In reading and weighing the contents of this Report on “Soviet
Intentions”, it should be borne in mind that the resources of this
Embassy are more restricted and the data available is less comprehensive
than will be the case in the Department. It is felt, however, that the
views expressed will have the merit of presenting the situation as seen
by qualified observers on the spot. The scene shifts, and is shifting
rapidly, so that we here in Moscow are perhaps more conscious of the
alterations than those who are further removed. On the other hand, the
Department with its specialists may enjoy a more favorable position in
weighting trends and interpreting events because of the advantages due
to perspective. In any case, it would be appreciated if comments and
suggestions might be forwarded at an early date, especially in areas or
on topics where the points of view may not coincide.
In forwarding this year’s analysis, I desire to draw particular attention
to the Section “Fundamental Considerations”, which presents an
especially penetrating exposition of what we consider to be basic
motivations of the Politburo.
Another important Section entitled “Military” should also be closely
studied, and if the Department of Defense has better information on
Soviet Military strength, its prompt transmission is requested.
In order to carry comment perhaps a step further than the limitations of
each Section permit, there follow some general remarks representing my
own views on certain broader topics. Some of these views were expressed
at the Rome Conference of Western Ambassadors, 22–24 March 1950,3 and may therefore already be available
in other documents. However, there may be some advantage in adding them
to these studies, as observations affecting actions and reactions in a
somewhat larger sphere.
United States policy aimed at defeating the Soviet offensive and,
ultimately, at winning the total war, should obviously be based on
estimates not only of Soviet intentions but also of Soviet and Free
World capabilities. The enclosed study of Soviet Intentions therefore
yields only certain ingredients for consideration in basic decisions
about United States policy. Subject to this qualification, the report
mentions certain factors which appear of especial importance in this
connection as will be evident from its study.
It is requested that copies of this report be transmitted to the
Departments of Defense, the Army, Navy and Air Force, and to the Central
Intelligence Agency.
[Enclosure]
Report on “Soviet Intentions” Prepared by the
Joint Intelligence Committee, American Embassy, U.S.S.R., April
25, 1950
Conclusions, Analytical Summary, Implications
for U.S. Policy
(a) conclusions as to soviet intentions
A study of the information available leads the Embassy’s Joint
Intelligence Committee to the following conclusions about the
intentions of the Soviet leaders:
- 1.
- These men are waging total war against the Free World, a
ruthless and unrelenting struggle within which “cold war”
and “shooting
[Page 1169]
war” are merely tactical phases. Under strict unity of
command, using the USSR as base and world communism as fifth
column, over decades they are marshalling every force to
achieve their end.
- 2.
- Holding that the chief communist gains are obtainable
during or in the aftermath of world wars, they are presently
engaged in making the most of the tidal wave of social
change generated by World War II, spurred by the minimum
objective of capturing half the world before the wave
subsides in order to be in position for World War III and
perhaps stimulated by the hope that if their gains are
sufficiently great this will set up a kind of chain reaction
leading to new gains and so on until the Free World is ripe
for a final push, without its having achieved real postwar
stabilization at all.
- 3.
- The first phase of exploiting the World War II tidal wave
consisted of relying primarily on guile to effect
revolutionary conquests under cover of good-will acquired
during the war, meanwhile rapidly rehabilitating the Soviet
heavy industry and military machine, at least partially
overcoming an important handicap in atomic technology, and,
as the good-will abroad was exhausted, gradually preparing
and organizing the masses for the second phase—an openly
revolutionary offensive—by developing a mammoth “peace
movement” against the “war mongers.”
- 4.
- The second phase, already begun, is marked by transition
of the peace movement from organization, to “action,” and by
belief in the approximate coincidence of two major forms of
crisis: a wave of rebellion against “imperialism” in
dependent areas set in motion by the Chinese Revolution, and
a Western economic depression said to be now in its second
year. To take advantage of these real or fancied tides of
change, the Kremlin has launched a revolutionary offensive
with the probable objective of encompassing certain key
areas before the Free World could otherwise begin to
recover, perhaps by 1953. Those areas are probably Southeast
Asia, the oil lands of the Near East, and Germany.
- 5.
- In order to accomplish these objectives in limited time
and under conditions which require increasingly frank
dependence on violence, the Kremlin is steering a course as
close as possible to full-scale war short of actually
precipitating it. During this period, therefore, the danger
of war nevertheless occurring through Soviet miscalculation
will doubtless grow considerably; yet the probability that
the Kremlin is still far from considering itself ready for
global warfare is supported by most of the available
evidence. Incidents and limited hostilities are to be
expected, but the Kremlin will probably try to avoid a
show-down until it attains overwhelming superiority of force
by other means. The probable minimum objective of the
present offensive is to capture the basic natural, human and
productive resources out of which such a superiority might
be built in a decade or more.
