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Stalin’s Pen: the Correspondences of the Soviet Leader and their Implications
Henry Smith
Towson University
HIST 486.001 Senior History Seminar
Professor Zajicek
May 9, 2016
Henry Smith-1
Stalin’s Pen:
The Correspondences of the Soviet Leader and their Implications
Henry Smith, May 2016
Introduction
One of the most useful, and most dangerous, ways of approaching history is through the
personal correspondences of historical figures. The letters, journals, transcripts, and words left by
historical figures illuminate a perspective to events as they happened. This can be a very
informative and enlightening tool. Joseph Stalin’s letters, however, are more complex. The
Soviet tyrant was not a mere worker keeping a journal, or a housewife writing a letter to her
husband on the front. He was in power, and this required him to take on different roles as a
leader. Whether he is giving a speech at the Politburo, discussing trade agreements with the
President of the United States, or sitting at a beach in Sochi, he was always the leader of the
Soviet Union. What is interesting is that it is not always the same kind of leader. The letters he
wrote show different kinds of leaders, ones that changed depending on the recipient. His position
on a subject, his style of writing, his cordiality, and his manner of leadership all change between
letters. When he is writing as the General Secretary leading the industrialization drive and
collectivization reforms, he is different than the World Leader working with the United States
Henry Smith-2
and Great Britain to stop the Nazis. The differences can partly be explained by the natural
differences in our speech to different people, as well as to differing times and circumstances, but
this gives us only a fraction of the full picture. The differences intentionally paint Stalin in
various images in order to meet expectations as leader and to get the most out of the recipient.
Stalin’s correspondences to Molotov, Kaganovich, Roosevelt, and Churchill are empirical
evidence of the different sides to Joseph Stalin as a leader.
The main sources are the collections of letters that Stalin sent to Vyacheslav Molotov,
Lazar Kaganovich, and Franklin Roosevelt.1 They provide not only Stalin’s personal
perspectives on the different issues surrounding the building and defense of Stalinism but a
glimpse of how he communicated with those around him. His letters lose some of the fire that
accompanied his speech, but it is still easy to see the violent emotions that he could unleash. A
letter sent to Molotov reads, “The letter from Manuilskii is cowardly and conniving. I stand
entirely by my declaration on the swindling and dirty tricks, despite the dissatisfaction of some
comrades.”2 The name-calling and thinly veiled threats are staples of Stalin’s prose, and even as
early as 1925 he is using it freely. But he is not all fire and insults. He can show compassion and
textbook diplomacy, like in his note to Roosevelt, “I take this moment to thank you, Mr.
President, on behalf of the Soviet Government, for the cordial hospitality offered to Mr. Molotov
and his staff during their sojourn in the United States.”3 He can also be a rational, pragmatic
ruler, analytically deciding the best decision in his view. This is seen most clearly in his
correspondences with Kaganovich, like on the importance of rail transport, of which Stalin
11Lars T. Lih, Oleg V. Naumov, and Oleg V. Khlevniuk,
ed., Stalin’sLetters to Molotov 1925-1936 (New Haven: Yale University Press, 1995); R. W. Davies, Oleg V.
Khlevniuk, and E. A. Rees, ed., The Stalin-Kaganovich Correspondence 1931-36 (New Haven: Yale University
Press, 2003); Susan Butler, ed., My Dear Mr. Stalin (New Haven: Yale University Press, 2005).
2 Stalin to Molotov,18 August 1925, in Stalin’s Letters to Molotov,94.
3 Stalin to Roosevelt, June 12, 1942, in My Dear Mr. Stalin,70.
Henry Smith-3
remarked, “I regard transport- above all, railroad transport- to be the most important issue in the
coming months. The principal threat to the national economy now comes from transport, and it is
transport that must be approved above all,” a sentiment to which Kaganovich agreed and set out
in motion.4 These sources shed much light on Stalin’s many leadership roles, which is the key
focus of this paper, but context to the letters is required first.
Starting in 1925 and ending in 1936, Stalin spent his summers at Sochi on the Black Sea.5
Lacking the necessary technology of the telephone, Stalin relied on pen, paper, and the postal
system to communicate with his party members. This allowed for the large corpus of letters to
exist at all, which allows for more research into the inner workings of the Soviet leadership.
From his seaside dacha, Stalin was alerted to important matters from Moscow and sent back his
input. Two of the main recipients of his letters were Molotov and Kaganovich, two of the most
powerful and influential members of the Soviet Union. The letters he sent show the different
dynamics Stalin held in power of the Politburo and Soviet governmental apparatus.
During this period, the most important aspect was the building of Stalinism. This is a
complex process that can be simplified into the policies, culture, and society created under
Stalin’s reign over the Soviet Union. Its origins are found in his crushing of Trotsky and
Zinoviev to unify the Politburo, as well as removal of Lenin’s New Economic Plan.6 From there,
Stalin began pushing his own agenda, which required a culture shift. The War Economy and
Revolutionary Fervor were running out of steam, and had to be replaced.7 The replacement was
4 Stalin to Kaganovich, 19 September 1931, in The Stalin-Kaganovich Correspondence 1931-36,94-97.
5 Lih, et. al., Stalin’s Letters to Molotov,1.
6 Oleg V. Khlevniuk, Stalin:New Biography of a Dictator (New Haven: Yale University Press, 2015), 100.
7 Hiroaki Kiromiya, “Stalin’s Industrial Revolution: Politics and Workers, 1928-1932,” in The Stalin Revolution:
Foundationsofthe Totalitarian Era, Robert Vincent Daniels (Boston: Houghton Mifflin Co., 1997), 70-71; Amir
Weiner, “The Making of a Dominant Myth: The Second World War and the Construction of Political Identities
within the Soviet Polity,” The Russian Review 55 (October 1996): 639-640.
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the Stalinist policies under a new Stalinist oppression.8 Two of the most important policies,
which were often discussed with Molotov, Kaganovich, and even Churchill at times, were
industrialization and collectivization. Industrialization had kulaks deported, the NEP and the
NEPmen removed, and factories pushed beyond their limits to reach ever-increasing
expectations.9 Collectivization of the farms was done to distribute grain in a socialist method, but
it also placed a heavy burden on the peasants producing the grain, leading to their resentment.10
These two policies and events complemented each other in Stalin’s plans to push Russia into
modernity, and exemplified his first decade of power.
Many of letters Stalin wrote to Molotov and Kaganovich concern these two major
policies. While the letters do not include what Stalin and his inner circle discussed while he was
in Moscow, they do give an in-depth discussion between Stalin and his right and left hand man.
The medium of the letter required Stalin, Molotov, and Kaganovich to cover all the details
needed to get the job done, a central tenant and expectation of Soviet bureaucracy. This makes
them longer-winded than they normally would have been if they were in a meeting room in the
Kremlin. This allows for greater insight into Stalin’s opinions on crucial topics to Soviet history.
Another defining moment of Stalinist Russia was the Nazi invasion during World War 2,
known as the Great Patriotic War in Russia. This was the realization of the fears of the Soviet
leaders. An outside force was challenging Communism, and it needed to be defending. This was
what they had been preparing for since 1927, yet it still started badly.11 So badly, in fact, the
8 Khlevniuk, Stalin,100-103.
9 Kuromiya, “Stalin’s Industrial Revolution,” 67-72.
10 Lynne Viola, “The Best Sons of the Fatherland: Workers in the Vanguard of Soviet Collectivization,” in The
Stalin Revolution:Foundationsof the Totalitarian Era, Robert Vincent Daniels (Boston: Houghton Mifflin Co.,
1997), 109-110.
11 Sheila Fitzpatrick, The Russian Revolution (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2008), 120-121.
Henry Smith-5
Soviet Union, despite their sense of historic and moral superiority, had to turn to outside help.12
They had to seek aid from the United States and Great Britain. From President Roosevelt he
asked for material aid, like telephones, metals, alloys, wire, trucks, armor, machines, tools,
factory equipment, and clothing.13 It would not be until the Japanese bombing of Pearl Harbor
that America would provide direct military aid. The United Kingdom was already at war with
Germany by the time Operation Barbarossa was tearing through western Russia. Resigned to
defending their island nation from German air raids, Prime Minister Churchill had to be
convinced mainly by Stalin to open up a ground offensive on Nazi controlled France.14
Operation Overlord put pressure on Hitler’s western territories, relieving pressure on the eastern
front. This would be a turning point in the Second World War and the downfall of fascism, but
also one of the last moments of diplomacy by the future Cold War adversaries.
The escalating war brought these three leaders together on several occasions. The most
famous of these meetings were the Conferences at Tehran, Yalta, and Potsdam. These meetings
established a common ground between the enemies of Hitler as they discussed how to defeat the
German warlord and what was to be done once peace was established. These meetings created
many informative and useful transcripts that can be applied to several subfields of history, but for
this paper’s purposes, it intensified the frequency of Stalin and Roosevelt’s letters to one another.
The leaders of the USSR and the USA struck an expectantly friendly relationship, one that has
created an invaluable corpus of writings that showcase Stalin’s international relations. While
Stalin’s relationship with Churchill was rockier, and did not create as many documents, their
interactions are important to the study of Stalin’s role as a international leader.
12 Stephen Kotkin, Magnetic Mountain:Stalinismas a Civilization (Berkeley: University of California Press, 1995),
202-203.
13 Roosevelt to Stalin, October 31, 1941, in My Dear Mr. Stalin,49-51.
14 Geoffrey Roberts, “Stalin at the Tehran, Yalta, and PotsdamConferences,” Journal of Cold War Studies 9:4 (Fall
2007): 16.
Henry Smith-6
Correspondence with Molotov and Kaganovich
Joseph Stalin has a reputation for being cruel, violent, tyrannical, and evil. Victims and
students of the Ukrainian Holodomor, the famines caused by collectivization, the misplaced
ethnic minorities, and the Great Terror will attest to these character traits. And in a final analysis,
they may be proven to be true. So while genocidal one-upmanship does not tell the full story, the
tens of millions dead cannot be ignored.
