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* the Case of the Anti-Soviet "Bloc of Rights and Trotskyites" (Bukharin-Rykov Trial, or "Trial of the Twenty-One;" 1938)
* the Case of the Anti-Soviet "Bloc of Rights and Trotskyites" (Bukharin-Rykov Trial, or "Trial of the Twenty-One;" 1938)


This last trial in turn led to the "[[Soviet purges of 1937–1938|Ezhovshchina]]" during which some hundreds of thousands of Soviet citizens, most certainly innocent, were arrested and executed, while many others imprisoned.
This last trial in turn led to the "[[Soviet purges of 1937–1938|Ezhovshchina]]" during which some hundreds of thousands of Soviet citizens, most certainly innocent, were arrested and executed, while many others imprisoned.<ref>{{Cite book|Book=The Murder Of Sergei Kirov|Page=1-2|Year=2013|Author=Grover Furr}}</ref>


Bourgeois propagandists during this period would assert that Stalin had Kirov killed<ref>Robert Conquest, Stalin and the Kirov Murder, 1 Jan. 1989.  
Bourgeois propagandists during this period would assert that Stalin had Kirov killed<ref>Robert Conquest, Stalin and the Kirov Murder, 1 Jan. 1989.  
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After the archives were opened a Trotskyist historian, Pierre Broue, began to study its contents. Pierre Broue and his team began to discover that Trotsky had deliberately lied in his published works.  
After the archives were opened a Trotskyist historian, Pierre Broue, began to study its contents. Pierre Broue and his team began to discover that Trotsky had deliberately lied in his published works.  


First they found evidence that the Bloc of Oppositionists and others had really existed. The activities of this Bloc were the major allegation in all three of the Moscow Trials. Trotsky and his son Sedov always denied that any such bloc had existed and claimed it was an invention  Stalin. <blockquote>Sedov’s letter in invisible ink reveals that the following groups existed: the Trotskyist Group in the USSR (“Our Group”), the Zinovievists, the group of I.N. Smirnov, the Sten–Lominadze Group, the “Safar(ov)–Tarkhan(ov) Group, the “right-wingers” and the “liberals”. Of course, not all of these participated in the “bloc”, but all of them knew of its existence and, according to Sedov, had contacts with it. (Pierre Broue, [https://www.marxists.org/archive/broue/1980/01/bloc.html The “Bloc” of the Oppositions against Stalin], 1980)<ref name=":1">Pierre Broue, [https://www.marxists.org/archive/broue/1980/01/bloc.html The “Bloc” of the Oppositions against Stalin], 1980</ref> </blockquote>
First they found evidence that the Bloc of Oppositionists and others had really existed. The activities of this Bloc were the major allegation in all three of the Moscow Trials. Trotsky and his son Sedov always denied that any such bloc had existed and claimed it was an invention  Stalin. <blockquote>Sedov’s letter in invisible ink reveals that the following groups existed: the Trotskyist Group in the USSR (“Our Group”), the Zinovievists, the group of I.N. Smirnov, the Sten–Lominadze Group, the “Safar(ov)–Tarkhan(ov) Group, the “right-wingers” and the “liberals”. Of course, not all of these participated in the “bloc”, but all of them knew of its existence and, according to Sedov, had contacts with it. (Pierre Broue, [https://www.marxists.org/archive/broue/1980/01/bloc.html The “Bloc” of the Oppositions against Stalin], 1980)<ref>{{Cite web|Website=https://www.marxists.org/archive/broue/1980/01/bloc.html|Author=Pierre Broue|Title=The “Bloc” of the Oppositions against Stalin
in the USSR in 1932}}</ref> </blockquote>


==== '''Trotsky and the slogan "Get Rid of Stalin"''' ====
==== '''Trotsky and the slogan "Get Rid of Stalin"''' ====
The correspondence between Trotsky and Sedov between October and December 1932 the period of the “bloc” constitutes an extraordinary set of documents. They enable us to follow almost from day to day the efforts of Trotsky to cling as closely as possible to what was really happening in the Soviet Union, and to grasp the full significance of the “bloc”, the cement of which precisely was hostility to Stalin, and the desire to drive him out of the General Secretary’s position.
The correspondence between Trotsky and Sedov between October and December 1932 the period of the “bloc” constitutes an extraordinary set of documents. They enable us to follow almost from day to day the efforts of Trotsky to cling as closely as possible to what was really happening in the Soviet Union, and to grasp the full significance of the “bloc”, the cement of which precisely was hostility to Stalin, and the desire to drive him out of the General Secretary’s position.
Trotsky opened the discussion about whether the slogan, “Get Rid of Stalin”, was appropriate on 17 October. “Get Rid of Stalin”, he wrote, “is correct in a well-defined, concrete sense”, but contrary to the “allies” and the “right-wingers”, he did not think it an appropriate one. In fact, he wrote that this slogan would not be dangerous “if we were strong”. But did it not risk being supported by the ''émigrés'', by the Mensheviks and by the “internal Thermidoreans”? He went on: “It is always possible that in a few months Stalin will be obliged to defend himself against the Thermidorean pressure, and that we shall be obliged to support him momentarily”. Indeed, “this stage is not yet past and, consequently, this slogan does not correspond to the needs of the movement”. <ref name=":1" />
Trotsky opened the discussion about whether the slogan, “Get Rid of Stalin”, was appropriate on 17 October. “Get Rid of Stalin”, he wrote, “is correct in a well-defined, concrete sense”, but contrary to the “allies” and the “right-wingers”, he did not think it an appropriate one. In fact, he wrote that this slogan would not be dangerous “if we were strong”. But did it not risk being supported by the ''émigrés'', by the Mensheviks and by the “internal Thermidoreans”? He went on: “It is always possible that in a few months Stalin will be obliged to defend himself against the Thermidorean pressure, and that we shall be obliged to support him momentarily”. Indeed, “this stage is not yet past and, consequently, this slogan does not correspond to the needs of the movement”. <ref>Pierre Broue, [https://www.marxists.org/archive/broue/1980/01/bloc.html The “Bloc” of the Oppositions against Stalin], 1980</ref>  
 


During the 1980s, J. Arch Getty was also examining the Trotsky Harvard archive and discovered the existence of a Bloc. <blockquote>“It is clear, then, that Trotsky did have a clandestine organization inside the USSR in this period and that he maintained communication with it. It is equally clear that a united oppositional bloc was formed in 1932” J. Arch Getty <ref>(Getty, Origins of the Great Purges: The Soviet Communist Party Reconsidered, 1933-1938)</ref>
During the 1980s, J. Arch Getty was also examining the Trotsky Harvard archive and discovered the existence of a Bloc. <blockquote>“It is clear, then, that Trotsky did have a clandestine organization inside the USSR in this period and that he maintained communication with it. It is equally clear that a united oppositional bloc was formed in 1932” J. Arch Getty <ref>(Getty, Origins of the Great Purges: The Soviet Communist Party Reconsidered, 1933-1938)</ref>
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