- 6.
- The most likely possible cause of Soviet miscalculation is
loss of touch with reality on the part of the Kremlin. The
abnormal isolation of its rulers has long been a subject of
comment. Some of their recent statements and actions suggest
that they may be moonstruck by recent conquests. Also
Stalin’s possible impatience to see victory in his lifetime
may conceivably get the better of his prudence, and
megalomania fostered by his systematic deification may in
the end corrupt the judgment of even this ruthless realist,
as well as his associates. History offers interesting
parallels for such a development,
[Page 1170]
but Stalin’s reputation for shrewd
common sense argues against it.
(b) analytical summary
The factors which have led to these conclusions are analysed in
separate sections below. They may be summarized:
Political
It seems clear that the Kremlin’s world outlook is considerably more
optimistic than a year ago. Flushed with the victory in China, which
is probably regarded as the greatest for world communism since the
1917 Revolution, and evidently deluded by their Marxist analysis of
the “western economic crisis”, the Soviet planners apparently
believe they are on the rising crest of another wave in the ebb and
flow characterizing the final stages of world imperialism. Their
“cold” war strategy is therefore likely, and in fact already shows
every sign, of becoming considerably more active and aggressive,
particularly if the economic crisis continues to develop in
accordance with expectations. At the same time, unless their
over-estimation of prospects should lead them to provoke a situation
on which prestige or other considerations might prevent a tactical
withdrawal by either side, it is not believed they will resort to an
actual shooting war.
Despite the existence of certain factors which might work for the
eventual emergence of Titoism in China, the Soviets evidently
expect; to consolidate their hold over this great area, at the same
time using it as a strategic base and pattern for the spread of
communism in other parts of Asia. Present prospects in the rich
lands of southeast Asia are undoubtedly bright, and Moscow’s
recognition of Ho Chi-minh4 is a sign of high hopes in this
direction.
At the same time, there are many indications that the Kremlin also
anticipates favorable opportunities in Europe, as the economic
crisis deepens and Marshall aid draws to an end. Germany is still
regarded as the key to Europe, and Soviet policy there has entered a
new, dynamic phase, based on the promotion of a “national liberation
movement,” in the form of the National Front, directed against the
western occupation powers. The German Democratic Republic
constitutes the strategic base for the conquest of the rest of
Germany, and the Soviets look forward hopefully to the liquidation
of the West’s remaining outpost behind the Iron Curtain—Berlin.
France and Italy are secondary arenas, in which “revolutionary
defeatism” and sabotage of the economy will be pushed through the
media of the Peace Movement and strikes. Control of the satellite
states is being steadily consolidated. Though it is still clear that
Moscow is out to destroy Tito,5 he
[Page 1171]
has been ideologically sealed off from the rest of eastern
Europe, and revenge can probably wait.
The Near East and South Asia continues to warrant Soviet optimism,
particularly in view of the deteriorating situation in Iran and
continuing differences between Israel and the Arab world, India and
Pakistan, and Pakistan; and Afganistan, as well as the difficult
basic economic and social problems facing both India and Pakistan.
Though the promotion of national liberation movements in Africa and
Latin America are still relatively long-range undertakings, and the
Soviets presumably do not expect the current “economic crisis” will
be decisive in the United States, the latter’s present position as
mainstay and leader of the world imperialist camp may be
considerably shaken.
In the field of international organisations, the Kremlin has showed a
completely cynical attitude towards the United Nations through its
walk-out over China,6 and
at the same time has developed the peace movement into its broadest
and biggest international “front” organisation to date. A new action
phase has begun for the latter and it is now clear that the struggle
for peace means the struggle for communism. Though it is believed
the UN walk-out represented a tactical maneuver and the Soviets
would still prefer to remain in the UN for reasons of prestige,
propaganda and obstructionism, it is clear that the longer this
situation continues, the greater the possibility it may result in a
permanent break-up of the United Nations in its present form.
Thus, on balance, the political factors point toward a further
intensification of the cold war, based on the Kremlin’s somewhat
“rosy” estimate of its global prospects during the next few
years.
Military
Net relative military capabilities of the Soviet-satellite and free
western worlds have changed but slightly during the last year. The
Chinese communist victory and Soviet progress in atomic weapons have
been counter-balanced by the ratification of the North Atlantic Pact
and its preliminary implementation through the MDAP. Considering these and other
factors, it is believed there has been a slight net gain for the
West.
The Soviets are still believed capable of overrunning continental
Europe and occupying strategic areas in the Near East, and
operations in the Far East in case of hostilities could now include
attacks on both the bridgehead of southern Korea and the rich lands
of southeast Asia. However, the Soviet-satellite forces would
everywhere have weak and overextended supply lines. Western defense
pacts and military strength, despite their present imperfect stage
of development, still
[Page 1172]
act as a major deterrent. Though a considerable advantage might
accrue to the side which first launched all-out atomic bomb attacks,
the long, drawn-out world conflict which would almost certainly
ensue should give the West an opportunity to mobilize and bring to
bear its tremendous and in the long run decisive industrial and
scientific potential.