Stopping any study on Stalin with the sole conclusion than he was a mass murderer
devalues the complexities of the Soviet government and of Stalin, not to mention the many
sources that can tell us more about the builders and defenders of socialism. The letters Stalin
wrote to Molotov and Kaganovich while at Sochi can help to look deeper into Stalin as a person
and a leader. They show instances of the tyrannical aggression that has dominated the public
perception, but they also show the opposite. They show Stalin’s long friendship with Molotov
and Kaganovich, as comrades not just in politics but also in spirit. They had rose through the
Communist Party’s ranks together during and directly after the Civil War, and the Old
Bolsheviks shared a comradeship that was not yet broken by the demands of power.15 These
correspondences show how Stalin stood above in the Soviet hierarchy, but more importantly,
why he carried out his actions that had dramatic effects on the inner workings of the Kremlin but
also on the Russian people as a whole.
Stalin was the General Secretary of the Politburo, the executive policy making branch of
the Soviet Union. Policies were proposed and debated by the members of the Politburo and a
decision was democratically reached. At least, this was the system envisioned under Lenin.
Under Stalin, the system became even more centralized. Decisions were no longer reached on the
15 Sheila Fitzpatrick, “In Power,” from On Stalin’s Team: The Years of Living Dangerously in Soviet Politics
(Princeton: Princeton University Press, 2015), 64-65.
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Politburo floor but in back room meetings between Stalin and several key members related to the
proposed policy.16 Stalin may not have been the leading expert on a subject, but he was virtually
always present, and his decisions were often final. He could be persuaded one way or another,
but it was clear who was in charge.
As in Moscow, so it was in Sochi. Updates on industrialization and collectivization were
required, as well as the happenings of Soviet politics. The letters to Kaganovich generally
concerned the former information, with factory updates and statistical data being the main
subjects of conversation, while the letters to Molotov generally concerned how members of the
Politburo were behaving. There was some overlap, but the distinction is not so surprising.
Kaganovich was in charge of the Orgburo, several Central Committee departments, and the
Politburo during Stalin’s absence.17 Essentially, he was in charge of the political operation of the
Soviet Union in Stalin’s stead. Molotov was less of a political organizer and more of a
bureaucrat.18 He had Stalin’s position before him, and still performed the office’s duties
whenever Stalin was away. He served as Stalin’s right hand man, working tirelessly for his best
interests, both in Moscow and abroad.19 Each served a different role in Stalin’s government, and
therefore Stalin had different correspondences with the two of them.
For instance, when Stalin wrote to Molotov about new iron and steel works, he focuses
on the personnel, specifically a Lokatskov, head of Main Ferrous Metals.20 He compares his
“ancient” methods to American and German specialists, and questions whether he and Molotov
could “shake up” Lokatskov and Kuibyshev, an economic advisor to the Politburo, into
16 J. Arch Getty, “Stalin as Prime Minister: power and the Politburo,” from Stalin:a New History, Sarah Davies and
James R. Harris (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2005), 83-86.
17 Davies, et. al., The Stalin-Kaganovich Correspondence,ix.
18 Lih, et. al., Stalin’s Letters to Molotov,2.
19 Ibid.
20 Stalin to Molotov,23 August 1929, in Stalin’s Letters to Molotov,172.
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performing good enough, or if they could bring “Austin & Co.” in on contracts instead.21 At this
time, the Soviet Union was bringing in foreign construction firms to build up their industry, but
only until Russian workers and experts were capable.22 This was a topic of contention in both
Moscow and Magnitogorsk, and the right personnel was necessary in making the Soviet
industrial dream a reality.
Conversely, when Stalin wrote to Kaganovich on factories, it was more policy than
person. “Why aren’t the summaries on the Moscow and Gorky auto plants being published every
day...Why did tractor output decline at the Stalingrad Tractor Plant...What is the situation with
regard to plan fulfillment of tanks, airplanes, engines…?”23 These question were less interested
in the personnel but in the operation. Industrialization had to follow Stalin’s vision for the
advancement of socialism, and Kaganovich was the man in charge of seeing things completed.24
If viewed through the correspondence, the leadership styles Molotov and Kaganovich
saw were quite different. Stalin had to be both a judge of a person’s character with Molotov and
an adept organizer and coordinator with Kaganovich. Stalin would fit certain roles to achieve
certain tasks, creating a multi-dimensional identity as leader. He had to be numerical and direct
at times. At others, he had to be subjective and judgmental. What was important in the end was
getting the job done. Was his cruelty another means to an end? Possibly. Does this resolve him
of guilt or blame? Definitely not. But it does show that Stalin had many hats, which he used to
ensure Stalinism moved forward.
Stalin’s shifting modes of power were unified by a common command for respect and
obedience. Since the crushing of Zinoviev and Trotsky and the removal of all opposition in the
21 Ibid.
22 Kotkin, Magnetic Mountain,37-45,47-48.
23 Stalin to Kaganovich, 12 June, 1932, in The Stalin-Kaganovich Correspondence,127.
24 Kaganovich to Stalin, 14 June 1932, in The Stalin-Kaganovich Correspondence,133-135.
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Politburo, Stalin ran the government through a combination of fear, devotion, and paranoia.25
Political exile was always a threat, as was murder. Even Molotov and Kaganovich lost Stalin’s
favor towards the end of his life. Overt oppression cannot last however, even for a member as
devoted as Molotov. Stalin was aggressive and demanding, but not more than he needed to be.
He remained tempered and self-aware in his writings, but the threat of his anger never was far. In
a letter to both Molotov and Bukharin, he wrote, “Damn the both of you: you misled me a little
bit by asking my opinion on the new directives (about China) and not providing me with
concrete fresh material… And not only did you mislead me a little bit, but I misled you, perhaps,
with my long and quite angry reply…”26 Stalin may have had absolute deciding power, but when
he was in Sochi, he relied heavily on the information provided to him.27 As this letter shows,
information can be withheld or altered to limit what Stalin knew. This was done to make him
make a decision that benefited whoever was giving him the abridged information. This letter also
shows the thinly veiled contempt Stalin could muster. “Damn the both of you,” when used in
governmental correspondence is a phrase that often signals the end of someone’s political career.
This letter predates the Great Terror or Purge, so Molotov and Bukharin were less at risk here
than if the same utterance was made a decade later.
The letter also shows Stalin’s self-awareness to his anger. It may not be a controlled fury
that he can dispense at will, as he feels some remorse for his emotions, but it is also not an
uncontrollable characteristic. Stalin knew when his anger was necessary, and with the political
system he manipulated to keep every member on its toes, his anger held a fatal weight. His anger
was a tool to be used to keep his lieutenants in line and following his vision. It is a Stalinist
variant of the carrot and the stick. In the above letter, he felt deceived, and administered the
25 Khlevniuk, Stalin:New Biography of the Dictator, 81-89.
26 Stalin to Molotov and Bukharin, 9 July 1927, in Stalin’s Letters to Molotov,139-140.
27 Getty, “Stalin as Prime Minister,” 98.
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stick, but in Letter 80 to Molotov, he gives the carrot. After going over budget cuts and
rebalancing, he asks Viacheslav, not Comrade Molotov, “How’s life? Are you getting any rest?
My health is good; my friends are well also. Regards to Com. Zhemchuzhina [Molotov’s
wife].”28 This may be political and personal manipulation, but it does show Stalin’s use of
aggression is not a blind rage, but more calculated to serve his best interests.
What were these best interests? We return to the ambiguous concept of the building of
Stalinism. The policies that Stalin pushed for are the clearest definition of Stalinism, but it also
involves the political, social, and cultural changes that occurred on a systematic level.
Industrialization was the most important aspect, and acted as a symbol for the creation of a new
society. Industry moved Russia forward into modern times, and furthered the historical certainty
of global victory for socialism.29 One of most common topics in the letters to Molotov and
Kaganovich was the progress of the Five Year Plan and the construction of new factories and
industries. Kaganovich was often more detailed in his reports on various topics. Grain sales,
tractor shipments, steel production, railroads, and Politburo voting on industrialization policies
are common in Kaganovich’s letters, which are really more like numbered reports on Moscow’s
view of the Union. They are lengthy and cover multiple topics that Stalin wished to be informed
on. One letter alone mentioned the cancellation of a speech by Vyshinsky, the Central Volga
Canal construction project, grain procurement rates and measures, the People’s Commissar of
Heavy Industry’s request for “a continuous rolling mill,” phonograph editing, the appointment of
the Ukrainian secretary, the shuffling of administrators, an International Youth Day Parade, and
Ordzhonikidze and Molotov’s vacation.30 This allowed Stalin to be up to date with current affairs
as Kaganovich ran the day-to-day leadership and Stalin made decisions from the Black Sea.
28 Stalin to Molotov,21 July 1935, in Stalin’s Letters to Molotov,235
29 Fitzpatrick, The Russian Revolution,120.
30 Kaganovich to Stalin, 2 September 1933, in The Stalin-Kaganovich Correspondence,201-203.
Henry Smith-11
Stalin did not need to be the ever present dictator, but his close correspondence with Kaganovich
kept in him control.
The correspondence with Kaganovich was more formal than Stalin’s letters to Molotov,
but there is some evidence of familiarity between the two Old Bolsheviks. This is due to the role
Stalin was playing with Kaganovich, as opposed to Molotov. With Kaganovich, Stalin was
ensuring Stalinism kept moving forward. With Molotov, he was ensuring Stalinism stayed
together. Stalin required results and updates from Kaganovich, which led to his responses being
administrative. As long as things were progressing, he was cordial and agreeable with
Kaganovich’s reports. But he was not afraid of letting Kaganovich know when he disagrees. He
wrote he was “resolutely opposed,” to publishing Central Committee congress material, noted
that “the situation with artillery is very bad,” and that “the Baku oil situation is bad.”31 Very few
words were wasted in his analysis of what was wrong, and this reflected Stalin’s expectations in
his role of industrial supervisor. When Tomskii was “resigned” from the All Union Chemical
Association, Stalin was strait to the point in agreeing with his removal as, “he is doing nothing
for us.”32 The worst thing one could be to Stalin was being useless.
Compare this to his next letter chronologically, written to both Kaganovich and Molotov,
detailing a new campaign to influence public opinion against Japanese militarism33. Several
differences emerge in the writing. He was more verbose in the second letter, full with positive
directives, suggestions, and expectations. He is less terse than in the first letter, as he takes on a
different role of leader. The operations of industry and public opinion are not connected in
Western governments, but under Stalin’s centralized state, he had to be the leader and instigator
31 Stalin to Kaganovich, 21 October, 1933, in The Stalin-Kaganovich Correspondence,231.
32 Stalin to Molotov,2 September 1930, in Stalin’s Letters to Molotov,210-211.
33 Stalin to Kaganovich and Molotov, 21 October 1933, in The Stalin-Kaganovich Correspondence,232-233.
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for both. The letters show almost a form of code switching, as Stalin takes different approaches
to the different aspects of Soviet leadership.
