Only for this reason it didn't take place.
But you have to realize how clever the KGB is. This technology didn't
have to stay two or three weeks in a Soviet building under Soviet
guard. Two or three nights were enough for the KGB there to look
through it and copy it. And if today, persons are being hunted down
by the best and most advanced technology, for this, I can also thank
your western capitalists.
This is something which is almost incomprehensible to the human
mind:
that burning greed for profit which goes beyond all reason, all
self-control, all conscience, only to get money.
I must say that Lenin foretold this whole process. Lenin, who spent
most of his life in the West and not in Russia, who knew the West
much better than Russia, always wrote and said that the western
capitalists would do anything to strengthen the economy of the USSR.
They will compete with each other to sell us goods cheaper and sell
them quicker, so that the Soviets will buy from one rather than
from the other. He said: They will bring it themselves without thinking
about their future. And, in a difficult moment, at a party meeting
in Moscow, he said: "Comrades, don't panic, when things go very
hard for us, we will give a rope to the bourgeoisie, and the bourgeoisie
will hang itself."
Then, Karl Radek, whom you may have heard of, who was a very
resourceful wit, said:
"Vladimir Ilyich, but where are we going to get enough rope to hang
the whole bourgeoisie?" . Lenin effortlessly replied, "They'll supply
us with it."
Through the decades of the 1920s, the 1930s, the 1940s, the 1950s,
the whole Soviet press wrote: Western capitalism, your end is near.
But it was as if the capitalists had not heard, could not understand,
could not believe this. Nikita Khrushchev came here and said, "We
will bury you!" They didn't believe that, either. They took it as
a joke. Now, of course, they have become more clever in our country.
Now they don't say "we are going to bury you" anymore, now they
say "detente."
Nothing has changed in Communist ideology. The goals are the same
as they were, but instead of the artless Khrushchev, who couldn't
hold his tongue, now they say "detente." In order to understand
this, I will take the liberty of making a short historic survey
- the history of such relations, which in different periods have
been called "trade," "stabilization of the situation," "recognition
of realities," and now "detente." These relations now are at least
40 years old.
Let me remind you with what sort of system they started. The system
was installed by armed uprising. It dispersed the Constituent Assembly.
It capitulated to Germany - the common enemy. It introduced execution
without trial. It crushed workers' strikes. It plundered the villagers
to such an unbelievable extent that the peasants revolted, and when
this happened it crushed the peasants in the bloodiest possible
way. It shattered the Church. It reduced 20 provinces of our country
to a condition of famine. This was in 1921. the famous Volga famine.
A very typical Communist technique: To seize power without thinking
of the fact that the productive forces will collapse, that the fields
will not be sown, the factories will stop, that the country will
decline into poverty and famine - but when poverty and hunger come,
then they request the humanitarian world to help them. We see this
in North Vietnam today, perhaps Portugal is approaching this also.
And the same thing happened in Russia in 1921.
When the three-year civil war, started by the Communists - and "civil
war" was a slogan of the Communists, civil war was Lenin s purpose;
read Lenin, this was his aim and his slogan - when they had ruined
Russia by this civil war, then they asked America, "America, feed
our hungry." And indeed, generous and magnanimous America did feed
our hungry. The so-called American Relief Administration was set
up, headed by your future President Hoover, and indeed many millions
of Russian lives were saved by this organization of yours. But what
sort of gratitude did you receive for this? In the USSR not only
did they try to erase this whole event from the popular memory -
it's almost impossible today in the Soviet press to find any reference
to the American Relief Administration - but they even denounce it
as a clever spy organization, a clever scheme of American imperialism
to set up a spy network in Russia.
I repeat, it was a system that introduced concentration camps for
the first time in the history of the world. A system that, in the
20th Century, was the first to introduce the use of hostages, that
is to say, not to seize the person whom they were seeking, but rather
a member of his family or someone at random, and shoot that person.
This system of hostages and persecution of the family exists to
this day. It is still the most powerful weapon of persecution, because
the bravest person, who is not afraid for himself, still shivers
at the threat to his family. It is a system which was the first
- long before Hitler - to employ false registration, that is, to
say: "Such and such people have to come in to register." People
would comply and then they were taken away to be annihilated.
We didn't have gas chambers in those days. We used barges. A hundred
or a thousand persons were put into a barge and then it was sunk.
It was a system which deceived the workers in all of its decrees
- the decree on land, the decree on peace, the decree on factories,
the decree on freedom of the press. It was a system which exterminated
all additional parties, and let me make it clear to you that it
not only disbanded the party itself, but destroyed its members.
All members of every other party were exterminated. It was a system
which carried out genocide of the peasantry; 15 million peasants
were sent off to extermination. It was a system which introduced
serfdom, the so called "passport system." It was a system which,
in time of peace, artificially created a famine, causing 6 million
persons to die in the Ukraine in 1932 and 1933. They died on the
very edge of Europe. And Europe didn't even notice it. The world
didn't even notice it - 6 million persons!
