When Leon Trotsky was murdered by NKVDNKVD Full Description The People’s Commissariat for Internal Affairs (NKVD) was the Soviet secret police from 1934 to 1946, responsible for political repression, the administration of the Gulag, and the terror purges of 1936–1938. Under Nikolai Yezhov during the Great Terror, the NKVD executed approximately 750,000 people and arrested over 1.5 million. It also conducted mass deportations of ethnic minorities and operated a network of foreign intelligence and assassination operations. Critical Perspective The NKVD institutionalised the principle that the state’s survival required pre-emptive destruction of potential enemies. Interrogation protocols routinely used torture to extract confessions — not to discover truth but to perform it. The show trials of the Old Bolsheviks, in which loyal communists confessed to absurd crimes, demonstrated that no loyalty to the party could protect an individual once designated an enemy. agent Ramon Mercader in 1940, his ideas lived on. The Trotskyist Fourth International and the American Socialist Workers Party in particular claimed (though this was disputed by his widow Natalia) to be the inheritors of his beliefs. Trotsky’s critique of the USSR and its capitalist enemies stated that the Russian Revolution had effectively been killed in its infancy, and that instead a bureacratic state had replaced a revolutionary society. Some of Trotsky’s former disciples eventually distanced themselves from his beliefs, embracing American conservatism and free market capitalism, most famously the recanting revolutionary James Burnham.
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