Stalin’s vacations to Sochi created a paper trail of his interactions with Molotov and
Kaganovich. From these documents, we can see how Stalin wrote to his main lieutenants and
more importantly how it changed. Stalin’s countenance in his writings depended on the recipient
and what the recipient meant to Stalin’s larger designs for the building of Stalinism. If he was
writing to Kaganovich, it was for the daily operation and leading of the USSR, and he used the
tone of authoritative leader that expected and demanded results and updates. If he was writing to
Molotov, it was for the inner workings of the Politburo and foreign embassies, specifically its
personnel, and took on the role of chief bureaucrat, deciding who was responsible for what to
make the Stalinist policies become reality. Stalin’s letters to the Soviet politicians differentiated
based on what Stalin expected and needed from them. This made Stalin utilize different styles of
leadership to best get the job done. The letters show this, and are a valuable resource to
determining Stalin’s relationship with the rest of the Politburo. This knowledge can be used to
better understand what kind of leader in Russia and the USSR was Stalin.
Correspondence with Roosevelt and Churchill
Stalin often came off as crass or aggressive to his Russian companions. If he was in a
particularly good mood, he might appear wry and sarcastic. This was due to his superiority over
Molotov and Kaganovich. The hierarchy had to be maintained, and a clear image of Soviet
leader kept Stalin above his fellow Communists. But with President Roosevelt and Prime
Minister Churchill, this hierarchy was not engrained. With fellow heads of state, Stalin was
expected to act as an equal, not a dictator. This caused his behavior to be different around the
international leaders, and his letters followed suit.
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The Second World War brought to Russia the devastation of the Nazi war machine. The
early defense of Russia was chaotic, as the army, the Politburo, and Stalin were not ready for
war.34 It was less of a defense, in fact, than an unorganized retreat; Stalin felt as if all the work
that had gone into building the Soviet state was being destroyed.35 Despite the grim future, the
Soviet Union could not give up. Defense plans were becoming more concrete, however slowly,
and the Red Army and Stalin still needed to at least appear confident to secure Western
alliances.36 Stalin needed allies, and that required him to take on another role of leader.
The first meeting of what became the Big Three occurred in Moscow in 1941 with the
main topic being the American material assistance, later organized into the Lend Lease Act.37
Despite the tensions that emerged by the end of the Second World War and threatened
throughout the Cold War, the Soviet-American alliance started affably enough. The three states,
being the USSR, the USA, and the UK, agreed to “collaborate and cooperate” together until the
war was over.38 As for Stalin himself, he was deeply gracious to Roosevelt.39 “The Soviet
Government expresses its deep gratitude for your statement that the decisions of the conference
[Lend-Lease] will be carried out to the maximum extent…a non-interest bearing loan in the sum
of one billion dollars…substantial assistance to the Soviet Union in its great and difficult
struggle with our common enemy, blood thirsty Hitlerism.”40 These do not seem like the words
of a brash and sadistic tyrant. How then do we compartmentalize this cordiality with the reality
of Stalin? One answer would be to doubt the sincerity of Stalin’s message. It is not unlikely that
such a formal letter was written by more than just Stalin, and he does claim to write “on behalf of
34 Khlevniuk, Stalin:New Biography of a Dictator, 203.
35 Ibid., 204-205.
36 Ibid., 210-211.
3737 Ibid., 212.
38 Roberts, “Stalin at the Tehran, Yalta, and PotsdamConferences,” 10.
39 Stalin to Roosevelt, November 4, 1941, in My Dear Mr. Stalin,52.
40 Ibid.
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the Government of the USSR,” so outside influence from that Government would also be
possible.41 But this overlooks a key point of Stalinism that Stalin had the final say. If Stalin
disagreed with the message being conveyed, it had to be revised or removed. Additionally, if the
words are not Stalin’s, they are coming from Stalin’s pen, and since Stalin agreed to keep further
correspondence with Roosevelt, more words must flow in the future. Whatever doubt to the
authenticity or sincerity of the letters, they were still sent to Roosevelt, and Stalin’s position of
friendship was made explicit.
This friendly relationship lasted until Roosevelt’s death in 1945, and Stalin’s relationship
with this successor, Harry Truman, would not be as friendly.42 Stalin and Roosevelt’s
relationship was cordial, but not as cold as the Stalin’s was with his Soviet compatriots. While it
would be difficult to call Stalin and Roosevelt true friends, there was a shared sense of interest
that never neared hostility. Stalin could be bluntly mean to Soviet and foreign politicians and
ambassadors, but this antagonism was never aimed at Roosevelt.
Their correspondence concerned matters not related to the war as well. Roosevelt’s re-
election, Franco-Soviet relations, which were a matter of some contention, and even Stalin’s
birthday were all mentioned and discussed between the two heads of state.43 They asked each
other for advice in the subject of ruling a country at war, gave each other updates on Soviet and
American ambassadors in Moscow, Washington D.C., and other places of note, and discussed
geopolitical matters that affecting the Allies and the world at large. They were political allies and
confidants, and their alliance did much to save Russia from the Nazis and Germany’s eventual
defeat. Stalin expressed as much to Roosevelt, in how “ ‘If not for Lend-Lease, victory would
41 Ibid.
42 Roberts, “Stalin at the Tehran, Yalta, and PotsdamConferences,” 29.
43 Stalin to Roosevelt, November 9, 1944, in My Dear Mr. Stalin,266; Stalin to Roosevelt, December 2, 1944, in My
Dear Mr. Stalin, 269-270; Getty, “Stalin at the Tehran, Yalta, and PotsdamConferences,” 12, 21, 23, 39; Roosevelt
to Stalin, December 21, 1944, in My Dear Mr. Stalin,277.
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have been greatly hindered.”44 Stalin knew he had an important and powerful ally in Roosevelt,
and did much to maintain this friendship.
It is in this understanding of Stalin’s view that we can see why Stalin so befriended a
Western capitalist, the historic enemy of the Marxist, Leninist, and Stalinist revolutions. It also
helps us rationalize why Stalin, justifiably scrutinized by popular perception, had a close
relationship with Roosevelt, a President that had overwhelmingly popular support in America at
the time and a unique place in our current memory of him. Ideologically, this partnership should
not fit. What it comes down to is that Stalin needed Roosevelt. The Nazi plan had nearly
succeeded, reaching the gates of Moscow, and that was with American and British material
support. The direction of power is switched when compared to Stalin’s relationship with
Molotov and Kaganovich. Stalin was not the Boss to Roosevelt, and he could not pretend to be.
Stalin knew that it was neither the time nor place to flaunt Bolshevik and Socialist superiority to
the Capitalist West when Leningrad was under siege. What was important was not the spreading
of Socialism to the global stage, but defending their Stalinist society in Russia. This required the
help of the United States and the United Kingdom. The real and present dangers of fascism
outweighed the evils of capitalism to Stalin and the Soviet Union.
The advantages gained from Roosevelt and his Lend-Lease Act were what kept the
relationship alive. Without it, Stalin would see no use in Roosevelt, and the dangers of being
useless to Stalin could be mortally deadly in Russia, and politically deadly internationally. The
study of the Cold War can be seen really as a study of what happened when the United States
and the USSR no longer needed each other. But in the Great Patriotic War, Stalin needed
Roosevelt, and therefore took on the role of benevolent diplomat trying to reach international
unity against a common foe. They were unlikely bedfellows, but the correspondence shows they
44 Khlevniuk, Stalin:New Biography of a Dictator, 212.
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were both at least willing to keep up appearances in order to stop Hitler. Once the war was won,
the talks of long-term peace keeping were no longer so unified. Roosevelt’s death definitely
played a large role in the worsening of relations, but ideological differences already created
fissures in the alliance. Stalin was happy to talk of everlasting peace when he was receiving
machinery, supplies, and armaments from the United States, but once that was gone, he had no
need to keep up the cordial letters.
With Winston Churchill, we see less of the friendly talk. Even if it wasn’t completely
genuine with Roosevelt, the friendship was at least feigned for the good of international
relations. Stalin is less polite to the British Prime Minister. They would often argue animatedly
on topics important to Soviet interests. Most important of these topics were the opening of a
second front against Germany to relieve pressure from the Russian defense, the role of France as
an ally after the war, and the group’s position on the dismemberment of Germany.45 For the
conversations between Stalin and Churchill on these topics we must look away from letters and
instead towards the spoken word, or at least the transcripts of the spoken word.
Stalin and Churchill met in person during the war three times at the Conferences at
Tehran in November 1943, Yalta in February 1945, and Potsdam in July-August 1945. Tehran,
in newly British occupied Iran, will be the main focus for Stalin and Churchill’s physical
meetings. At Tehran, the Big Three concluded on the date of May 1944 for Operation Overlord,
the military venture that would retake France from Nazi control as Russia focused a counter-
offensive against the German forces in the east.46 While the Allied liberation of France seems
like a historical certainty in today’s perspective, much debate preceded it. Stalin was very
motivated to finalize the plans for Western involvement, as the Germans were moving through
45 Roberts, “Stalin at the Tehran, Yalta, and PotsdamConferences,” 13-19, 22, 24
46 Avalon Project at Yale Law School, “The Tehran Conference, November 28-December 1, 1943,” 1997,
http://www.yale.edu/lawweb/avalon/wwii/tehran.htm.