I could keep on enumerating these endlessly, but I have to stop
because I have come to the year 1933 when, with all I have enumerated
behind us, your President Roosevelt and your Congress recognized
this system as one worthy of diplomatic recognition, of friendship
and of assistance. Let me remind you that the great Washington did
not agree to recognize the French Convention because of its savagery.
Let me remind you that in 1933, voices were raised in your country
objecting to recognition of the Soviet Union. However, the recognition
took place and this was the beginning of friendship and ultimately
of a military alliance.
Let us remember that in 1904, the American press was delighted at
the Japanese victories and everyone wanted Russia's defeat because
it was a conservative country. I want to remind you that in 1914
reproaches were directed at France and England for having entered
into an alliance with such a conservative country as Russia.
The scope and the direction of my speech today do not permit me
to say more about pre-revolutionary Russia. I will just say that
information about pre-revolutionary Russia was obtained by the West
from persons who were either not sufficiently competent or not sufficiently
conscientious. I will just cite for the sake of comparison a number
of figures which you can read for yourself in Gulag Archipelago,
volume 1 which has been published in the United States, and perhaps
many of you may have read it.
These are the figures: According to calculations by specialists,
based on the most precise objective statistics, in pre-revolutionary
Russia, during the 80 years before the revolution - years of the
revolutionary movement when there were attempts on the Tsar's life,
assassination of a Tsar, revolution - during these years about 17
persons a year were executed. The famous Spanish Inquisition, during
the decades when it was at the height of its persecution, destroyed
perhaps 10 persons a month. In the Archipelago - I cite a book which
was published by the Cheka in 1920, proudly reporting on its revolutionary
work in 1918 and 1919 and apologizing that its data were not quite
complete - in 1918 and 1919 the Cheka executed, without trial, more
than a thousand persons a month!
This was written by the Cheka itself, before it understood how this
would look to history.
At the height of Stalin's terror in 1937-38, if we divide the
number of persons executed by the number of months, we get more
than 40,000 persons shot per month!
Here are the figures: 17 a year, 10 a month, more than 1,000 a month,
more than 40,000 a month! Thus, that which had made it difficult
for the democratic West to form an alliance with pre-revolutionary
Russia had, by 1941, grown to such an extent and still did not prevent
the entire united democracy of the world - England, France, the
United States, Canada, Australia and small countries - from entering
into a military alliance with the Soviet Union. How is this to be
explained? How can we understand it?
Here we can offer a few explanations.
The first, I think, is that the entire united democracy of the
world was too weak to fight against Hitler's Germany alone. If this
is the case, then it is a terrible sign. It is a terrible portent
for the present day. If all these countries together could not defeat
Hitler's little Germany, what are they going to do today, when more
than half the globe is flooded with totalitarianism? I don't want
to accept this explanation.
The second explanation is perhaps that there was simply an attack
of panic - of fear - among the statesmen of the day. They simply
didn't have sufficient confidence in themselves, they simply had
no strength of spirit, and in this confused state decided to enter
into an alliance with Soviet totalitarianism. This is also not flattering
to the West.
Finally, the third explanation is that it was a deliberate device.
Democracy did not want to defend itself: For defense it wanted to
use another totalitarian system, the Soviet totalitarian system.
I'm not talking now about the moral evaluation of this, I'm going
to talk about that later. But in terms of simple calculation, how
shortsighted, what profound self-deception! We have a Russian proverb:
"Do not call a wolf to help you against the dogs." If dogs are attacking
and tearing at you, fight against the dogs, but do not call a wolf
for help. Because when the wolves come, they will destroy the dogs,
but they will also tear you apart.
World democracy could have defeated one totalitarian regime after
another, the German, then the Soviet. Instead, it strengthened Soviet
totalitarianism, helped bring into existence a third totalitarianism,
that of China, and all this finally precipitated the present world
situation. Roosevelt, in Teheran, during one of his last toasts,
said the following: "I do not doubt that the three of us" - meaning
Roosevelt, Churchill and Stalin - "lead our peoples in accordance
with their desires, in accordance with their aims."
How are we to explain this? Let the historians worry about that.
At the time, we listened and were astonished. We thought, "when
we reach Europe, we will meet the Americans, and we will tell them."
I was among the troops that were marching towards the Elbe. A little
bit more and I would have reached the Elbe and would have shaken
the hands of your American soldiers. But just before that happened,
1 was taken off to prison and my meeting did not take place. But
now, after all this great delay, the same hand has thrown me out
of the country and here I am, instead of the meeting at the Elbe.
After a delay of 30 years, my Elbe is here today. I am here to tell
you, as a friend of the United States, what, as friends, we wanted
to tell you then, but which our soldiers were prevented from telling
you on the Elbe.
There is another Russian proverb: "The yes-man is your enemy, but
your friend will argue with you."
