Stalin's Methods to Control the Soviet Union (Cambridge (CIE) IGCSE History)

Revision Note

Zoe Wade

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Zoe Wade

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History

Did Stalin Rule by Fear or Love? - Summary

Stalin ruled the USSR primarily through fear rather than love. He created a cult of personality and used propaganda to portray himself as a popular leader. However, his regime relied upon repression, intimidation and violence.

Stalin also employed fear tactics to limit dissent. The state arrested people with no evidence of a crime, found them guilty in show trials and placed them into forced labour camps or executed them. These methods instilled a climate of fear. It ensured compliance with the regime's policies.

Stalin's propaganda machine portrayed him as a beloved fatherly figure and saviour of the Soviet people. The reality was that he ruled through fear and the elimination of perceived enemies.

The NKVD

  • Communist Russia had a secret police

    • From 1917 to 1922, it was called the Cheka

    • From 1922 to 1934, it was called the OGPU

  • The NKVD was formed in 1934

    • It combined all forms of the military and general police force into one organisation

    • Its full name was the People's Commissariat for Internal Affairs

What was the Role of the NKVD?

  • The government tasked the NKVD with eliminating political enemies

    • It carried out the Great Purges for Stalin

    • It did not need evidence or witnesses to make an arrest

    • From 1935, they could prosecute children as young as 12 as adults

What Tactics did the NKVD use?

  • If workers broke workplace rules, they could face:

    • Fines

    • Being fired from their job

  • The NKVD used even harsher tactics to maintain control

An illustration showing the methods that the NKVD used against 'enemies of the state'
An illustration showing the methods that the NKVD used against 'enemies of the state'

The GULAG System

  • The GULAG system was created in 1919

    • GULAG is an acronym that translates to the Chief Administration of Corrective Labour Camps

    • It was an organisation of forced labour camps, which were called lagery in Russian

    • The state placed many of the lagery in Siberia

    • The secret police administrated the system

  • The GULAG aimed to:

    • Severely punish criminals

    • Deter other citizens from committing crimes

    • Provide the state with free labour

Exam Tip

It is popular to call the labour camps 'gulags'. You may see this wording in an exam question. As Cambridge uses the term 'gulags', you may use this in your exam answer. However, lagery (or lager for a singular camp) is the technically accurate term.

Prisoners in the GULAG System

  • A range of people were prisoners in the GULAG system, including:

    • Political opponents

    • Kulaks and NEPmen

    • Workers accused of sabotaging

    • Members of the military

    • Artists who broke censorship

How did the GULAG System Grow?

A graph showing the number of prisoners in the GULAG system
A graph showing the number of prisoners in the GULAG system

What were Conditions Like in the GULAG System?

  • The lagery had terrible living conditions

    • Prisoners lived in overcrowded wooden lodges

    • There was little sanitation

      • Diseases spread in these conditions

    • There was no heating

      • Many people died from the cold conditions of Siberia

  • The prisoners completed forced physical labour

    • Prisoners had to meet production targets

      • These were unattainable

      • Many prisoners died of overworking

  • The camp rationed food for prisoners

    • Prisoners received more rations if they completed more work

    • If a prisoner did not meet their targets, the prisoner received less rations

      • Prisoners died of starvation

Worked Example

What were the ‘gulags’?

4 marks

Answer:

They were labour camps (1). They were where criminals and political opponents were sent (1). The conditions were very harsh and many prisoners died (1). Many of them were in Siberia (1).

Exam Tip

You should aim to complete the question in four minutes, one minute per point. This will give you one minute to read through your answer.

Show Trials

  • A show trial was a staged, public trial with a predetermined outcome

    • In the Great Purge, Stalin placed high-profile Bolsheviks in show trials

    • The NKVD tortured suspects so they would confess, even if they did not commit the crime

    • The state ensured the judge knew the sentence before the trial

The Trial of 16

Date

Suspected crime

Who were accused?

Verdict and outcome

1936

  • Disrupting Five-Year Plans

  • The murder of Kirov

16 people, including Zinoviev and Kamenev

  • Guilty

  • All 16 people were executed

The Trial of 17

Date

Suspected crime

Who were accused?

Verdict and outcome

1937

  • Disrupting Five-Year Plans

  • The murder of Kirov

  • Plotting to overthrow the government

Party officials

  • Guilty

  • 13 people were executed

  • Four people were sent into the GULAG system

The Trial of 21

Date

Suspected crime

Who were accused?

Verdict and outcome

1938

  • Disrupting Five-Year Plans

  • The murder of Kirov

  • Plotting to overthrow the government

21 people, including Bukharin and Yagoda, the head of the NKVD

  • Guilty

  • All 21 people were executed

  • Bukharin spoke out about the corruption of the trial

Propaganda and the Cult of Stalin

  • The Bolsheviks knew the importance of propaganda

    • The party used propaganda posters in the tsarist regime to win support

  • The Soviet government heavily censored information

    • The communist newspaper Pravda was the only legal newspaper in the USSR

    • Western radio stations were banned

    • The government controlled public events to ensure that the USSR looked good

  • Stalin relied on propaganda to:

    • Create portraits, photographs and statues across the USSR of Stalin as:

      • A god-like figure

      • 'Uncle Joe' and the father of the USSR

    • Spread Stalin's image and ideas across the USSR

      • Parades celebrating the October Revolution and May Day occurred annually

      • Participants held images of Stalin or performed in front of him in the Red Square, Moscow

    • Re-write history

      • The government edited photographs to remove Bolshevik Party members considered 'enemies of the state' under Stalin's regime

      • History textbooks wrote Lenin and Stalin, rather than Trotsky, as the key figures in the October Revolution

A typical propaganda poster from Stalin's regime
A typical propaganda poster from Stalin's regime, depicting Stalin as a father figure
An example of a doctored photograph during Stalin's regime
An example of a doctored photograph during Stalin's regime. Yezhov was removed after his execution in 1940

Worked Example

Why was Stalin’s ‘cult of personality’ important?

6 marks

Partial answer:

Stalin's cult of personality was important because it made him a god-like figure to his people (1). Portraits, photographs and statues of Stalin were placed across the USSR and depicted him as the father of the USSR (1). This was important because it made people worship Stalin. This made it less likely for people to rebel against his regime (1).

Exam Tip

In Paper One, ‘explain why’ questions are worth either six or ten marks. For full marks in this question, an examiner is looking for two fully explained reasons as to why Stalin's 'cult of personality' was important. Use the PEE structure in your answer:

  • P - Make a point about the question

  • E - Use evidence that supports the point that you have made

  • E - Explain why this evidence made Stalin's 'cult of personality' important. Avoid repeating the point again. Explain how this factor impacted the day-to-day life and behaviour of the Soviet people.

Culture in Stalin's Regime

  • Stalin believed that controlling Soviet culture was important

    • He wanted all artists, writers and musicians to strengthen, not challenge, the state

    • Culture could be far-reaching and powerful in changing the opinions of Soviet citizens

A concept map showing Stalin's control of Soviet culture and the arts
A concept map showing Stalin's control of Soviet culture and the arts

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Zoe Wade

Author: Zoe Wade

Zoe has worked in education for 10 years as a teaching assistant and a teacher. This has given her an in-depth perspective on how to support all learners to achieve to the best of their ability. She has been the Lead of Key Stage 4 History, showing her expertise in the Edexcel GCSE syllabus and how best to revise. Ever since she was a child, Zoe has been passionate about history. She believes now, more than ever, the study of history is vital to explaining the ever-changing world around us. Zoe’s focus is to create accessible content that breaks down key historical concepts and themes to achieve GCSE success.