Henry Smith-17
Soviet territory and the Red Army needed assistance.47 The location of the meeting was reflected
in this urgency, as Tehran allowed Stalin to have access to a direct telephone to Moscow to
coordinate with his generals.48
Stalin and Roosevelt were of the same mind of the necessity of a Western front, and both
worked to convince Churchill, who was hesitant to mount an offensive across the English
Channel.49 Churchill’s reluctance was not unnoticed by Stalin, and he spoke sharply to Churchill,
questioning his commitment to defeating Germany and allying with Russia.50 Once Churchill
agreed to the invasion however, Stalin’s demeanor towards Churchill improved.51 Stalin did not
necessarily dislike Churchill, but he would not let the British leader stand in his way of doing
what was needed for the Soviet Union. Stalin knew what was at stake. There was the threat of
complete defeat to the German armies, but Stalin did not show this fear at Tehran. He maintained
the face of a strong leader in the face of opposition, even going so far as to push other issues, like
Russia’s long time desire for access to the Mediterranean, blocked by Turkish control of the
Black Sea Straits.52 He was the leader of the Soviet Union, but that meant something different to
Churchill than it did to Roosevelt, Molotov, or Kaganovich. Stalin had to be a player in the
European geopolitical chess match, the same game Churchill was a part of. Stalin pushed
Churchill because he needed to push the Soviet position. It is a similar position to Stalin’s
motives with Roosevelt. Stalin needed something from the Western leaders, and changed his
personal style to best get it. From Churchill he needed cooperation, but the fiery English bulldog
was often characteristically uncooperative, which prompted Stalin to be more forceful. Roosevelt
47 Roberts, “Stalin at the Tehran, Yalta, and PotsdamConferences,” 10
48 Ibid., 11
49 Ibid., 13
50 Ibid., 15
51 Ibid.,16
52 Ibid.
Henry Smith-18
was willing to work with Stalin, which allowed for their relationship to go smoothly, but
Churchill often opposed Stalin, which created the tension.
The biggest reason that the correspondences between Stalin, Roosevelt, and Churchill
exist is the alliance against Nazi Germany. Without the common threat, Stalin’s interactions with
the leaders of the United States, the United Kingdom, and other non-socialist countries likely
would have been reserved to the odd economic agreement or international meeting. These
theoretical meetings would also be less likely since the United Nations, the leading body on
international meetings, was created as a result of World War 2 and the Yalta Conference.53 The
Second World War has reshaped our understanding of global politics that makes it seem
ideologically impossible that the two Western leaders would have so much contact with the
leader of the Socialist world. From a post-Cold War world, the alliance appears contradictory to
our understanding of the dynamics of Western-Soviet relations. But by considering Stalin as a
leader that consciously fits into needed roles for the good of the Soviet Union, the alliance seems
less peculiar. His letters to Roosevelt take on a new persona, one that is friendly, cordial, and
cooperative. As the Conferences show, this is partly due to Roosevelt and Stalin often agreeing
on many subjects. Roosevelt was not an obstacle to Stalin’s wartime leadership. Just the
opposite, in fact, as US aid and support was a monumental help to the Soviet defense of Russia.
Stalin needed Roosevelt, and made sure that the letters that were sent to him would be the most
effective at ensuring the alliance for the continued material aid. This was a major operation by
the Kremlin, and Stalin often enlisted Molotov and his subordinates to draft the letters, which
were then edited and finalized by Stalin.54
53 Ibid., 25
54 Vladimir Pechatnov,“How Stalin and Molotov Wrote Messages to Churchill: Following Stalin’s Archives,”
Russia in Global Affairs 7, no. 3 (July-September 2009), 162-163.
Henry Smith-19
The letters and statements made to Churchill also had immense importance, but Stalin
took a different approach with the British Prime Minister. Churchill often butted heads with
Stalin on several issues related to the war. He was hesitant to open a second front and did not
plan on being as harsh in German reconstruction. To Stalin, these were indirect threats to the
Soviet Union’s stability and interests, and therefore exerted his gruffness and aggression against
Churchill. With the assistance of Roosevelt, Stalin mostly got what he wanted. Stalin took on the
role of political manipulator and bully in his correspondence with Churchill. Churchill’s take on
Stalin is flagged with caveats. His memoirs mention several meetings he had with Stalin, but the
politician (who, it must be added, was taken to drink) made several statements that contradict
with the official Soviet and British records of the meetings.55 Regardless of Churchill’s personal
recollections, Stalin’s approaches to writing and speaking with Roosevelt and Churchill display
the Soviet leader’s ability to change his style to best fit the role he believed was necessary. This
character trait is very important in understanding Stalin as both a leader and a person.
Conclusion
Stalin’s letters give us not only a glimpse into the mind of the Soviet leader, but also an
example of how Stalin led. His leadership style fluctuated to best fit the situation he was in. And
while these differences occur with each person Stalin wrote his letters to, there is a clearer
dichotomy between the Soviet Stalin and the International Stalin. A student of international
diplomacy will see a different side of Stalin than one who studies Soviet domestic political
relations. The expectations Stalin had from Molotov and Kaganovich are very different than with
Roosevelt and Churchill. He expected results, updates, progress, and loyalty from his Soviet
comrades. With the leaders of the Western world, it is likely he wanted the same, but instead
55 Michael Ellman, “Churchill on Stalin: A Note,” Europe-Asia Studies 58, no. 6 (September 2006), 966-970
Henry Smith-20
expected coordination and cooperation. This shows that Stalin could change his form of
leadership, and this is important because it show Stalin as a dynamic leader who was self-aware
of his rule.
Stalin’s leadership of the Soviet government is so significant because of its centralized
nature. Stalin had the final say on virtually every topic, and even if he wasn’t directly involved,
the decision was made by some part of the central government. This had many adverse effects on
the operation of the country during Stalin’s rule as inefficient administration plagued the country.
Despite the shortcomings, this system was maintained because it allowed Stalin’s vision for the
Soviet Union to advance unimpeded. Keeping this system running required extreme measures of
loyalty and devotion, some forced and some freely given, by both the population and government
workers.56 This explains Stalin’s attitude towards Molotov and Kaganovich. He required their
loyalty and obedience in order to keep Stalinism moving forward. To ensure that the Soviet
statesmen stayed in line, Stalin used the harsh and demanding words of his letters. Stalin’s
centralist government required regular results and updates, and his letters to Molotov and
Kaganovich were written in such a way to keep Stalinism propelled forward.
Stalin had to contain the harsh rhetoric in his correspondence with Roosevelt and
Churchill. While Marxist ideology may preach that the workers of America and Britain will one
day rise up and seize the means of production in these places, Stalin could not press a theoretical
communist revolution when there was the very real Nazi threat on its way to Moscow. He
needed the support and alliance of the United States and the United Kingdom, and had to play
nice in order to keep the USSR alive. He was friendliest with Roosevelt, partly because of
genuine mutual admiration, but also because losing American material aid would be a death
knell for the Russian war effort. The rational for agitating Churchill requires a separate
56 Kotkin, Magnetic Mountain,201
Henry Smith-21
explanation. British involvement on the Western front was extremely important, but Churchill
required continued pressure to force his involvement. The letters and meetings Stalin had with
these international leaders show his motives for the cooperation, which were to remove direct
enemies of the Soviet Union and to ensure future progress could be made. The end goal of the
letters, and of the rest of Stalin’s wartime international policy, was to defend Stalinism. It was a
fight for survival for both the people of the Soviet Union and for Stalinist socialism.
Joseph Stalin’s letters to Molotov, Kaganovich, and Roosevelt, and his correspondences
with Churchill display the many sides of the Soviet dictator. Although public perception has
portrayed him as a one-dimensional monster, the letters show there is more to the story. Of
course he was a monster, and the blood on his hands can and should never be washed away, but
it is important to understand that the monstrous leader is just one of several roles Stalin took on.
The framework of centralized Stalinism and the international demands of a world at war allowed
for many roles to be taken, as be the leaders around him. Stalin had different expectations from
Molotov, Kaganovich, Roosevelt, and Churchill, and had to be a different leader to each. The
differences are fewer between the domestic and international figures, but there is a clear
distinction between them all. These distinctions show themselves most clearly in the letters
written to the figures, and the letters are a remarkable tool for the study of Stalin’s personal
interactions with the various Soviet and international leaders. The letters show us the dynamic
nature of Stalin’s rule. He had to change how he ruled depending on the person or group he was
addressing, and this is very well showcased in the letters. This is important to understanding
Stalin as both a person and a leader.
Henry Smith-22
Bibliography
 The Avalon Project. “The Tehran Conference, November 28-December 1, 1943.” 1997.
http://www.yale.edu/lawweb/avalon/wwii/tehran.htm
 Butler, Susan, ed. My Dear Mr. Stalin. New Haven: Yale University Press, 2005.
 Davies, R. W., Khlevniuk, Oleg V., and Rees, E. A., ed. The Stalin-Kaganovich
Correspondence 1931-36. New Haven: Yale University Press, 2003.
 Ellman, Michael. “Churchill on Stalin: A Note.” Europe-Asia Studies 58, no. 6 (September
2006): 965-971.
 Fitzpatrick, Sheila. The Russian Revolution. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2008.
 Fitzpatrick, Sheila. “In Power.” In On Stalin’s Team: The Years of Living Dangerously in
Soviet Politics, Sheila Fitzpatrick, 64-88. Princeton: Princeton University Press,
2015.
 Getty, J. Arch. “Stalin as Prime Minister: power and the Politburo.” In Stalin: A New History,
edited by Sarah Davies and James Harris, 83-107. Cambridge: Cambridge
University Press, 2005.
 Khlevniuk, Oleg V. Stalin: New Biography of a Dictator. Translated by Nora Seligmann
Favorov. New Haven: Yale University Press, 2015.
 Kiromiya, Hiroaki. “Stalin’s Industrial Revolution: Politics and Workers, 1928-1932.” In The
Stalin Revolution: Foundations of the Totalitarian Era, Robert Vincent Daniels,
67-80. Boston: Houghton Mifflin Co., 1997.
 Kotkin, Stephen. Magnetic Mountain: Stalinism as a Civilization. Berkeley: University of
California Press, 1995.
Henry Smith-23
 Lih, Lars T., Naumov, Oleg V. and Khlevniuk, Oleg V., ed. Stalin’s Letters to Molotov 1925-
1936. New Haven: Yale University Press, 1995.
 Pechatnov, Vladimir. “How Stalin and Molotov Wrote Messages to Churchill: Following
Stalin’s Archives.” Russian Global Affairs 7, no. 3 (July-September 2009): 162-
173.
 Roberts, Geoffrey. “Stalin at the Tehran, Yalta, and Potsdam Conferences.” Journal of Cold
War Studies 9, no. 4 (Fall 2007): 6-40.