It is precisely because I am the friend of the United States, precisely
because my speech is prompted by friendship, that I have come to
tell you: "My friends, I'm. not going to tell you sweet words. The
situation in the world is not just dangerous, it isn't just threatening,
it is catastrophic."
Something that is incomprehensible to the ordinary human mind has
taken place. We over there, the powerless, average Soviet people,
couldn't understand, year after year and decade after decade, what
was happening. How were we to explain this? England, France, the
United States, were victorious in World War II. Victorious states
always dictate peace; they receive firm conditions; they create
the sort of situation which accords with their philosophy, their
concept of liberty, their concept of national interest. Instead
of this, beginning in Yalta, your statesmen of the West, for some
inexplicable reason, have signed one capitulation after another.
Never did the West or your President Roosevelt impose any conditions
on the Soviet Union for obtaining aid. He gave unlimited aid, and
then unlimited concessions. Already in Yalta, without any necessity,
the occupation of Mongolia, Moldavia, Estonia, Latvia, Lithuania
was silently recognized. Immediately after that, almost nothing
was done to protect eastern Europe, and seven or eight more countries
were surrendered. Stalin demanded that the Soviet citizens who did
not want to return home be handed over to him, and the western countries
handed over 1.5 million human beings. How was this done? They took
them by force. English soldiers killed Russians who did not want
to become prisoners of Stalin, and drove them by force to Stalin
to be exterminated. This has recently come to light - just a few
years ago - a million and a half human beings. How could the Western
democracies have done this?
And after that, for another 30 years, the constant retreat, the
surrender of one country after another, to such a point that there
are Soviet satellites even in Africa; almost all of Asia is taken
over by them; Portugal is rolling down the precipice. During those
30 years, more was surrendered to totalitarianism than any defeated
country has ever surrendered after any war in history. There was
no war, but there might as well have been.
For a long time we in the East couldn't understand this. We couldn't
understand the flabbiness of the truce concluded in Vietnam. Any
average Soviet citizen understood that this was a sly device which
made it possible for North Vietnam to take over South Vietnam when
it so chose. And suddenly, this was rewarded by the Nobel Prize
for Peace - a tragic and ironic prize. A very dangerous state of
mind can arise as a result of this 30 years of retreat: give in
as quickly as possible, give up as quickly as possible, peace and
quiet at any cost. This is what many western papers wrote: "Let's
hurry up an end the bloodshed in Vietnam and have national unity
there."
But at the Berlin Wall no one talked of national unity. One of your
leading newspapers, after the end of Vietnam, had a full headline:
"The Blessed Silence." I would not wish that kind of "blessed silence"
on my worst enemy. I would not wish that kind of national unity
on my worst enemy. I spent 11 years in the Archipelago, and for
half of my lifetime I have studied this question. Looking at this
terrible tragedy in Vietnam from a distance, I can tell you, a million
persons will be simply exterminated, while 4 to 5 million (in accordance
with the scale of Vietnam) will find themselves in concentration
camps and will be rebuilding Vietnam.
And what is happening in Cambodia you already know. It is genocide.
It is full and complete destruction but in a new form. Once again
their technology is not up to building gas chambers. So, in a few
hours, the entire capital city - the guilty capital city - is emptied
out: old people, women, children are driven out without belongings,
without food. "Go and die!" This is very dangerous for one's view
of the world when this feeling comes on: "Go ahead, give it up."
We already hear voices in your country and in the West-"Give up
Korea and we will live quietly. Give up Portugal, of course; give
up Japan, give up Israel, give up Taiwan, the Philippines, Malaysia,
Thailand, give up 10 more African countries. Just let us live in
peace and quiet. Just let us drive our big cars on our splendid
highways; just let us play tennis and golf, in peace and quiet;
just let us mix our cocktails in peace and quiet as we are accustomed
to doing; just let us see the beautiful toothy smile with a glass
in hand on every advertisement page of our magazines."
But look how things have turned out: Now in the West this has all
turned into an accusation against the United States. Now, in the
West, we hear very many voices saying, "It's your fault, America."
And, here, I must decisively defend the United States against these
accusations. I have to say that the United States, of all the countries
of the West, is the least guilty in all this and has done the most
in order to prevent it. The United States has helped Europe to win
the First and the Second World Wars. It twice raised Europe from
post-war destruction - twice for 10, 20, 30 years it has stood as
a shield protecting Europe while European countries were counting
their nickels, to avoid paying for their armies (better yet to have
none at all) to avoid paying for armaments, thinking about how to
leave NATO, knowing that in any case America will protect them anyway.
These countries started it all, despite their thousands of years
of civilization and culture, even though they are closer and should
have known better.
I came to your continent for two months I have been travelling in
its wide open spaces and I agree: here you do not feel the nearness
of it all, the immediacy of it all. And here it is possible to miscalculate.
