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During the past year two things had happened to strengthen his convictions. One was the murder of his only son, a Red Army commander whose cavalry regiment had been captured by the Whites in the battle for Orel in September 1919. No one knew for certain how Alexei died but Brusilov was convinced that he had been executed on Denikin’s orders when the Whites found out who he was. Denikin was thought to despise Brusilov for having overseen the ‘destruction of the army’ during 1917. The fact that Alexei had only joined the Reds in the hope of persuading the Cheka to spare his father’s life left Brusilov full of remorse. He blamed himself for Alexei’s death and was determined to avenge it.74 Blood, if not class, had made him Red.

So too had Russian nationalism. The Polish invasion of the Ukraine was the other vital factor behind Brusilov’s conversion to the Reds. Since its partition in the eighteenth century, Poland had lived in the shadows of the three great empires of Eastern Europe. But suddenly with the Versailles Treaty it found itself with a guarantee of independence and a great deal of new territory given to it by the victorious Western powers as a buffer between Germany and Russia. It often does not take much for a former nation-victim to behave like a nation-aggressor; and as soon as Poland gained its independence it began to strut around with imperial pretensions of its own. Marshal Pilsudski, the head of the Polish state and army, talked of restoring ‘historic Poland’ which had once stretched from the Baltic to the Black Sea. He promised to reclaim her eastern borderlands — the ‘Lithuania’ cherished by Mickiewicz and other Polish patriots of the nineteenth century — that had been lost to Russia in the partitions. These were ethnically intermingled regions — Polish and Jewish cities like Lvov, Polish former landowners and Ukrainian or Belorussian peasants — to which both Russia and Poland had a claim. As the Germans withdrew from the east, Polish troops marched in to the borderlands. Pilsudski led the capture of Wilno in April 1919. During the summer the Poles continued to advance into Belorussia and the western Ukraine, capturing Minsk and Lvov. Fighting halted for a while in the winter as the Poles and Russians haggled over borders. But these negotiations broke down in the spring of 1920, when the Poles launched a new offensive. Largely supplied by the Allies, and having signed a pact with Petliura, Pilsudski led a combined force of Poles and Ukrainian nationalists in a mad dash towards Kiev, then held very tenuously by the Bolsheviks. It was a desperate bid to transform the Ukraine into a Polish satellite state. The roots of this adventure went back to the previous winter, when Petliura, forced out of the Ukraine by the Reds, had settled in Warsaw and signed a pact with Pilsudski. By this agreement Petliura’s Ukrainian nationalist forces would help the Poles to re-invade the Ukraine and, once they were reinstalled in power in Kiev, would cede to Poland the western Ukraine. It was in effect a Polish Brest-Litovsk. The Poles advanced swiftly towards Kiev, whilst the Reds, who were also facing the Whites in the south, broke up in confusion. On 6 May the Poles took Kiev without much resistance. It was less an invasion than a parade. The residents of Kiev watched their new rulers march into the city with apparent indifference. This, after all, was the eleventh time that Kiev had been occupied since 1917 — and it was not to be the last.fn10

For Russian patriots like Brusilov the capture of Kiev by the Poles was nothing less than a national disaster. This was not just any other city but the birthplace of Russian civilization. It was inconceivable that the Ukraine — ‘Little Russia’ — should be anything but Orthodox. Brusilov’s ancestors in the eighteenth century had given up their lives defending the Ukraine against the Poles, and as a result the Brusilovs had been given large amounts of land there. Having spent the war and millions of Russian lives defending the western Ukraine from the Austrians, Brusilov was damned if he would now let it pass to the Poles without a fight. He thought it was ‘inexcusable that Wrangel should attack Russia at this moment’, even more so since the Whites had clearly planned their attack to coincide with that of the Poles. The Whites were placing their own class interests above those of the Russian Empire — something Brusilov had refused to do. On 1 May he wrote to N. I. Rattel, a Major-General in the imperial army and now Trotsky’s Chief of Staff, offering to help the Reds against the Poles. ‘It seems to me’, he wrote, ‘that the most important task is to engender a sense of popular patriotism.’ The war against Poland, in his view, could only be won ‘under the Russian national flag’, since only this could unite the whole Russian people:

Communism is completely unintelligible to the millions of barely literate peasants and it is doubtful that they will fight for it. If Christianity failed to unify the people in two thousand years, how can Communism hope to do so when most of the people had not even heard of it three years ago? Only the idea of Russia can do that.75

Trotsky at once saw the propaganda victory to be won by getting Brusilov to join the Reds. The next day he announced the general’s appointment as the Chairman of a Special Conference in command of the Western Front.fn11 Printed in Pravda on 7 May, the announcement was typical of the increasingly xenophobic tone of the Bolsheviks’ rhetoric. It called on all patriots to join the army and ‘defend the Fatherland’ from the ‘Polish invaders’, who were ‘trying to tear from us lands that have always belonged to the Russians’. Trotsky claimed that the Poles were driven by ‘hatred of Russia and the Russians’. The Red Army journal, Voennoe delo, published a xenophobic article (for which it was later suspended) contrasting the ‘innate Jesuitry of the Polacks’ with the ‘honourable and open spirit of the Great Russian race’. Radek characterized the whole of the civil war as a ‘national struggle of liberation against foreign invasion’. The Reds, he said, were ‘defending Mother Russia’ against the efforts of the Whites and the Allies to ‘make it a colony’ of the West. ‘Soviet Russia’, he concluded on a note of warning to the newly independent states, aimed to ‘reunite all the Russian lands and defend Russia from colonial exploitation.’76 It was back to the old imperialism.

The Bolsheviks were stunned by the success of their own patriotic propaganda. It brought home to them the huge potential of Russian nationalism as a means of popular mobilization. It was a potential Stalin later realized. Within a few weeks of Brusilov’s appointment, 14,000 officers had joined the Red Army to fight the Poles, thousands of civilians had volunteered for war-work, and well over 100,000 deserters had returned to the Red Army on the Western Front. There were mass patriotic demonstrations with huge effigies of Pilsudski and Curzon which the protesters proceeded to burn. ‘We never thought’, Zinoviev confessed, ‘that Russia had so many patriots.’77