 Viola, Lynne. “The Best Sons of the Fatherland: Workers in the Vanguard of Soviet
Collectivization.” In The Stalin Revolution: Foundations of the Totalitarian Era,
Robert Vincent Daniels, 108-126. Boston: Houghton Mifflin Co., 1997.
 Weiner, Amir. “The Making of a Dominant Myth: The Second World War and the
Construction of Political Identities within the Soviet Polity.” The Russian Review
55 (October 1996): 638-660.

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Final Copy

  • 1. Stalin’s Pen: the Correspondences of the Soviet Leader and their Implications Henry Smith Towson University HIST 486.001 Senior History Seminar Professor Zajicek May 9, 2016
  • 2. Henry Smith-1 Stalin’s Pen: The Correspondences of the Soviet Leader and their Implications Henry Smith, May 2016 Introduction One of the most useful, and most dangerous, ways of approaching history is through the personal correspondences of historical figures. The letters, journals, transcripts, and words left by historical figures illuminate a perspective to events as they happened. This can be a very informative and enlightening tool. Joseph Stalin’s letters, however, are more complex. The Soviet tyrant was not a mere worker keeping a journal, or a housewife writing a letter to her husband on the front. He was in power, and this required him to take on different roles as a leader. Whether he is giving a speech at the Politburo, discussing trade agreements with the President of the United States, or sitting at a beach in Sochi, he was always the leader of the Soviet Union. What is interesting is that it is not always the same kind of leader. The letters he wrote show different kinds of leaders, ones that changed depending on the recipient. His position on a subject, his style of writing, his cordiality, and his manner of leadership all change between letters. When he is writing as the General Secretary leading the industrialization drive and collectivization reforms, he is different than the World Leader working with the United States
  • 3. Henry Smith-2 and Great Britain to stop the Nazis. The differences can partly be explained by the natural differences in our speech to different people, as well as to differing times and circumstances, but this gives us only a fraction of the full picture. The differences intentionally paint Stalin in various images in order to meet expectations as leader and to get the most out of the recipient. Stalin’s correspondences to Molotov, Kaganovich, Roosevelt, and Churchill are empirical evidence of the different sides to Joseph Stalin as a leader. The main sources are the collections of letters that Stalin sent to Vyacheslav Molotov, Lazar Kaganovich, and Franklin Roosevelt.1 They provide not only Stalin’s personal perspectives on the different issues surrounding the building and defense of Stalinism but a glimpse of how he communicated with those around him. His letters lose some of the fire that accompanied his speech, but it is still easy to see the violent emotions that he could unleash. A letter sent to Molotov reads, “The letter from Manuilskii is cowardly and conniving. I stand entirely by my declaration on the swindling and dirty tricks, despite the dissatisfaction of some comrades.”2 The name-calling and thinly veiled threats are staples of Stalin’s prose, and even as early as 1925 he is using it freely. But he is not all fire and insults. He can show compassion and textbook diplomacy, like in his note to Roosevelt, “I take this moment to thank you, Mr. President, on behalf of the Soviet Government, for the cordial hospitality offered to Mr. Molotov and his staff during their sojourn in the United States.”3 He can also be a rational, pragmatic ruler, analytically deciding the best decision in his view. This is seen most clearly in his correspondences with Kaganovich, like on the importance of rail transport, of which Stalin 11Lars T. Lih, Oleg V. Naumov, and Oleg V. Khlevniuk, ed., Stalin’sLetters to Molotov 1925-1936 (New Haven: Yale University Press, 1995); R. W. Davies, Oleg V. Khlevniuk, and E. A. Rees, ed., The Stalin-Kaganovich Correspondence 1931-36 (New Haven: Yale University Press, 2003); Susan Butler, ed., My Dear Mr. Stalin (New Haven: Yale University Press, 2005). 2 Stalin to Molotov,18 August 1925, in Stalin’s Letters to Molotov,94. 3 Stalin to Roosevelt, June 12, 1942, in My Dear Mr. Stalin,70.
  • 4. Henry Smith-3 remarked, “I regard transport- above all, railroad transport- to be the most important issue in the coming months. The principal threat to the national economy now comes from transport, and it is transport that must be approved above all,” a sentiment to which Kaganovich agreed and set out in motion.4 These sources shed much light on Stalin’s many leadership roles, which is the key focus of this paper, but context to the letters is required first. Starting in 1925 and ending in 1936, Stalin spent his summers at Sochi on the Black Sea.5 Lacking the necessary technology of the telephone, Stalin relied on pen, paper, and the postal system to communicate with his party members. This allowed for the large corpus of letters to exist at all, which allows for more research into the inner workings of the Soviet leadership. From his seaside dacha, Stalin was alerted to important matters from Moscow and sent back his input. Two of the main recipients of his letters were Molotov and Kaganovich, two of the most powerful and influential members of the Soviet Union. The letters he sent show the different dynamics Stalin held in power of the Politburo and Soviet governmental apparatus. During this period, the most important aspect was the building of Stalinism. This is a complex process that can be simplified into the policies, culture, and society created under Stalin’s reign over the Soviet Union. Its origins are found in his crushing of Trotsky and Zinoviev to unify the Politburo, as well as removal of Lenin’s New Economic Plan.6 From there, Stalin began pushing his own agenda, which required a culture shift. The War Economy and Revolutionary Fervor were running out of steam, and had to be replaced.7 The replacement was 4 Stalin to Kaganovich, 19 September 1931, in The Stalin-Kaganovich Correspondence 1931-36,94-97. 5 Lih, et. al., Stalin’s Letters to Molotov,1. 6 Oleg V. Khlevniuk, Stalin:New Biography of a Dictator (New Haven: Yale University Press, 2015), 100. 7 Hiroaki Kiromiya, “Stalin’s Industrial Revolution: Politics and Workers, 1928-1932,” in The Stalin Revolution: Foundationsofthe Totalitarian Era, Robert Vincent Daniels (Boston: Houghton Mifflin Co., 1997), 70-71; Amir Weiner, “The Making of a Dominant Myth: The Second World War and the Construction of Political Identities within the Soviet Polity,” The Russian Review 55 (October 1996): 639-640.
  • 5. Henry Smith-4 the Stalinist policies under a new Stalinist oppression.8 Two of the most important policies, which were often discussed with Molotov, Kaganovich, and even Churchill at times, were industrialization and collectivization. Industrialization had kulaks deported, the NEP and the NEPmen removed, and factories pushed beyond their limits to reach ever-increasing expectations.9 Collectivization of the farms was done to distribute grain in a socialist method, but it also placed a heavy burden on the peasants producing the grain, leading to their resentment.10 These two policies and events complemented each other in Stalin’s plans to push Russia into modernity, and exemplified his first decade of power. Many of letters Stalin wrote to Molotov and Kaganovich concern these two major policies. While the letters do not include what Stalin and his inner circle discussed while he was in Moscow, they do give an in-depth discussion between Stalin and his right and left hand man. The medium of the letter required Stalin, Molotov, and Kaganovich to cover all the details needed to get the job done, a central tenant and expectation of Soviet bureaucracy. This makes them longer-winded than they normally would have been if they were in a meeting room in the Kremlin. This allows for greater insight into Stalin’s opinions on crucial topics to Soviet history. Another defining moment of Stalinist Russia was the Nazi invasion during World War 2, known as the Great Patriotic War in Russia. This was the realization of the fears of the Soviet leaders. An outside force was challenging Communism, and it needed to be defending. This was what they had been preparing for since 1927, yet it still started badly.11 So badly, in fact, the 8 Khlevniuk, Stalin,100-103. 9 Kuromiya, “Stalin’s Industrial Revolution,” 67-72. 10 Lynne Viola, “The Best Sons of the Fatherland: Workers in the Vanguard of Soviet Collectivization,” in The Stalin Revolution:Foundationsof the Totalitarian Era, Robert Vincent Daniels (Boston: Houghton Mifflin Co., 1997), 109-110. 11 Sheila Fitzpatrick, The Russian Revolution (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2008), 120-121.
  • 6. Henry Smith-5 Soviet Union, despite their sense of historic and moral superiority, had to turn to outside help.12 They had to seek aid from the United States and Great Britain. From President Roosevelt he asked for material aid, like telephones, metals, alloys, wire, trucks, armor, machines, tools, factory equipment, and clothing.13 It would not be until the Japanese bombing of Pearl Harbor that America would provide direct military aid. The United Kingdom was already at war with Germany by the time Operation Barbarossa was tearing through western Russia. Resigned to defending their island nation from German air raids, Prime Minister Churchill had to be convinced mainly by Stalin to open up a ground offensive on Nazi controlled France.14 Operation Overlord put pressure on Hitler’s western territories, relieving pressure on the eastern front. This would be a turning point in the Second World War and the downfall of fascism, but also one of the last moments of diplomacy by the future Cold War adversaries. The escalating war brought these three leaders together on several occasions. The most famous of these meetings were the Conferences at Tehran, Yalta, and Potsdam. These meetings established a common ground between the enemies of Hitler as they discussed how to defeat the German warlord and what was to be done once peace was established. These meetings created many informative and useful transcripts that can be applied to several subfields of history, but for this paper’s purposes, it intensified the frequency of Stalin and Roosevelt’s letters to one another. The leaders of the USSR and the USA struck an expectantly friendly relationship, one that has created an invaluable corpus of writings that showcase Stalin’s international relations. While Stalin’s relationship with Churchill was rockier, and did not create as many documents, their interactions are important to the study of Stalin’s role as a international leader. 12 Stephen Kotkin, Magnetic Mountain:Stalinismas a Civilization (Berkeley: University of California Press, 1995), 202-203. 13 Roosevelt to Stalin, October 31, 1941, in My Dear Mr. Stalin,49-51. 14 Geoffrey Roberts, “Stalin at the Tehran, Yalta, and PotsdamConferences,” Journal of Cold War Studies 9:4 (Fall 2007): 16.