The Soviets are applying many of the combat principles of actual
hostilities in their present “cold” war against the West, and still
consider eventual hostilities inevitable unless they can win the
former. However, they have been devoting much attention to improving
their defensive capabilities, are perhaps now even more optimistic
than before regarding their prospects of winning the cold war, and
would not be expected, on the basis of military considerations, to
deliberately resort to a shooting war until their offensive weapons
have been further developed.
Thus, from a military point of view, the Soviets are not prepared to
launch hostilities and carry on actual war against the West to a
successful conclusion in the immediate future.
Economic
While the Soviet economy has evidently become stronger over the past
year, and the present cold war can be supported at an increasing
tempo, a large-scale shooting war could only be supported in the
immediate future with great difficulty and for a limited period of
time. Short-term economic considerations thus favor the avoidance of
actual hostilities while the Soviets build up their economy and
await the further development of the western economic crisis, at the
same time doing everything they can to promote the latter. Unless
their rosiest hopes are fulfilled along these lines, however, it
seems unlikely that they expect to be economically prepared for a
long drawn-out, global conflict before one or more decades.
Agriculture
Similarly, though current agricultural production could probably
support a war economy for a short period of time, it is not believed
that Soviet agriculture would support a protracted international
conflict. Recent Soviet actions suggest a realization that the
agricultural situation has not improved markedly over the past year
and that further control over the peasantry is an immediate
political necessity. Similarly, the drive for the establishment of
the “kolkhoz”7 system, both in the western areas added to the
Soviet Union by World War II and the eastern European satellite
states, suggests the acceptance of temporary weaknesses in
anticipation of greater future strength,
[Page 1173]
thus reinforcing the probability that the
Kremlin’s agricultural policy is based on an expectation of no
actual hostilities in the near future.
Morale and Propaganda
Despite some evidence of continuing dissatisfaction in certain
outlying areas, the Kremlin probably considers its relative position
in the field of morale and propaganda better than a year ago, and
likely to improve. While it is doubtful that the status of morale
and the efficacy of propaganda at a given moment would decide the
question of war or peace for the Soviet Union, consideration of this
problem again leads to the conclusion, as it did a year ago, that
actual war for the Soviet planners would be preferable some years
hence rather than now.
(c) implications for united states policy
United States policy aimed at defeating the Soviet offensive and,
ultimately, at winning the “total war”, should obviously be based on
estimates not only of Soviet intentions but also of Soviet and Free
World capabilities. The present study of Soviet intentions therefore
yields only certain ingredients for consideration in basic decisions
about policy. Special attention is invited to the following:
- 1.
- The character and sweep of Soviet intentions, given the
magnitude of Soviet and communist resources, constitute an
enduring state of emergency comparable to that of wartime.
This calls for firm coordination of effort, delegation of
power, and unity of command, on both a national and a Free
World scale, embracing not merely military but political,
informational, economic and other fields of action. Within
this framework, an integrated western Europe, including both
Britain and Germany, is of particular importance.
- 2.
- The free peoples will rise to the occasion only if they
realize its vivid and lasting urgency, yet believe they have
a fighting chance to win. Against the dangers of complacency
and despair, the total war must be made as dramatically
intelligible to them as were World Wars I and II.
- 3.
- This can be done if the war is both fought and publicly
presented as an enterprise of grandiose scope and strategic
and tactical action. “Containment” is too defensive and
static concept for winning either the public or the war
itself. Repeated demands for sacrifice produce diminishing
returns in the long run if merely made seriatim; they can
rouse cumulative effort of each new demand is a logical part
of the total enterprise. Only the prospect of real victory
creates the mood in which sacrifices are welcomed and losses
call forth new determination.
- 4.
- The emotional tone and imaginative range of the wartime
spirit give the best hope of achieving the economic
integration of not only key areas, such as Western Europe,
but of the Free World as a whole, and the patterns of world
trade should be re-studied and re-directed to this end. As
the Kremlin’s position, in practice as well as in theory,
ultimately depends on its claim to out-produce the Free,
World, the central long-range clue to victory is to
demonstrate the opposite; both stabilizing the Free World
economy adequately and developing it
[Page 1174]
dynamically in a way which
leaves the lumbering, self-benighted Soviet economy further
and further behind. This process should be accelerated by
systematically perfecting the restrictions which prevent
Soviet access to advanced products and data of Western
technology.
- 5.