Here you must make a spiritual effort to understand the acuteness
of the world situation. The United States of America has long shown
itself to be the most magnanimous, the most generous country in
the world. Wherever there is a flood, an earthquake, a fire, a natural
disaster, disease, who is the first to help? The United States.
Who helps the most and unselfishly? The United States. And what
do we hear in reply? Reproaches, curses, "Yankee Go Home." American
cultural centers are burned, and the representatives of the Third
World jump on tables to vote against the United States. But this
does not take the load off America's shoulders.
The course of history - whether you like it or not - has made you
the leaders of the world. Your country can no longer think provincially.
Your political leaders can no longer think only of their own states,
of their parties, of petty arrangements which may or may not lead
to promotion. You must think about the whole world, and when the
new political crisis in the world will arise (I think we have just
come to the end of a very acute crisis and the next one will come
any moment) the main decisions will fall anyway on the shoulders
of the United States of America.
And while already here, I have heard some explanations of the situation.
Let me quote some of them: "It is impossible to protect those who
do not have the will to defend themselves.' I agree with that, but
this was said about South Vietnam.
In one-half of today's Europe and in three-quarters of today's world
the will to defend oneself is even less than it was in South Vietnam.
We are told: "We cannot defend those who are unable to defend themselves
with their own human resources." But against the overwhelming powers
of totalitarianism, when all of this power is thrown against a country
- no country can defend itself with its own resources.
For instance, Japan doesn't have a standing army. We are told, "We
should not protect those who do not have full democracy." This is
the most remarkable argument of the lot. This is the Leitmotif I
hear in your newspapers and in the speeches of some of your political
leaders. Who in the world, ever, on the front line of defense against
totalitarianism has been able to sustain full democracy? You, the
united democracies of the world, were not able to sustain it. America,
England, France, Canada, Australia together did not sustain it.
At the first threat of Hitlerism, you stretched out your hands to
Stalin. You call that sustaining democracy? And there is more of
the same (there were many of these speeches in a row): "If the Soviet
Union is " going to use detente for its own ends, then we. . . .
But what will happen then? The Soviet Union has used detente in
its own interests., is using it now and will continue to use it
in its own interests! For example, China and the Soviet Union, both
actively participating in detente, have quietly grabbed three countries
of Indochina. True, perhaps as a consolation, China will send you
a ping-pong team. And just as the Soviet Union once sent you the
pilots who once crossed the North Pole, in a few days you're flying
into space together.
A typical diversion. I remember very well the year, this was June
of 1937, when Chkalov, Baidukov and Beliakov heroically flew over
the North Pole and landed in the state of Washington. This was the
very year when Stalin was executing more than 40,000 persons a month.
And Stalin knew what he was doing. He sent those pilots and aroused
in you a naive delight - the friendship of two countries across
the North Pole. The pilots were heroic, nobody will say anything
against them. But this was a show - a show to divert you from the
real events of 1937.
And what is the occasion now'? Is it an anniversary - 38 years?
Is 38 years some kind of an anniversary? No, it is simply necessary
to cover up Vietnam. And, once again, those pilots were sent here.
The Chkalov Memorial was unveiled in the State of Washington. Chkalov
was a hero and is worthy of a memorial. But, to present the true
picture, behind the memorial there should have been a wall and on
it there should have been a bas relief showing the executions, showing
the skulls and bones.
We are also told (I apologize for so many quotes, but there are
many more in your press and radio): "We cannot ignore the fact that
North Vietnam and the Khmer Rouge have violated the agreement, but
we're ready to look into the future." What does that mean? It means:
let them exterminate people. But if these murderers, who live by
violence, these executioners, offer us detente we will be happy
to go along with them.
As Willy Brandt once said: "I would even be willing to have detente
with Stalin." At a time when Stalin was executing 40,000 a month
he would have been willing to have detente with Stalin? Look into
the future. This is how they looked into the future in 1933 and
1941. but it was a shortsighted look into the future.
This is how they looked into the future two years ago when a senseless,
incomprehensible, non-guaranteed truce in Vietnam was arranged,
and it was a shortsighted view. There was such a hurry to make this
truce that they forgot to liberate your own Americans from captivity.
They were in such a hurry to sign this document that some 1,300
Americans, "Well, they have vanished; we can get by without them."
How is that done? How can this be?
Part of them, indeed, can be missing in action, but the leaders
of North Vietnam themselves have admitted that some of them are
still being kept in prison. And do they give you back your countrymen?
No, they are not giving them back, and they are always raising new
conditions. At first they said, "Remove Them from power." Now, they
say, "Have the United States restore Vietnam, otherwise it's very
difficult for us to find these people."
If the government of North Vietnam has difficulty explaining to
you what happened with your brothers, with your American POWs who
have not yet returned, I, on the basis of my experience in the Archipelago,
can explain this quite clearly. There is a law in the Archipelago
that those who have been treated the most harshly and who have withstood
the most bravely, the most honest, the most courageous, the most
unbending, never again come out into the world. They are never again
shown to the world because they will tell such tales as the human
mind cannot accept. A part of your returned POWs told you that they
were tortured. This means that those who have remained were tortured
even more, but did not yield an inch. These are your best people.