  • 7. Henry Smith-6 Correspondence with Molotov and Kaganovich Joseph Stalin has a reputation for being cruel, violent, tyrannical, and evil. Victims and students of the Ukrainian Holodomor, the famines caused by collectivization, the misplaced ethnic minorities, and the Great Terror will attest to these character traits. And in a final analysis, they may be proven to be true. So while genocidal one-upmanship does not tell the full story, the tens of millions dead cannot be ignored. Stopping any study on Stalin with the sole conclusion than he was a mass murderer devalues the complexities of the Soviet government and of Stalin, not to mention the many sources that can tell us more about the builders and defenders of socialism. The letters Stalin wrote to Molotov and Kaganovich while at Sochi can help to look deeper into Stalin as a person and a leader. They show instances of the tyrannical aggression that has dominated the public perception, but they also show the opposite. They show Stalin’s long friendship with Molotov and Kaganovich, as comrades not just in politics but also in spirit. They had rose through the Communist Party’s ranks together during and directly after the Civil War, and the Old Bolsheviks shared a comradeship that was not yet broken by the demands of power.15 These correspondences show how Stalin stood above in the Soviet hierarchy, but more importantly, why he carried out his actions that had dramatic effects on the inner workings of the Kremlin but also on the Russian people as a whole. Stalin was the General Secretary of the Politburo, the executive policy making branch of the Soviet Union. Policies were proposed and debated by the members of the Politburo and a decision was democratically reached. At least, this was the system envisioned under Lenin. Under Stalin, the system became even more centralized. Decisions were no longer reached on the 15 Sheila Fitzpatrick, “In Power,” from On Stalin’s Team: The Years of Living Dangerously in Soviet Politics (Princeton: Princeton University Press, 2015), 64-65.
  • 8. Henry Smith-7 Politburo floor but in back room meetings between Stalin and several key members related to the proposed policy.16 Stalin may not have been the leading expert on a subject, but he was virtually always present, and his decisions were often final. He could be persuaded one way or another, but it was clear who was in charge. As in Moscow, so it was in Sochi. Updates on industrialization and collectivization were required, as well as the happenings of Soviet politics. The letters to Kaganovich generally concerned the former information, with factory updates and statistical data being the main subjects of conversation, while the letters to Molotov generally concerned how members of the Politburo were behaving. There was some overlap, but the distinction is not so surprising. Kaganovich was in charge of the Orgburo, several Central Committee departments, and the Politburo during Stalin’s absence.17 Essentially, he was in charge of the political operation of the Soviet Union in Stalin’s stead. Molotov was less of a political organizer and more of a bureaucrat.18 He had Stalin’s position before him, and still performed the office’s duties whenever Stalin was away. He served as Stalin’s right hand man, working tirelessly for his best interests, both in Moscow and abroad.19 Each served a different role in Stalin’s government, and therefore Stalin had different correspondences with the two of them. For instance, when Stalin wrote to Molotov about new iron and steel works, he focuses on the personnel, specifically a Lokatskov, head of Main Ferrous Metals.20 He compares his “ancient” methods to American and German specialists, and questions whether he and Molotov could “shake up” Lokatskov and Kuibyshev, an economic advisor to the Politburo, into 16 J. Arch Getty, “Stalin as Prime Minister: power and the Politburo,” from Stalin:a New History, Sarah Davies and James R. Harris (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2005), 83-86. 17 Davies, et. al., The Stalin-Kaganovich Correspondence,ix. 18 Lih, et. al., Stalin’s Letters to Molotov,2. 19 Ibid. 20 Stalin to Molotov,23 August 1929, in Stalin’s Letters to Molotov,172.
  • 9. Henry Smith-8 performing good enough, or if they could bring “Austin & Co.” in on contracts instead.21 At this time, the Soviet Union was bringing in foreign construction firms to build up their industry, but only until Russian workers and experts were capable.22 This was a topic of contention in both Moscow and Magnitogorsk, and the right personnel was necessary in making the Soviet industrial dream a reality. Conversely, when Stalin wrote to Kaganovich on factories, it was more policy than person. “Why aren’t the summaries on the Moscow and Gorky auto plants being published every day...Why did tractor output decline at the Stalingrad Tractor Plant...What is the situation with regard to plan fulfillment of tanks, airplanes, engines…?”23 These question were less interested in the personnel but in the operation. Industrialization had to follow Stalin’s vision for the advancement of socialism, and Kaganovich was the man in charge of seeing things completed.24 If viewed through the correspondence, the leadership styles Molotov and Kaganovich saw were quite different. Stalin had to be both a judge of a person’s character with Molotov and an adept organizer and coordinator with Kaganovich. Stalin would fit certain roles to achieve certain tasks, creating a multi-dimensional identity as leader. He had to be numerical and direct at times. At others, he had to be subjective and judgmental. What was important in the end was getting the job done. Was his cruelty another means to an end? Possibly. Does this resolve him of guilt or blame? Definitely not. But it does show that Stalin had many hats, which he used to ensure Stalinism moved forward. Stalin’s shifting modes of power were unified by a common command for respect and obedience. Since the crushing of Zinoviev and Trotsky and the removal of all opposition in the 21 Ibid. 22 Kotkin, Magnetic Mountain,37-45,47-48. 23 Stalin to Kaganovich, 12 June, 1932, in The Stalin-Kaganovich Correspondence,127. 24 Kaganovich to Stalin, 14 June 1932, in The Stalin-Kaganovich Correspondence,133-135.
  • 10. Henry Smith-9 Politburo, Stalin ran the government through a combination of fear, devotion, and paranoia.25 Political exile was always a threat, as was murder. Even Molotov and Kaganovich lost Stalin’s favor towards the end of his life. Overt oppression cannot last however, even for a member as devoted as Molotov. Stalin was aggressive and demanding, but not more than he needed to be. He remained tempered and self-aware in his writings, but the threat of his anger never was far. In a letter to both Molotov and Bukharin, he wrote, “Damn the both of you: you misled me a little bit by asking my opinion on the new directives (about China) and not providing me with concrete fresh material… And not only did you mislead me a little bit, but I misled you, perhaps, with my long and quite angry reply…”26 Stalin may have had absolute deciding power, but when he was in Sochi, he relied heavily on the information provided to him.27 As this letter shows, information can be withheld or altered to limit what Stalin knew. This was done to make him make a decision that benefited whoever was giving him the abridged information. This letter also shows the thinly veiled contempt Stalin could muster. “Damn the both of you,” when used in governmental correspondence is a phrase that often signals the end of someone’s political career. This letter predates the Great Terror or Purge, so Molotov and Bukharin were less at risk here than if the same utterance was made a decade later. The letter also shows Stalin’s self-awareness to his anger. It may not be a controlled fury that he can dispense at will, as he feels some remorse for his emotions, but it is also not an uncontrollable characteristic. Stalin knew when his anger was necessary, and with the political system he manipulated to keep every member on its toes, his anger held a fatal weight. His anger was a tool to be used to keep his lieutenants in line and following his vision. It is a Stalinist variant of the carrot and the stick. In the above letter, he felt deceived, and administered the 25 Khlevniuk, Stalin:New Biography of the Dictator, 81-89. 26 Stalin to Molotov and Bukharin, 9 July 1927, in Stalin’s Letters to Molotov,139-140. 27 Getty, “Stalin as Prime Minister,” 98.
  • 11. Henry Smith-10 stick, but in Letter 80 to Molotov, he gives the carrot. After going over budget cuts and rebalancing, he asks Viacheslav, not Comrade Molotov, “How’s life? Are you getting any rest? My health is good; my friends are well also. Regards to Com. Zhemchuzhina [Molotov’s wife].”28 This may be political and personal manipulation, but it does show Stalin’s use of aggression is not a blind rage, but more calculated to serve his best interests. What were these best interests? We return to the ambiguous concept of the building of Stalinism. The policies that Stalin pushed for are the clearest definition of Stalinism, but it also involves the political, social, and cultural changes that occurred on a systematic level. Industrialization was the most important aspect, and acted as a symbol for the creation of a new society. Industry moved Russia forward into modern times, and furthered the historical certainty of global victory for socialism.29 One of most common topics in the letters to Molotov and Kaganovich was the progress of the Five Year Plan and the construction of new factories and industries. Kaganovich was often more detailed in his reports on various topics. Grain sales, tractor shipments, steel production, railroads, and Politburo voting on industrialization policies are common in Kaganovich’s letters, which are really more like numbered reports on Moscow’s view of the Union. They are lengthy and cover multiple topics that Stalin wished to be informed on. One letter alone mentioned the cancellation of a speech by Vyshinsky, the Central Volga Canal construction project, grain procurement rates and measures, the People’s Commissar of Heavy Industry’s request for “a continuous rolling mill,” phonograph editing, the appointment of the Ukrainian secretary, the shuffling of administrators, an International Youth Day Parade, and Ordzhonikidze and Molotov’s vacation.30 This allowed Stalin to be up to date with current affairs as Kaganovich ran the day-to-day leadership and Stalin made decisions from the Black Sea. 28 Stalin to Molotov,21 July 1935, in Stalin’s Letters to Molotov,235 29 Fitzpatrick, The Russian Revolution,120. 30 Kaganovich to Stalin, 2 September 1933, in The Stalin-Kaganovich Correspondence,201-203.
  • 12. Henry Smith-11 Stalin did not need to be the ever present dictator, but his close correspondence with Kaganovich kept in him control. The correspondence with Kaganovich was more formal than Stalin’s letters to Molotov, but there is some evidence of familiarity between the two Old Bolsheviks. This is due to the role Stalin was playing with Kaganovich, as opposed to Molotov. With Kaganovich, Stalin was ensuring Stalinism kept moving forward. With Molotov, he was ensuring Stalinism stayed together. Stalin required results and updates from Kaganovich, which led to his responses being administrative. As long as things were progressing, he was cordial and agreeable with Kaganovich’s reports. But he was not afraid of letting Kaganovich know when he disagrees. He wrote he was “resolutely opposed,” to publishing Central Committee congress material, noted that “the situation with artillery is very bad,” and that “the Baku oil situation is bad.”31 Very few words were wasted in his analysis of what was wrong, and this reflected Stalin’s expectations in his role of industrial supervisor. When Tomskii was “resigned” from the All Union Chemical Association, Stalin was strait to the point in agreeing with his removal as, “he is doing nothing for us.”32 The worst thing one could be to Stalin was being useless. Compare this to his next letter chronologically, written to both Kaganovich and Molotov, detailing a new campaign to influence public opinion against Japanese militarism33. Several differences emerge in the writing. He was more verbose in the second letter, full with positive directives, suggestions, and expectations. He is less terse than in the first letter, as he takes on a different role of leader. The operations of industry and public opinion are not connected in Western governments, but under Stalin’s centralized state, he had to be the leader and instigator 31 Stalin to Kaganovich, 21 October, 1933, in The Stalin-Kaganovich Correspondence,231. 32 Stalin to Molotov,2 September 1930, in Stalin’s Letters to Molotov,210-211. 33 Stalin to Kaganovich and Molotov, 21 October 1933, in The Stalin-Kaganovich Correspondence,232-233.