- To the extent that sound economic progress is made in the
short run, upsetting Soviet calculations based on belief in
a deepening depression, a major blow will have been struck
against the present revolutionary offensive. A primary
target must clearly be present unemployment in such critical
areas as Germany and Italy, to say nothing of the United
States. And as far as the promotion of a healthy, prosperous
American economy is concerned, a balance must be struck
between the demands of the internal economy, economic
assistance abroad and the requirements of unified defense.
However, recent indications that the western world’s
previous condition of serious underproduction is gradually
giving way to one of perhaps even excess capacity and
production in certain fields suggests that this problem
should be capable of solution.
- 6.
- The strategic problem, though centrally economic, is by no
means exclusively so. By economic health and growth all the
sinews of war will be nourished—political, psychological,
military, subversive—and all should be put to work in
accordance with plans devised to seek out and destroy the
foe at his weakest points. For example, Titoism or other
splits in the enemy’s ranks should be aided, and ample means
devised for penetrating the Iron Curtain with the truth and
other means of subversion.
- 7.
- If the analysis of Soviet intentions is correct in arguing
that the Kremlin wishes to avoid war for some time, then a
judicious use of military power can have a salutary effect
in stopping certain forms of Soviet aggression in the near
future, as it has in the past, with the effect of
diminishing rather than increasing the danger of global war.
Such action should be taken without hesitation or apology,
being justified by the fact that in a deeper sense a state
of war has already been in existence for years. This is
clearly recommended where areas are threatened by Soviet
capture before longer-range forces, such as economic
improvement, can take effect—today in Southeast Asia,
tomorrow perhaps in Persia. There is also much to be said
for a far more extensive deployment of American forces in
Europe, to counterbalance the increasingly prominent
influence of Soviet or puppet armed forces in fostering
revolution, especially until Germany can be permitted to
play a full role in European defense. Otherwise the peoples
of Western Europe will continue to be a prey to moods of
despair at the thought of being overrun in case of
war.
- 8.
- The noise of the “peace front,” reflecting a probably
vastly exaggerated belief of the Kremlin in the power of its
propaganda, should not embarass us in making vigorous use of
our military power-probably one of the chief purposes of the
“peace” campaign—nor tempt us to resort to spurious
imitations. The craving of the world for peace is genuine,
and if ways to enlist it sincerely on the side of the Free
World can be found, that would be excellent strategy. But it
will be unlikely to succeed if not sincere, and it cannot be
sincere if it utters mealy platitudes or veils the realities
of the total war which is actually going on. The one real
road to peace is to win the war.
- 9.
- Every occasion should be sought not only for checking
Soviet aggression but for forcing a retreat—for instance in
the coming battle
[Page 1175]
for Berlin. If the whole Soviet revolutionary offensive
is frustrated over the next two or three years, the
communists may well have expended so many assets, especially
human and spiritual ones, that they would be in a peculiarly
weakened condition. A properly designed counteroffensive
launched at that point would therefore have some chances of
rolling them back as the Russians rolled the Germans after
Stalingrad. If, for example, the Kremlin has already
seriously overextended itself in China and will try to go
much further, the opportunity may arise for inflicting
dramatic reverses there.
- 10.
- Peace is unlikely to be won, however, as long as the
present Soviet regime survives, since its very existence is
interwoven with and depends upon waging the total
war.
Fundamental Considerations
The actions of the Soviet Government and of the Moscow-directed
communist parties since the war have corresponded to the views
expressed in Stalin’s basic writings to such an extent that these
and similar Politburo
pronouncements may be taken to give a general outline of Soviet
intentions which is substantially true, if shrewdly interpreted. The
picture which results is one of extraordinary focus and tenacity of
will, operating within a framework of belief about the operation of
long-range forces in history which encourages persistence of effort
in the same direction for decades, despite odds which would probably
long since have moderated or defeated a gang of merely opportunist
power-seekers. The aim of that will is to drive from the face of the
earth a social system which it conceives to be moribund but
unwilling to depart of its own accord, and to establish instead an
all-embracing social order of which the USSR is the expanding
embryo. Thus its goal is equally world revolution and world empire.
Bolshevization of humanity is the form of Stalin’s will to
power.
The road by which this goal is sought is total war, a war which has
never ceased since it was declared by the young Lenin. It transcends
the legal distinction between war and peace, but is properly called
war because it tries to destroy its opponent without any scruple
whatever as to means. It is total because it seeks to mobilize every
physical and spiritual energy in its service.
The grand strategy which Stalin has described and evidently practiced
follows the strict logic of war. The Soviet Union is the main base
which, once won, is to be defended at all costs and expanded
whenever the general course of battle makes it appropriate.
Communist and other movements elsewhere are exploited for what they
are thought to be worth under given world conditions, but always in
subordination to the requirements of the base and under the strict
discipline necessary for maintaining unity of command. No challenge
to that unity is tolerated. Insubordination is dealt with by the
[Page 1176]
most severe methods
available, even if this entails temporary losses of men or
territory.