These are your first heroes, who, in a solitary combat, have stood
the test. And today, unfortunately, they cannot take courage from
our applause. They can't hear it from their solitary cells where
they may either die or sit 30 years, like Raoul Wallenberg, the
Swedish diplomat who was seized in 1945 in the Soviet Union. He
has been imprisoned for 30 years and they will not yield him up.
And you have some hysterical public figure who said: "I will go
to North Vietnam. I will stand on my knees and beg them to release
our prisoners of war." This isn't a political act - this is masochism.
To understand properly what detente has meant all these 40 years
- friendships, stabilization of the situation, trade, etc. I would
have to tell you something, which you have never seen or heard,
of how it looked from the other side. Let me tell you how it looked.
Mere acquaintance with an American, and God forbid that you should
sit with him in a cafe or restaurant, meant a 10-year term for suspicion
of espionage. In the first volume of Archipelago I tell of an event
which was not told me by some arrested person, but by all of the
members of the Supreme Court of the USSR during those short days
when I was in the limelight under Khrushchev.
One Soviet citizen was in the United States and on his return said
that in the United States they have wonderful automobile roads.
The KGB arrested him and demanded a term of 10 years. But the judge
said: "I don't object, but there is not enough evidence. Couldn't
you find something else against him?" So the judge was exiled to
Sakhalin because he dared to argue and they gave the other man 10
years. Can you imagine what a lie he told?
And what sort of praise this was of American imperialism - in America
there are good roads? Ten years.
In 1945-46 through our prison cells passed a lot of persons - and
these were not ones who were cooperating with Hitler, although there
were some of those too. These were not guilty of anything, but rather
persons who had just been in the West and had been liberated from
German prison camps by the Americans. This was considered a criminal
act: liberated by the Americans. That means he has seen the good
life. If he comes back he will talk about it. The most terrible
thing is not what he did but what he would talk about. And all such
persons got 10-year terms.
During Nixon's last visit to Moscow your American correspondents
were reporting in the western way from the streets of Moscow. I
am going down a Russian street with a microphone and asking the
ordinary Soviet citizen: "Tell me please, what do you think about
the meeting between Nixon and Brezhnev?" And, amazingly, every last
person answered: "Wonderful. I'm delighted. I'm absolutely overjoyed!"
What does this mean? If I'm going down a street in Moscow and some
American comes up to me with a microphone and asks me something,
then I know that on the other side of him is a member of the state
security, also with a microphone who is recording everything I say.
You think that I'm going to say something that is going to put me
in prison immediately? Of course I say: "It's wonderful; I'm overjoyed."
But what is the value of such correspondents if they simply transfer
western techniques over there without thinking things through? You
helped us for many years with Lend Lease, but we've now done everything
to forget this, to erase it from our minds, not to remember it if
at all possible. And now, before I came into this hall, I delayed
my visit to Washington a little in order to first take a look at
some ordinary parts of America, going to various states and simply
talking with people. I was told, and I learned this for the first
time, that in every state during the war years there were Soviet-American
friendship societies which collected assistance for Soviet people
- warm clothes, canned food, gifts and sent them to the Soviet Union.
But we not only never saw these; we not only never received them
(they were distributed somewhere among the privileged circles) no
one ever even told us that this was being done. I only learned about
it for the first time here, this month, in the United States.
Everything poisonous which could be said about the United States
was said in Stalin's days. And all of this is a heavy sediment which
can be stirred up anytime. Any day the newspapers can come out with
the headlines: "Bloodthirsty American imperialism wants to seize
control of the world," and this poison will rise up from the sediment
and many people in our country will believe this, and will be poisoned
by it, and will consider you as aggressors. This is how detente
has been managed on our side.
The Soviet system is so closed that it is almost impossible for
you to understand from here. Your theoreticians and scholars write
works trying to understand and explain how things occur there. Here
are some naive explanations which are simply funny to Soviet citizens.
Some say that the Soviet leaders have now given up their inhumane
ideology. Not at all. They haven't given it up one bit. Some say
that in the Kremlin there are some on the left, some on the right.
And they are fighting with each other, and we've got to behave in
such a way as not to interfere with those on the left side. This
is all fantasy: left . . . right. There is some sort of a struggle
for power, but they all agree on the essentials.
There also exists the following theory, that now, thanks to the
growth of technology, there is a technocracy in the Soviet Union,
a growing number of engineers and the engineers are now running
the economy and will soon determine the fate of the country, rather
than the party. I will tell you, though, that the engineers determine
the fate of the economy just as much as our generals determine the
fate of the Army. That means zero. Everything is done the way the
party demands. That's our system. Judge it for yourself.