  • 13. Henry Smith-12 for both. The letters show almost a form of code switching, as Stalin takes different approaches to the different aspects of Soviet leadership. Stalin’s vacations to Sochi created a paper trail of his interactions with Molotov and Kaganovich. From these documents, we can see how Stalin wrote to his main lieutenants and more importantly how it changed. Stalin’s countenance in his writings depended on the recipient and what the recipient meant to Stalin’s larger designs for the building of Stalinism. If he was writing to Kaganovich, it was for the daily operation and leading of the USSR, and he used the tone of authoritative leader that expected and demanded results and updates. If he was writing to Molotov, it was for the inner workings of the Politburo and foreign embassies, specifically its personnel, and took on the role of chief bureaucrat, deciding who was responsible for what to make the Stalinist policies become reality. Stalin’s letters to the Soviet politicians differentiated based on what Stalin expected and needed from them. This made Stalin utilize different styles of leadership to best get the job done. The letters show this, and are a valuable resource to determining Stalin’s relationship with the rest of the Politburo. This knowledge can be used to better understand what kind of leader in Russia and the USSR was Stalin. Correspondence with Roosevelt and Churchill Stalin often came off as crass or aggressive to his Russian companions. If he was in a particularly good mood, he might appear wry and sarcastic. This was due to his superiority over Molotov and Kaganovich. The hierarchy had to be maintained, and a clear image of Soviet leader kept Stalin above his fellow Communists. But with President Roosevelt and Prime Minister Churchill, this hierarchy was not engrained. With fellow heads of state, Stalin was expected to act as an equal, not a dictator. This caused his behavior to be different around the international leaders, and his letters followed suit.
  • 14. Henry Smith-13 The Second World War brought to Russia the devastation of the Nazi war machine. The early defense of Russia was chaotic, as the army, the Politburo, and Stalin were not ready for war.34 It was less of a defense, in fact, than an unorganized retreat; Stalin felt as if all the work that had gone into building the Soviet state was being destroyed.35 Despite the grim future, the Soviet Union could not give up. Defense plans were becoming more concrete, however slowly, and the Red Army and Stalin still needed to at least appear confident to secure Western alliances.36 Stalin needed allies, and that required him to take on another role of leader. The first meeting of what became the Big Three occurred in Moscow in 1941 with the main topic being the American material assistance, later organized into the Lend Lease Act.37 Despite the tensions that emerged by the end of the Second World War and threatened throughout the Cold War, the Soviet-American alliance started affably enough. The three states, being the USSR, the USA, and the UK, agreed to “collaborate and cooperate” together until the war was over.38 As for Stalin himself, he was deeply gracious to Roosevelt.39 “The Soviet Government expresses its deep gratitude for your statement that the decisions of the conference [Lend-Lease] will be carried out to the maximum extent…a non-interest bearing loan in the sum of one billion dollars…substantial assistance to the Soviet Union in its great and difficult struggle with our common enemy, blood thirsty Hitlerism.”40 These do not seem like the words of a brash and sadistic tyrant. How then do we compartmentalize this cordiality with the reality of Stalin? One answer would be to doubt the sincerity of Stalin’s message. It is not unlikely that such a formal letter was written by more than just Stalin, and he does claim to write “on behalf of 34 Khlevniuk, Stalin:New Biography of a Dictator, 203. 35 Ibid., 204-205. 36 Ibid., 210-211. 3737 Ibid., 212. 38 Roberts, “Stalin at the Tehran, Yalta, and PotsdamConferences,” 10. 39 Stalin to Roosevelt, November 4, 1941, in My Dear Mr. Stalin,52. 40 Ibid.
  • 15. Henry Smith-14 the Government of the USSR,” so outside influence from that Government would also be possible.41 But this overlooks a key point of Stalinism that Stalin had the final say. If Stalin disagreed with the message being conveyed, it had to be revised or removed. Additionally, if the words are not Stalin’s, they are coming from Stalin’s pen, and since Stalin agreed to keep further correspondence with Roosevelt, more words must flow in the future. Whatever doubt to the authenticity or sincerity of the letters, they were still sent to Roosevelt, and Stalin’s position of friendship was made explicit. This friendly relationship lasted until Roosevelt’s death in 1945, and Stalin’s relationship with this successor, Harry Truman, would not be as friendly.42 Stalin and Roosevelt’s relationship was cordial, but not as cold as the Stalin’s was with his Soviet compatriots. While it would be difficult to call Stalin and Roosevelt true friends, there was a shared sense of interest that never neared hostility. Stalin could be bluntly mean to Soviet and foreign politicians and ambassadors, but this antagonism was never aimed at Roosevelt. Their correspondence concerned matters not related to the war as well. Roosevelt’s re- election, Franco-Soviet relations, which were a matter of some contention, and even Stalin’s birthday were all mentioned and discussed between the two heads of state.43 They asked each other for advice in the subject of ruling a country at war, gave each other updates on Soviet and American ambassadors in Moscow, Washington D.C., and other places of note, and discussed geopolitical matters that affecting the Allies and the world at large. They were political allies and confidants, and their alliance did much to save Russia from the Nazis and Germany’s eventual defeat. Stalin expressed as much to Roosevelt, in how “ ‘If not for Lend-Lease, victory would 41 Ibid. 42 Roberts, “Stalin at the Tehran, Yalta, and PotsdamConferences,” 29. 43 Stalin to Roosevelt, November 9, 1944, in My Dear Mr. Stalin,266; Stalin to Roosevelt, December 2, 1944, in My Dear Mr. Stalin, 269-270; Getty, “Stalin at the Tehran, Yalta, and PotsdamConferences,” 12, 21, 23, 39; Roosevelt to Stalin, December 21, 1944, in My Dear Mr. Stalin,277.
  • 16. Henry Smith-15 have been greatly hindered.”44 Stalin knew he had an important and powerful ally in Roosevelt, and did much to maintain this friendship. It is in this understanding of Stalin’s view that we can see why Stalin so befriended a Western capitalist, the historic enemy of the Marxist, Leninist, and Stalinist revolutions. It also helps us rationalize why Stalin, justifiably scrutinized by popular perception, had a close relationship with Roosevelt, a President that had overwhelmingly popular support in America at the time and a unique place in our current memory of him. Ideologically, this partnership should not fit. What it comes down to is that Stalin needed Roosevelt. The Nazi plan had nearly succeeded, reaching the gates of Moscow, and that was with American and British material support. The direction of power is switched when compared to Stalin’s relationship with Molotov and Kaganovich. Stalin was not the Boss to Roosevelt, and he could not pretend to be. Stalin knew that it was neither the time nor place to flaunt Bolshevik and Socialist superiority to the Capitalist West when Leningrad was under siege. What was important was not the spreading of Socialism to the global stage, but defending their Stalinist society in Russia. This required the help of the United States and the United Kingdom. The real and present dangers of fascism outweighed the evils of capitalism to Stalin and the Soviet Union. The advantages gained from Roosevelt and his Lend-Lease Act were what kept the relationship alive. Without it, Stalin would see no use in Roosevelt, and the dangers of being useless to Stalin could be mortally deadly in Russia, and politically deadly internationally. The study of the Cold War can be seen really as a study of what happened when the United States and the USSR no longer needed each other. But in the Great Patriotic War, Stalin needed Roosevelt, and therefore took on the role of benevolent diplomat trying to reach international unity against a common foe. They were unlikely bedfellows, but the correspondence shows they 44 Khlevniuk, Stalin:New Biography of a Dictator, 212.
  • 17. Henry Smith-16 were both at least willing to keep up appearances in order to stop Hitler. Once the war was won, the talks of long-term peace keeping were no longer so unified. Roosevelt’s death definitely played a large role in the worsening of relations, but ideological differences already created fissures in the alliance. Stalin was happy to talk of everlasting peace when he was receiving machinery, supplies, and armaments from the United States, but once that was gone, he had no need to keep up the cordial letters. With Winston Churchill, we see less of the friendly talk. Even if it wasn’t completely genuine with Roosevelt, the friendship was at least feigned for the good of international relations. Stalin is less polite to the British Prime Minister. They would often argue animatedly on topics important to Soviet interests. Most important of these topics were the opening of a second front against Germany to relieve pressure from the Russian defense, the role of France as an ally after the war, and the group’s position on the dismemberment of Germany.45 For the conversations between Stalin and Churchill on these topics we must look away from letters and instead towards the spoken word, or at least the transcripts of the spoken word. Stalin and Churchill met in person during the war three times at the Conferences at Tehran in November 1943, Yalta in February 1945, and Potsdam in July-August 1945. Tehran, in newly British occupied Iran, will be the main focus for Stalin and Churchill’s physical meetings. At Tehran, the Big Three concluded on the date of May 1944 for Operation Overlord, the military venture that would retake France from Nazi control as Russia focused a counter- offensive against the German forces in the east.46 While the Allied liberation of France seems like a historical certainty in today’s perspective, much debate preceded it. Stalin was very motivated to finalize the plans for Western involvement, as the Germans were moving through 45 Roberts, “Stalin at the Tehran, Yalta, and PotsdamConferences,” 13-19, 22, 24 46 Avalon Project at Yale Law School, “The Tehran Conference, November 28-December 1, 1943,” 1997, http://www.yale.edu/lawweb/avalon/wwii/tehran.htm.