To ask in greater detail for an appraisal of Soviet intentions at any
given time is accordingly to inquire about current plans of
campaign. Since the Kremlin gives every sign of operating seriously
within the framework of a Leninist-Stalinist philosophy of history,
it may be inferred that current plans are shaped to some extent by
that philosophy, all the more because it emphasizes factors which
would in any case recommend themselves as useful in the struggle for
power: the theory was developed by professional revolutionaries;
hence it is not surprising if revolutionary thought matches
revolutionary will. The features of this conception of history most
relevant to the present discussion are:
- 1.
- The period which began during World War I is the General
Crisis of Capitalism. It is an age of wars and revolutions,
beginning with the first breach in the old social system and
the initiation of the one destined to replace it, marked by
a tragic struggle between the two as country after country
falls away from the old camp and joins the new until victory
is complete. This implies that a principal aim of strategy
will be to facilitate this process, picking off one or more
countries at a time, whenever conditions are ripe.
- 2.
- The underlying forces at work during this period are: (a) the basic conflicts within the old
system which grow worse as it becomes more and more
inadequate to the demands of this stage of history, and (b) the increasing strength—moral,
economic and military—of the new system as it demonstrates
its fitness to solve the problems of the age, notably those
of production and employment. This suggests a strategy
geared to the rhythm of the underlying forces, designed to
magnify their effect and capitalize on it at favorable
times.
- 3.
- The tensions generated by the underlying forces
alternately mount and subside, and strategy is intended to
develop aggressively as the tide rises, aiming at maximum
gains when a crisis is at its crest; when the tide ebbs, the
recommended strategy consists in minimizing losses, avoiding
decisive encounters, and re-grouping and re-training forces
in preparation for the next rise. There are several
different, though somewhat inter-dependent, forms of crisis
which mark the General Crisis of Capitalism. Economic crises
of industrial and agricultural overproduction occur
periodically and tend to issue in fascism, war and
revolution. The conflicts between imperialist countries and
the areas which they exploit come to a head in colonial wars
and rebellions. The rivalries between leading imperialist
powers lead to world wars, as does the bitter antagonism
between the old social system which (according to Kremlin
thinking) is on the way down and the new one which is
determined to hasten its demise. Of these forms of crisis,
world wars are those which generate by far the biggest tides
of change, aggravating and bringing to a focus all the
destructive conflicts inherent in the old system.
Accordingly it has long been not only a clear implication of
Stalin’s theory but his explicit prediction that the next
additions to the “socialist camp” would be made during or in
the aftermath of World War II, and the prediction has been
fulfilled so
[Page 1177]
successfully that Politburo spokesmen are beginning to boast that
World War III would bring them world victory.
Thus the context within which the Kremlin’s present plans of campaign
have presumably been thought out is that of making the most of the
World War II tidal wave. This has been complicated by the long
period of pseudo-friendship with the democracies which was dictated
by the threat emanating from Germany and Japan and began coming to
an end, quite logically, when the threat did. At the present time
Soviet policy seems to have completed the 90-degree turn of
direction which this tactic involved; the former Ally Number One is
now Enemy Number One, and the world is frankly polarized between
“socialist” and “capitalist” camps. Henceforth the Kremlin is free
to drive as directly at its basic goal as it thinks the balance of
forces will allow. Thus the crucial problem in estimating Soviet
intentions at the present time is to gauge its estimate of those
forces. That is the central theme of later sections of this report.
The present section will develop only certain broad lines of
approach.
Stalin in analyzing the factors which made possible the success of
the October Revolution has attributed considerable efficacy to the
craving of the masses for peace after several years of World War I.
The Soviet “peace” campaign after World War II, which began early in
1946 if not before, looks like an effort to play on similar popular
moods today, creating and prolonging semi-artificially what occurred
spontaneously in Russia in 1917. Since the “shooting” war is over,
the threat of a new one has to be conjured up instead. After a
lengthy propaganda preparation, the campaign has passed through its
overt organizational phase and now claims to be entering the phase
of “action,” using language which clearly implies revolutionary
intent. The length of the preceding phases suggests that the action
phase in turn may be expected to run through several years. The
point at which it is brought to its climax need not be the same for
all countries; in each case it will presumably be synchronized with
other moves in the light of the Kremlin’s estimate of the total
situation. The implication of revolutionary intent does not
necessarily mean direct revolutionary action by the “Peace Front”;
in many or possibly even in all cases the role assigned to it may be
one of blocking or delaying aid to a revolutionary area from the
“capitalist” camp. For example: if, as will be argued below, Stalin
wishes to avoid global hostilities for some time, a real show of
adequate force in the West would bring him to a halt or even cause
him to retreat temporarily. In this respect the “peace movement” may
be intended to prevent just such measures on our part.