It's a system where for 40 years there haven't been genuine elections
but simply a comedy, a farce. Thus a system which has no legislative
organs. It's a system without an independent press; a system without
an independent judiciary; where the people have no influence either
on external or internal policy; where any thought which is different
from what the state thinks is crushed. And let me tell you that
electronic bugging in our country is such a simple thing that it's
a matter of everyday life. You had an instance in the United States
where a bugging caused an uproar which lasted for a year and a half.
For us it's an everyday matter. Almost every apartment, every institution
has got its bug and it doesn't surprise us in the least - we are
used to it.
It's a system where unmasked butchers of millions like Molotov and
others smaller than him have never been tried in the courts but
retire on tremendous pensions in the greatest comfort. It's a system
where the show still goes on today and to which every foreigner
is introduced surrounded by a couple of planted agents working according
to a set scenario. It's a system where the very constitution has
never been carried out for one single day; where all the decisions
~mature in secrecy, high up in a small irresponsible group and then
are released on us and on you like a bolt of lightning.
And what are the signatures of such persons worth? How could one
rely on their signatures to documents of detente? You yourselves
might ask your specialists now and they'll tell you that precisely
in recent years the Soviet Union has succeeded in creating wonderful
chemical weapons, missiles, which are even better than those used
by the United States. So what are we to conclude from that? Is detente
needed or not? Not only is it needed, it's as necessary as air.
it's the only way of saving the earth - instead of a world war to
have detente, but a true detente, and if it has already been ruined
by the bad word which we use for it - "detente" - then we should
find another word for it.
I would say that there are very few, only three, main characteristics
of such a true detente. In the first place, there would be disarmament
- not only disarmament from the use of war but also from the use
of violence. We must stop using not only the sort of arms which
are used to destroy one's neighbors, but the sort of arms which
are used to oppress one's fellow countrymen. It is not detente if
we, here with you today, can spend our time agreeably while over
there people are groaning and dying and in psychiatric hospitals.
Doctors are making their evening rounds, for the third time injecting
people with drugs which destroy their brain cells.
The second sign of detente, I would say, is the following: that
it be not one based on smiles, not on verbal concessions, but it
has to be based on a firm foundation. You know the words from the
Bible: "Build not on sand, but on rock." There has to be a guarantee
that this will not be broken overnight and for this the other side
- the other party to the agreement - must have its acts subject
to public opinion, to the press, and to a freely elected parliament.
And until such control exists there is absolutely no guarantee.
The third simple condition - what sort of detente is it when they
employ the sort of inhumane propaganda which is proudly called in
the Soviet Union "ideological warfare." Let us not have that.
If we're going to be friends, let's be friends, if we're going to
have detente, then let's have detente, and an end to ideological
warfare. The Soviet Union and the Communist countries can conduct
negotiations. They know how to do this. For a long time they don't
make any concessions and then they give in a little bit. Then everyone
says triumphantly, "Look, they've made a concession; it's time to
sign."
The European negotiators of the 35 countries for two years now have
painfully been negotiating and their nerves were stretched to the
breaking point and they finally gave in. A few women from the Communist
countries can now marry foreigners. And a few newspapermen are now
going to be permitted to travel a little more than before. They
give 1/1,000th of what natural law should provide. Matters which
people should be able to do even before such negotiations are undertaken.
And already there is joy. And here in the West we hear many voices,
saying: "Look, they're making concessions; it's time to sign."
During these two years of negotiations, in all the countries of
eastern Europe, the pressure has increased, the oppression intensified,
even in Yugoslavia and Romania, leaving aside the other countries.
And it is precisely now that the Austrian chancellor says, "We've
got to sign this agreement as rapidly as possible." What sort of
an agreement would this be? The proposed agreement is the funeral
of eastern Europe. It means that western Europe would finally, once
and for all, sign away eastern Europe, stating that it is perfectly
willing to see eastern Europe be crushed and overwhelmed once and
for all, but please don't bother us. And the Austrian chancellor
thinks that if all these countries are pushed into a mass grave,
Austria at the very edge of this grave will survive and not fall
into it also. And we, from our lives there, have concluded that
violence can only be withstood by firmness.
You have to understand the nature of communism. The very ideology
of communism, all of Lenin's teachings, are that anyone is considered
to be a fool who doesn't take what's lying in front of him. If you
can take it, take it. If you can attack, attack. But if there's
a wall, then go back. And the Communist leaders respect only firmness
and have contempt and laugh at persons who continually give in to
them. Your people are now saying - and this is the last quotation
I am going to give you from the statements of your leaders - "Power,
without any attempt at conciliation, will lead to a world conflict."
But I would say that power with continual subservience is no power
at all. But from our experience I can tell you that only firmness
will make it possible to withstand the assaults of Communist totalitarianism.
We see many historic examples, and let me give you some of them.