  • 18. Henry Smith-17 Soviet territory and the Red Army needed assistance.47 The location of the meeting was reflected in this urgency, as Tehran allowed Stalin to have access to a direct telephone to Moscow to coordinate with his generals.48 Stalin and Roosevelt were of the same mind of the necessity of a Western front, and both worked to convince Churchill, who was hesitant to mount an offensive across the English Channel.49 Churchill’s reluctance was not unnoticed by Stalin, and he spoke sharply to Churchill, questioning his commitment to defeating Germany and allying with Russia.50 Once Churchill agreed to the invasion however, Stalin’s demeanor towards Churchill improved.51 Stalin did not necessarily dislike Churchill, but he would not let the British leader stand in his way of doing what was needed for the Soviet Union. Stalin knew what was at stake. There was the threat of complete defeat to the German armies, but Stalin did not show this fear at Tehran. He maintained the face of a strong leader in the face of opposition, even going so far as to push other issues, like Russia’s long time desire for access to the Mediterranean, blocked by Turkish control of the Black Sea Straits.52 He was the leader of the Soviet Union, but that meant something different to Churchill than it did to Roosevelt, Molotov, or Kaganovich. Stalin had to be a player in the European geopolitical chess match, the same game Churchill was a part of. Stalin pushed Churchill because he needed to push the Soviet position. It is a similar position to Stalin’s motives with Roosevelt. Stalin needed something from the Western leaders, and changed his personal style to best get it. From Churchill he needed cooperation, but the fiery English bulldog was often characteristically uncooperative, which prompted Stalin to be more forceful. Roosevelt 47 Roberts, “Stalin at the Tehran, Yalta, and PotsdamConferences,” 10 48 Ibid., 11 49 Ibid., 13 50 Ibid., 15 51 Ibid.,16 52 Ibid.
  • 19. Henry Smith-18 was willing to work with Stalin, which allowed for their relationship to go smoothly, but Churchill often opposed Stalin, which created the tension. The biggest reason that the correspondences between Stalin, Roosevelt, and Churchill exist is the alliance against Nazi Germany. Without the common threat, Stalin’s interactions with the leaders of the United States, the United Kingdom, and other non-socialist countries likely would have been reserved to the odd economic agreement or international meeting. These theoretical meetings would also be less likely since the United Nations, the leading body on international meetings, was created as a result of World War 2 and the Yalta Conference.53 The Second World War has reshaped our understanding of global politics that makes it seem ideologically impossible that the two Western leaders would have so much contact with the leader of the Socialist world. From a post-Cold War world, the alliance appears contradictory to our understanding of the dynamics of Western-Soviet relations. But by considering Stalin as a leader that consciously fits into needed roles for the good of the Soviet Union, the alliance seems less peculiar. His letters to Roosevelt take on a new persona, one that is friendly, cordial, and cooperative. As the Conferences show, this is partly due to Roosevelt and Stalin often agreeing on many subjects. Roosevelt was not an obstacle to Stalin’s wartime leadership. Just the opposite, in fact, as US aid and support was a monumental help to the Soviet defense of Russia. Stalin needed Roosevelt, and made sure that the letters that were sent to him would be the most effective at ensuring the alliance for the continued material aid. This was a major operation by the Kremlin, and Stalin often enlisted Molotov and his subordinates to draft the letters, which were then edited and finalized by Stalin.54 53 Ibid., 25 54 Vladimir Pechatnov,“How Stalin and Molotov Wrote Messages to Churchill: Following Stalin’s Archives,” Russia in Global Affairs 7, no. 3 (July-September 2009), 162-163.
  • 20. Henry Smith-19 The letters and statements made to Churchill also had immense importance, but Stalin took a different approach with the British Prime Minister. Churchill often butted heads with Stalin on several issues related to the war. He was hesitant to open a second front and did not plan on being as harsh in German reconstruction. To Stalin, these were indirect threats to the Soviet Union’s stability and interests, and therefore exerted his gruffness and aggression against Churchill. With the assistance of Roosevelt, Stalin mostly got what he wanted. Stalin took on the role of political manipulator and bully in his correspondence with Churchill. Churchill’s take on Stalin is flagged with caveats. His memoirs mention several meetings he had with Stalin, but the politician (who, it must be added, was taken to drink) made several statements that contradict with the official Soviet and British records of the meetings.55 Regardless of Churchill’s personal recollections, Stalin’s approaches to writing and speaking with Roosevelt and Churchill display the Soviet leader’s ability to change his style to best fit the role he believed was necessary. This character trait is very important in understanding Stalin as both a leader and a person. Conclusion Stalin’s letters give us not only a glimpse into the mind of the Soviet leader, but also an example of how Stalin led. His leadership style fluctuated to best fit the situation he was in. And while these differences occur with each person Stalin wrote his letters to, there is a clearer dichotomy between the Soviet Stalin and the International Stalin. A student of international diplomacy will see a different side of Stalin than one who studies Soviet domestic political relations. The expectations Stalin had from Molotov and Kaganovich are very different than with Roosevelt and Churchill. He expected results, updates, progress, and loyalty from his Soviet comrades. With the leaders of the Western world, it is likely he wanted the same, but instead 55 Michael Ellman, “Churchill on Stalin: A Note,” Europe-Asia Studies 58, no. 6 (September 2006), 966-970
  • 21. Henry Smith-20 expected coordination and cooperation. This shows that Stalin could change his form of leadership, and this is important because it show Stalin as a dynamic leader who was self-aware of his rule. Stalin’s leadership of the Soviet government is so significant because of its centralized nature. Stalin had the final say on virtually every topic, and even if he wasn’t directly involved, the decision was made by some part of the central government. This had many adverse effects on the operation of the country during Stalin’s rule as inefficient administration plagued the country. Despite the shortcomings, this system was maintained because it allowed Stalin’s vision for the Soviet Union to advance unimpeded. Keeping this system running required extreme measures of loyalty and devotion, some forced and some freely given, by both the population and government workers.56 This explains Stalin’s attitude towards Molotov and Kaganovich. He required their loyalty and obedience in order to keep Stalinism moving forward. To ensure that the Soviet statesmen stayed in line, Stalin used the harsh and demanding words of his letters. Stalin’s centralist government required regular results and updates, and his letters to Molotov and Kaganovich were written in such a way to keep Stalinism propelled forward. Stalin had to contain the harsh rhetoric in his correspondence with Roosevelt and Churchill. While Marxist ideology may preach that the workers of America and Britain will one day rise up and seize the means of production in these places, Stalin could not press a theoretical communist revolution when there was the very real Nazi threat on its way to Moscow. He needed the support and alliance of the United States and the United Kingdom, and had to play nice in order to keep the USSR alive. He was friendliest with Roosevelt, partly because of genuine mutual admiration, but also because losing American material aid would be a death knell for the Russian war effort. The rational for agitating Churchill requires a separate 56 Kotkin, Magnetic Mountain,201
  • 22. Henry Smith-21 explanation. British involvement on the Western front was extremely important, but Churchill required continued pressure to force his involvement. The letters and meetings Stalin had with these international leaders show his motives for the cooperation, which were to remove direct enemies of the Soviet Union and to ensure future progress could be made. The end goal of the letters, and of the rest of Stalin’s wartime international policy, was to defend Stalinism. It was a fight for survival for both the people of the Soviet Union and for Stalinist socialism. Joseph Stalin’s letters to Molotov, Kaganovich, and Roosevelt, and his correspondences with Churchill display the many sides of the Soviet dictator. Although public perception has portrayed him as a one-dimensional monster, the letters show there is more to the story. Of course he was a monster, and the blood on his hands can and should never be washed away, but it is important to understand that the monstrous leader is just one of several roles Stalin took on. The framework of centralized Stalinism and the international demands of a world at war allowed for many roles to be taken, as be the leaders around him. Stalin had different expectations from Molotov, Kaganovich, Roosevelt, and Churchill, and had to be a different leader to each. The differences are fewer between the domestic and international figures, but there is a clear distinction between them all. These distinctions show themselves most clearly in the letters written to the figures, and the letters are a remarkable tool for the study of Stalin’s personal interactions with the various Soviet and international leaders. The letters show us the dynamic nature of Stalin’s rule. He had to change how he ruled depending on the person or group he was addressing, and this is very well showcased in the letters. This is important to understanding Stalin as both a person and a leader.
  • 23. Henry Smith-22 Bibliography  The Avalon Project. “The Tehran Conference, November 28-December 1, 1943.” 1997. http://www.yale.edu/lawweb/avalon/wwii/tehran.htm  Butler, Susan, ed. My Dear Mr. Stalin. New Haven: Yale University Press, 2005.  Davies, R. W., Khlevniuk, Oleg V., and Rees, E. A., ed. The Stalin-Kaganovich Correspondence 1931-36. New Haven: Yale University Press, 2003.  Ellman, Michael. “Churchill on Stalin: A Note.” Europe-Asia Studies 58, no. 6 (September 2006): 965-971.  Fitzpatrick, Sheila. The Russian Revolution. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2008.  Fitzpatrick, Sheila. “In Power.” In On Stalin’s Team: The Years of Living Dangerously in Soviet Politics, Sheila Fitzpatrick, 64-88. Princeton: Princeton University Press, 2015.  Getty, J. Arch. “Stalin as Prime Minister: power and the Politburo.” In Stalin: A New History, edited by Sarah Davies and James Harris, 83-107. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2005.  Khlevniuk, Oleg V. Stalin: New Biography of a Dictator. Translated by Nora Seligmann Favorov. New Haven: Yale University Press, 2015.  Kiromiya, Hiroaki. “Stalin’s Industrial Revolution: Politics and Workers, 1928-1932.” In The Stalin Revolution: Foundations of the Totalitarian Era, Robert Vincent Daniels, 67-80. Boston: Houghton Mifflin Co., 1997.  Kotkin, Stephen. Magnetic Mountain: Stalinism as a Civilization. Berkeley: University of California Press, 1995.
  • 24. Henry Smith-23  Lih, Lars T., Naumov, Oleg V. and Khlevniuk, Oleg V., ed. Stalin’s Letters to Molotov 1925- 1936. New Haven: Yale University Press, 1995.  Pechatnov, Vladimir. “How Stalin and Molotov Wrote Messages to Churchill: Following Stalin’s Archives.” Russian Global Affairs 7, no. 3 (July-September 2009): 162- 173.  Roberts, Geoffrey. “Stalin at the Tehran, Yalta, and Potsdam Conferences.” Journal of Cold War Studies 9, no. 4 (Fall 2007): 6-40.  Viola, Lynne. “The Best Sons of the Fatherland: Workers in the Vanguard of Soviet Collectivization.” In The Stalin Revolution: Foundations of the Totalitarian Era, Robert Vincent Daniels, 108-126. Boston: Houghton Mifflin Co., 1997.  Weiner, Amir. “The Making of a Dominant Myth: The Second World War and the Construction of Political Identities within the Soviet Polity.” The Russian Review 55 (October 1996): 638-660.