In addition to the fund of war-weariness which the peace front tries
to exploit, two other factors stand out as of probably much greater
importance in the Kremlin’s charting of the World War II tidal wave:
[Page 1178]
wars of “liberation”
in dependent areas, and economic crisis in leading industrial
countries. For present purposes it is unnecessary to discuss the
extent to which, in Soviet theory, such events are direct
consequences of World War II or represent independent chains of
causation. It is evident in any case that amid the general
dislocation and unrest of the war’s aftermath they have occupied a
central place in the Kremlin’s calculations. At the present time the
outstanding fact is that just as a major victory was being
consummated in China and public attention was being directed toward
further fields for “liberation,” notably Southeast Asia, word went
out from the Kremlin that the long-hoped-for economic crisis had
already begun in the West late in 1948. Though the public statements
about the “crisis” may be assumed to exaggerate for propaganda
effect, both the nature and source of the statements and the tempo
of accompanying Soviet actions make it probable that the development
of a depression in the West, considered already fairly serious and
expected to reach drastic proportions perhaps two or three years
hence, has become a sober Kremlin belief which plays a prominent
role in shaping Soviet intentions. Thus in the Kremlin’s view the
position of the “capitalist camp” is impaired by the approximate
coincidence of two major forms of crisis: wars of “liberation” in
the East and depression in the West. This means that the Kremlin
probably plans to accelerate its efforts to exploit the World War II
tidal wave between now and about 1953. It is evidently no accident
that the “action phase” of the “peace campaign” has been initiated
at the same time, and it is also relevant to note that Soviet
internal postwar rehabilitation is now claimed to be completed.
“Accelerated effort” does not mean that caution will be thrown to the
winds, but it does mean rapid expenditure of accumulated assets,
throwing into action forces which have been recruited and trained
for the purpose, cashing in on alliances, taking greater than
ordinary risks for the sake of anticipated gains. Following the
analogy of a military campaign, which seems peculiarly appropriate
for Soviet activities, the big offensive should not be thought of as
an indiscriminate splurge of energy in all directions, but as
conducted under carefully thought-out operational plans which are
flexibly applied in day-to-day tactics and revised as the campaign
develops and unexpected successes or reverses are encountered or new
opportunities perceived. Such plans can be expected to make use of
the standard rules of the art of warfare—mass, surprise, maneuver,
etc.—and an understanding of these rules should prove useful in
anticipating Soviet moves.
In trying to estimate the main outlines of the present Soviet plan of
campaign, the decisive questions are: How far does the Kremlin
intend to go, in various directions? How fast? At what risks? And
underlying these questions lies the perennial problem for all
estimates
[Page 1179]
of Soviet
intentions; How far does the Kremlin’s view of facts and trends, of
its capabilities and of ours, differ from our own?
In view of the Kremlin’s ultimate objective, it might seem that in
general it intends to go just as far as it can, in every direction,
during the present offensive, while Stalin is still alive. However,
overextension is a serious danger which prudent commanders seek to
avoid. Eighteen months ago it was still the prevailing opinion,
according to an estimate received from the State Department, that
the Communists would stop half-way in China and not press on to win
the whole country. Mr. Kennan’s article in the Readers Digest for March, 1950,8 remarks that Soviet imperialism “bit
off more than it could comfortably chew” in Eastern Europe. Other
eminent students of Soviet affairs have suggested that analogous
considerations probably lead the Kremlin to prefer winning a
nationalist Germany as a dependent ally to a fully communized
Germany, which might threaten Moscow’s monopoly of power.
Nevertheless there are considerations which point to a more
expansive estimate of the Kremlin’s belief in its own digestive
powers: the daemonic drive which has characterized the Bolshevik
movement from its beginnings; the fact that they did take all of
China and evidently have no intention of stopping there; the
enormous self-confidence of an organization which won power against
great odds, held and developed it for decades, came victorious out
of World War II, and since then has added half a billion population
to its empire.
Indeed, given the Kremlin’s basic aims and philosophy, there are
reasons which would seem to make it imperative for it to make
further major additions to its empire during the present offensive.
Holding that violence is required to achieve the new social order,
and that this inevitably leads to destructive clashes between the
old order and the new, it cannot bide its time and trust that the
old will disintegrate merely by reason of its own inner conflicts.