Look at little Finland in 1939, which by its own forces withstood
the attack. You, in 1948, defended Berlin only by your firmness
of spirit, and there was no world conflict. In Korea in 1950 you
stood up against the Communists, only by your firmness, and there
was no world conflict. In 1962 you compelled the rockets to be removed
from Cuba. Again it was only firmness, and there was no world conflict.
And the late Konrad Adenauer conducted firm negotiations with Khrushchev
and thus started a genuine detente with Khrushchev. Khrushchev started
to make concessions and if he hadn't been removed, that winter he
was planning to go to Germany and to continue the genuine detente.
Let me remind you of the weakness of a man whose name is rarely
associated with weakness - the weakness of Lenin. Lenin, when he
came to power, in panic gave up to Germany everything Germany wanted.
Just what it wanted. Germany took as much as it wanted and said,
"Give Armenia to Turkey." And Lenin said, "Fine." It's almost an
unknown fact but Lenin petitioned the Kaiser to act as intermediary
to persuade the Ukraine and, thus, to make possible a boundary between
the Communist part of Russia and the Ukraine. It wasn't a question
of seizing the Ukraine but rather of making a boundary with the
Ukraine.
We, we the dissidents of the USSR, don't have any tanks, we don't
have any weapons, we have no organization. We don't have anything.
Our hands are empty. We have only a heart and what we have lived
through in the half century of this system. And when we have found
the firmness within ourselves to stand up for our rights, we have
done so. It's only by firmness of spirit that we have withstood.
And if I am standing here before you, it's not because of the kindness
or the good will of communism, not thanks to detente, but thanks
to my own firmness and your firm support. They knew that I would
not yield one inch, not one hair. And when they couldn't do more
they themselves fell back. This is not easy.
In our conditions this was taught to me by the difficulties of my
own life. And if you yourselves - any one of you - were in the same
difficult situation, you would have learned the same thing. Take
Vladimir Bukovsky, whose name is now almost forgotten. Now, I don't
want to mention a lot of names because however many I might mention
there are more still. And when we resolve the question with two
or three names it is as if we forget and betray the others. We should
rather remember figures. There are tens of thousands of political
prisoners in our country and by the calculation of English specialists
7,000 persons are now under compulsory psychiatric treatment.
Let's take Vladimir Bukovsky as an example. It was proposed to him.
"All right, we'll free you. Go to the West and shut up." And this
young man, a youth today on the verge of death said: "No, I won't
go this way. I have written about the persons whom you have put
in insane asylums. You release them and then I'll go West." This
is what I mean by that firmness of spirit to stand up against granite
and tanks.
Finally, to evaluate everything that I have said to you, I would
say we need not have had our conversation on the level of business
calculations. Why did such and such a country act in such and such
a way? What were they counting on? We should rather rise above this
to the moral level and, say: "In 1933 and in 1941 your leaders and
the whole western world, in an unprincipled way, made a deal with
totalitarianism." We will have to pay for this, some day this deal
will come back to haunt us. For 30 years we have been paying for
it and we're still paying for it. And we're going to pay for it
in a worse way.
One cannot think only in the low level of political calculations.
It's necessary to think also of what is noble, and what is honorable
- not only what is profitable. Resourceful western legal scholars
have now introduced the term "legal realism." By legal realism,
they want to push aside any moral evaluation of affairs. They say,
"Recognize realities; if such and such laws have been established
in such and such countries by violence, these laws still must be
recognized and respected."
At the present time it is widely accepted among lawyers that law
is higher than morality - law is something which is worked out and
developed, whereas morality is something inchoate and amorphous.
That isn't the case. The opposite is rather true! Morality is higher
than law!
While law is our human attempt to embody in rules a part of that
moral sphere which is above us. We try to understand this morality,
bring it down to earth and present it in a form of laws. Sometimes
we are more successful, sometimes less. Sometimes you actually have
a caricature of morality. but morality is always higher than law.
This view must never be abandoned. We must accept it with heart
and soul.
It is almost a joke now in the western world, in the 20th century,
to use words like "good'! and "evil." They have become almost old-fashioned
concepts, but they are very real and genuine concepts. These are
concepts from a sphere which is higher than us. And instead of getting
involved in base, petty, shortsighted political calculations and
games we have to recognize that the concentration of World Evil
and the tremendous force of hatred is there and it's flowing from
there throughout the world. And we have to stand up against it and
not hasten to give to it, give to it, give to it, everything that
it wants to swallow.
Today there are two major processes occurring in the world. One
is the one which I have just described to you which has been in
progress more than 30 years. It is a process of shortsighted concessions;
a process of giving up, and giving up and giving up and hoping that
perhaps at some point the wolf will have eaten enough. The second
process is one which I consider the key to everything and which,
I will say now, will bring all of us our future; under the cast-iron
shell of communism - for 20 years in the Soviet Union and a shorter
time in other Communist countries - there is occurring a liberation
of the human spirit. New generations are growing up which are steadfast
in their struggle with evil; which are not willing to accept unprincipled
compromises; which prefer to lose everything - salary, conditions
of existence and life itself - but are not willing to sacrifice
conscience; not willing to make deals with evil.
This process has now gone so far that in the Soviet Union today,
Marxism has fallen so low that it has become an anecdote, it's simply
an object of contempt. No serious person in our country today, not
even university and high school students, can talk about Marxism
without smiling, without laughing. But this whole process of our
liberation, which obviously will entail social transformations,
is slower than the first one - the process of concessions.
Over there, when we see these concessions, we are frightened. Why
so quickly? Why so precipitously? Why yield several countries a
year? I started by saying that you are the allies of our liberation
movement in the Communist countries. And I call upon you: let us
think together and try to see how we can adjust the relationship
between these two processes. Whenever you help the persons persecuted
in the Soviet Union, you not only display magnanimity and nobility,
you're defending not only them but yourselves as well. You're defending
your own future.
So let us try and see how far we can go to stop this senseless and
immoral process of endless concessions to the aggressor - these
clever legal arguments for why we should give up one country after
another. Why must we hand over to Communist totalitarianism more
and more technology - complex, delicate, developed technology which
it needs for armaments and for crushing its own citizens? If we
can at least slow down that process of concessions, if not stop
it all together - and make it possible for the process of liberation
to continue in the Communist countries - ultimately these two processes
will yield us our future.
On our crowded planet there are no longer any internal affairs.
The Communist leaders say, "Don't interfere in our internal affairs.
Let us strangle our citizens in peace and quiet." But I tell you:
Interfere more and more. Interfere as much as you can. We beg you
to come and interfere.
Understanding my own task in the same way I have perhaps interfered
today in your internal affairs, or at least touched upon them, and
I apologize for it. I have traveled a lot around the United States
and this has been added to my earlier understanding of it; what
I have heard from listening to the radio, from talking to experienced
persons. America - in me and among my friends and among people who
think the way I do over there, among all ordinary Soviet citizens
- evokes a sort of mixture of feelings of admiration and of compassion.
Admiration at the fact of your own tremendous forces which you perhaps
don't even recognize yourselves. You're a country of the future;
a young country; a country of still untapped possibilities; a country
of tremendous geographical distances; a country of tremendous breadth
of spirit; a country of generosity; a country of magnanimity. But
these qualities - strength, generosity and magnanimity - usually
make a man and even a whole country trusting, and this already several
times has done you a disservice.
I would like to call upon America to be more careful with its trust
and prevent those wise persons who are attempting to establish even
finer degrees of justice and even finer legal shades of equality
- some because of their distorted outlook, others because of short-sightedness
and still others out of self-interest - from falsely using the struggle
for peace and for social justice to lead you down a false road.
Because they are trying to weaken you; they are trying to disarm
your strong and magnificent country in the face of this fearful
threat - one which has never been seen before in the history of
the world. Not only in the history of your country, but in the history
of the world.
And I call upon you: ordinary working men of America - as represented
here by your trade union movement - do not let yourselves become
weak. Do not let yourselves be taken in the wrong direction. Let
us try to slow down the process of concessions and help the process
of liberation!
"The Vancouver Province" July 22nd, 1975
'Ford betrays E. Europe' New York Times
WASHINGTON - Alexander Solzhenitsyn accused President Ford on Monday
of participating in "the betrayal of Eastern Europe" by planning
to attend the 35-nation European summit meeting next week. As a
result, the exiled Soviet novelist said, he could see no point in
meeting Ford. In a statement, Solzhenitsyn continued his campaign
aimed at alerting the American people to the dangers he perceives
in the policy of Soviet-American detente. The impetus for Solzhenitsyn's
statement was the flurry of pro-reports about Ford's efforts to
reverse his original decision not to receive Solzhenitsyn at the
White Home when the author first arrived in Washington June 30.
After first snubbing him, the White House said it was holding open
an invitation.
Solzhenitsyn said that one of the original reasons given by Ron
Nessen, the White House spokesman when Ford did not see the author
was that Ford preferred "substantive" meetings to "symbolic"
ones and the "symbolic" effect it might have on detente. "Nobody
needs symbolic meetings". The president will shortly be leaving
for Europe to sign the betrayal of Eastem Europe, to acknowledge
officially its slavery forever. Had I the hope of dissuading him
from signing this treaty I myself would seek such a meeting. However,
there is no such hope. If the president considers Use 30-year raging
of worldwide totalitarianism as an example of an 'era of peace'
what wll the basis be for a conversation?"
Solzhenitsyn is concerned that the signing of the European document
would lend permanence to the postwar division of Europe into communist
and non-communist nations. Critics of the conference have said the
document's mention of the "inviolability of frontiers" has doomed
the people of Eastern Europe to communist rule.
But supporters of the document have said it merely reflects the
reality of postwar Europe.