Until the old is finally destroyed, there is always a danger that it
will crush the budding new order, and the whole painful process of
revolution have to begin over again. Hence the problem is to avoid a
head-on conflict but continue gaining at the expense of the foe
until decisive superiority of force is attained. During the
inter-war period, the Kremlin could bank on division between the
other great powers to make this possible. Since World War II there
remains only one other comparable power, and Politburo statements described
the world as evolving into precisely that polarization around two
centers which Stalin long ago predicted as the stage which would
lead to a final struggle for the world. Thus the prewar strategy is
no longer possible. It is true that much is still made of
“Anglo-American contradictions,” but the Kremlin, however badly it
misunderstands US–UK relations
[Page 1180]
can hardly count on Britain becoming strong
enough to disrupt the basic polarity of the two super-powers. The
belief that major communist gains are won chiefly in connection with
world wars implies that the tidal wave of World War II may offer the
last chance of really substantial additions to the Orbit before
World War III. Hence in order eventually not to meet World War III
under a disadvantage that might prove fatal, the Kremlin very likely
feels that it must make drastic efforts to gain something close to
half of the world’s basic resources—natural, human and
productive—during the present offensive. If it won most of the vital
parts of Southeast Asia, a good share of Near-Eastern oil, plus all
of Germany, this goal would be substantially attained. These are in
fact the areas which recent Politburo statements imply greatest interest in.
Despite the danger of over-extension, it seems on balance that they
probably are the objectives of the Kremlin’s new offensive.
How fast the Kremlin actually moves toward these objectives will of
course depend on developments during the campaign. As far as present
intentions are concerned, the fact that the crisis in the East has
already reached a high point with the revolution in China, whereas
the alleged economic crisis in the West is described in terms which
suggest that it is only gradually getting under way, points to the
probability that the Kremlin expects to move most rapidly in
Southeast Asia during the coming year, saving its main thrusts in
Europe and the Near East for later—though of course engaging in
preparatory, supporting or diversionary actions there. However, the
Kremlin undoubtedly believes that its recent gains in the East have
weakened Western countries themselves as well as their “colonial”
positions, thereby making immediately possible more extensive gains
in the West than the economic “crisis,” if acting alone, would
indicate. Hence it is conceivable that it has advanced its timetable
somewhat in the West, and may be planning quite dramatic moves there
too during 1950. The desire to press forward before MDAP has significantly enlarged West
European military stamina would also favor acceleration in that
area.
The most decisive question concerns the risks which the Kremlin
intends to take, and these in turn depend in large measure on how it
estimates the capabilities of each side and the elasticity of our
intentions. Considerations advanced in the preceding pages support
the view that the Kremlin, because of the urgency of its objectives
and the expected limitations on time at its disposal, is prepared to
take very serious risks, but not to the extent of starting a war to
the finish. The latter point is also reinforced by the apparently
controlling objective of Soviet domestic policy, which is projecting
long-range industrial and agricultural programs in order to achieve
full “communism” in one or more decades. The defensive character of
Soviet military installations recently observed in Central and
Eastern Europe further
[Page 1181]
suggests a desire to avoid war at present, and may correspond to a
Soviet belief that the only way in which the West could really stop
Soviet cold war aggressive efforts would be by a shooting war.
Indeed it is self-evident that only reckless romanticists, which the
Bolsheviks are not, deliberately start wars unless victory seems
assured at moderate cost. Assuming, as seems most probable, that the
Kremlin does not expect to obtain such a favorable superiority of
forces in the next few years, the question narrows to one of
estimating how close to war the Kremlin will dare to go, while yet
intending to avoid it? It is at this point that the most serious
danger of war appears to lie during the next few years. It is
entirely possible that the USSR, exalted by its present mood of
confidence and impelled by the fancied necessity of grabbing while
it thinks it can, may underestimate our capabilities and
consequently our intentions, hence precipitate a situation in which
we feel compelled to fight. The “peace campaign” in one of its
aspects looks very like an effort to insure against the chances of
our going to war over the losses which the Kremlin intends to
inflict on us during the present revolutionary offensive.
This does not at all mean that the Kremlin will seek to avoid
“incidents”. It is already producing these at a very serious rate
which is likely to intensify. It might conceivably engage, directly
or through satellites, even in rather protracted hostilities as it
did with Japan in 1938, provided it calculates that they can be
localized. Of course it realizes that our position today is not
analogous to Japan’s in that we face no second threat which would
compel us to keep such hostilities local. Nevertheless we have amply
advertized our unwillingness to begin a war; the “peace campaign” is
intended to brand us in advance as aggressors if we should; and it
is even plausible to suggest that one purpose of the current
propaganda against using atomic bombs is to make public opinion
deter us from using the one weapon which would almost automatically
turn limited hostilities into global war.
Even if the Kremlin thoroughly intends, however, to keep the
situation under control, it does not follow that it will succeed. In
addition to the risk, above mentioned, of underestimating us, there
is also a risk of overestimation: in daring to steer very close to
war, the Kremlin is creating a state of tension in which a false
belief that we were about to attack might actually prompt it to
attack first. This is a subtler and probably a remoter risk than the
other, but it should not be discounted altogether. The desirability
of securing initial advantage in atomic war, the relatively
favorable position of the Soviet Army for overrunning Europe and the
Near East, and the neurotic hypersensitivity of Soviet suspicions,
fostered by isolation from normal contacts and by corresponding
dependence on the apparently sometimes fantastic mental world of the
MGB, all lend some
[Page 1182]
substance to this
possibility. Nor is it wise to consider Stalinist dogma a likely
preventive. Though the Bolsheviks have in general developed their
strategy and tactics under the pretext of righteous reaction against
“capitalist” oppression and aggression, there is nothing in Stalin’s
teachings which excludes initiating a war as a matter of principle.
On the contrary, the basic doctrine is the aggressive use of
violence to destroy our social order. The Bolsheviks have never
shown any reluctance to resort to violence except where their
position was too weak to make it prudent. Stalin’s writings make it
very obvious that his strategy of avoiding war and letting the
“capitalists” attack first—preferably each other—was adapted to the
phase of relative weakness, and that as the Soviet base of world
revolution grew in power it would rely on its own force to attain
its ends with increasing frankness. The repeated failure of the
Comintern9 to achieve
much in promoting revolution abroad must have encouraged this
trend.
So far the discussion has been based on what seems the most probable
Soviet outlook. Since, however, what is probable can always turn out
to be false, it may be worth while to indicate some alternative
possibilities in order to set perspectives in better balance. It is
possible, though it seems distinctly less probable, that the
evidence from which the Kremlin’s beliefs and intentions have been
inferred is consistently over-theorized and over-colored, that the
Politburo are really much
more sensible than their propaganda line seems to indicate. In that
case, their actions will prove in the end to be less risky and less
aggressive than above predicted, and the whole structure of evidence
as it appears today will then seem to have been partly bluff,
designed to protect a position which was in fact believed to be
somewhat weaker and to secure goals which were in fact more modest
than those above described. On the other hand it is also possible
that the above reading of the evidence lags behind reality, that the
more extreme among recent Soviet statements approximate literal
sincerity, and that the Kremlin’s head has been so turned by its
recent successes, and so cut off from reality by its own paranoid
security measures and propaganda, that it really does expect to be
in position to give the Free World the coup de
grâce within the next few years. Though, as argued above,
this still seems improbable, it is a possibility which, considering
the tone of current Soviet speech and action, definitely should not
be excluded. It would of course become more serious if, despite our
efforts, the Kremlin moved conspicuously closer to a position which
might seem to put it within striking distance of world victory—for
example by winning control of Persia and the Ruhr, though the more
probable course of action would still seem to be avoiding global
hostilities until Soviet power were overwhelmingly
[Page 1183]
predominant: the Kremlin might well
consider that really big gains, if made during the next few years,
would so weaken and disorganize the remainder of the “capitalist”
camp as to delay its postwar stabilization and thus prolong the
World War II tidal wave indefinitely, thereby making possible
continued acquisition of country after country until an easy final
shove would suffice to do the rest, perhaps 5 or 10 years hence. A
third alternative possibility might be that the rulers of the USSR
are in a sense dual personalities, embodying to a considerable
degree the trait, often noted among Russians, of maintaining quite
contradictory beliefs and attitudes at the same time, and of
shifting from one to another without serious difficulty in a way
which baffles prediction. If so, this merely adds one more dimension
of uncertainty to the picture.
To resume the main thread of the discussion, however, it should be
re-stated that the balance of probability still seems to support the
view that the Kremlin does not intend full scale war in the next few
years. In this connection, it is relevant to recall one of Stalin’s
remarks during the early years of World War II: he said that victory
must go in the end to the side which produced the greater number of
motors (for tanks, trucks and planes), and stated that Allied motor
production was three times that of the Axis. This is in keeping with
the tone of sober calculation which has characterized much of
Stalin’s public discussion of the world situation throughout the
years, and also fits the accounts of acquaintances who recall the
realist’s scorn with which he often rejected the proposals of more
impractical colleagues.
If what seems probable is really true, then the danger of war, though
definitely present because of possible miscalculation, is not the
main threat which confronts the Free World during the current Soviet
offensive. For this reason it seems important that neither
governments nor public opinion should become so overly obsessed with
the dramatic but secondary danger of “shooting” war, that they
neglect to form that unity of command and scale of effort required
to meet the primary danger, which arises from the never-ending
“total” war against our social order. The present discussion of
Soviet intentions is only one of several necessary approaches to a
comprehensive understanding of the danger that confronts us in this
total war. As far as this study goes, the tentative conclusion is:
so much of Eurasia may be lost by means short of full-scale war,
that the existence of freedom in the world will be jeopardized some
20 years hence.
[Here follow the remaining 43 pages of the report. The fundamental
considerations are treated in separate sections under these main
headings: Political (Far East, Europe, Near East and South Asia,
Western Hemisphere, UN and Other International Organizations);
Military; Economic; Agriculture; and Morale and Propaganda.]