1942
Joseph Stalin
FROM THE TIME ARCHIVE
Jan. 4, 1943

The year 1942 was a year of blood and strength. The man whose name means
steel in Russian, whose few words of English include the American expression
"tough guy" was the man of 1942. Only Joseph Stalin fully knew how close Russia
stood to defeat in 1942, and only Joseph Stalin fully knew how he brought
Russia through.
But the whole world knew what the alternative would have been. The man who
knew it best of all was Adolf Hitler, who found his past accomplishments
turning into dust.
Moved PermanentlyMoved Permanently
Had German legions swept past steel-stubborn Stalingrad and liquidated
Russia's power of attack, Hitler would have been not only man of the year, but
he would have been undisputed master of Europe, looking for other continents to
conquer. He could have diverted at least 250 victorious divisions to new
conquests in Asia and Africa. But Joseph Stalin stopped him. Stalin had done it
beforein 1941when he started with all of Russia intact. But Stalin's
achievement of 1942 was far greater. All that Hitler could give he tookfor
the second time.
Men of Good Will. Above the heavy tread of nations on the march, above the
staccato uproar of the battlefields, only a few men of peace were heard in
1942.
Britain's William Temple, who made his pilgrimage to Canterbury in 1942
and became the new Archbishop, was one of them. His church-approved program of
reforms brought religion closer to the center of British national life than at
any time since Cromwell's Roundheads. Temple challenged all Britain's
well-established institutions of economic privilege, espoused the cause of
mankind's economic freedom (which Britain loosely calls socialism), probably to
leave a lasting mark on British history.
Another man who may leave a similar mark is Henry J. Kaiser, the man who
launched one of his Liberty ships in four days and 15 hours and, more
important, preached as a practical businessman "full production for full
employment." His gospel challenged U.S. industry to lead the post-war world out
of depression.
A third man who left a mark was Wendell Willkie, whose world-circling trip
as the politician without office had an effect perhaps more lasting than the
U.S. yet realizes on U.S. relations with Russia and the Orient.
But Willkie's accomplishment was dimmed by his failure to command the firm
support of his party, and the plain fact was that in 1942, a year of war, men
of good will had no achievements to match those of men of arms and men of
power.
Men of War. Flamboyant Erwin Rommel and cold-mouthed Fedor von Bock were
Germany's two top generals in a year whose laurels were reserved primarily for
fighting men. Rommel, who drove to within 70 miles of Alexandria before he was
stopped by the British, established himself as one of the great virtuosos among
field commanders. Bock directed a brilliant campaign which reached the west
bank of the Volga, but the final spark that would have meant victory was not in
him.
The greatest military conquests of the yearalthough not against the
greatest forceswere those of frog-legged Tomoyuki Yamashita, who blasted the
British out of Singapore, the Dutch out of the Indies and the U.S. out of
Bataan and Corregidor. Yamashita in one year successfully seized a great empire
for his country. On his side were advantages in numbers, in preparation, in the
stupidity of the Allied nations, but Yamashita successfully capitalized on
them.
Quite different were the military triumphs of Yugoslavia's General Draja
Mihailovich, who capitalized on a conquered nation's unconquerable urge for
freedom to fight when fighting seemed impossible. But before the year was out
thousands of his countrymen, probably distrusting the Yugoslav Government in
Exile more than they did Mihailovich, supported the rival Partisan guerrillas
who were carving out their own fighting front. From high on the crags of
southern Serbia, Mihailovich, a great fighter, saw, instead of the unification
of his country, a preview of rival aims and clashing ideologies which may bring
out a rash of civil wars in post-war Europe.
As for the military men of the U.S., 1942 offered them few opportunities
for great achievement. General Eisenhower's able occupation of North Africa
only placed him on the threshold of his real test. Douglas MacArthur, whose
brilliant skill and courage raised him to the rank of hero while he fought an
inevitably losing fight, still lacked the means to win the crown of a great
victory. Outstanding among Americans for accomplishment in battle stood the
name of Admiral William Halsey, who, not once but again & again, took his
task force into swift encounters against the Japs to deal them telling blows.
Yet no military man from Rommel to Halsey was the man of 1942 for a good
sufficient reason: there was no military victory of the year which showed signs
of being conclusive.
Men of Power. There was perhaps no more unlikely place to look for a Man
of 1942 than in prostrate France. Yet two Frenchmen, both of whom the U.S.
disliked and distrusted, rose to the top of a soiled political heap. One of
them was Pierre Laval, who rose to the honor of a meeting with Hitler to which
the tragicomic Benito Mussolini was not invited. If Hitler wins, Pierre Laval
may yet be a successful man. Jean Francois Darlan's deal with General
Eisenhower might have profited him eventually, but his award was an assassin's
bullet.
A far greater step to power was taken by a Japanese. From behind his
horn-rimmed glasses and the ask-ack of his cigar smoke, Premier Hideki Tojo
emerged as a character worthy of his nickname: The Razor. He, like Stalin, was
tough. So were his people. He took the major political risk of the year in
tackling Britain and the U.S., and, for the year, it turned out to be a good
speculation. His armies conquered Hong Kong, the Philippines, Singapore, the
Dutch East Indies and Burma. Never in history had one nation conquered so much
so quickly. Seldom had any nation's fighting abilities been underestimated so
badly. Tojo, or Emperor Hirohito, in whose name all Japanese wage holy war,
might well have been the man of the year, if the explosive Japanese campaigns
had not shown signs of burning out.
For the great leaders of the United Nations 1942 was another story.
China's Generalissimo Chiang Kai-shek struggled on stubbornly against China's
internal problems and the invading Japanese. Britain's Winston Churchill, Man
of 1940, delivered victory in Egypt after standing on the verge of defeat.
Franklin Roosevelt, Man of 1941, shouldered mountainous problems, solved some,
left others still crying to be solved. He successfully brought the weight of
the U.S. to bear against the Axis. But the 1942 accomplishments of Chiang, of
Churchill and of Roosevelt will not bear fruit till 1943. And, worthy though
they may prove, they inevitably pale by comparison with what Joseph Stalin did
in 1942.
At the beginning of the year Stalin was in an unenviable spot. During the
year before he had sold over 400,000 miles of territory at the price of saving
most of his army. Gone was a big fractionhow large only he knewof the
precious tanks, planes and war equipment which he had been hoarding for years
against the Nazi attack. Gone was roughly one-third of Russia's industrial
capacity, on which he depended for replacements. Gone was nearly half of
Russia's best farmland.
With all this gone, Stalin had to face another full-weight blow from the
Nazi war machine. For every trained soldier the Germans had lost in the
previous year's battles, he had probably lost as many and more. For every bit
of valuable experience which his soldiers and commanders had gained, the
Germans had had the opportunity to gain an equal amount.
Stalin still had the magnificent will to resist of the Russian peoplewho
had as much claim to glory as the British people had when they withstood the
blitz of 1940. But a strong people had not prevented the loss of White Russia
and the Ukraine. Would they be any better able to prevent the conquest of the
Don basin, of Stalingrad, of the Caucasus? The strongest will to resist can
eventually crack under continued defeat.
Only one new resource had Stalin for 1942: the help of the U.S. And, as
events were to prove, that was to come late and to be bottlenecked by German
attacks on the North Sea route and the Caucasus.
With these reduced resources, Stalin tackled his problem, trying to pick
abler leaders for his Army, trying to improve its resistance, trying to
maintain the morale of his underfed people, trying to extract more aid from his
Allies and to get them to open a second front.
Only Stalin knows how he managed to make 1942 a better year for Russia
than 1941. But he did. Sevastopol was lost, the Don basin was nearly lost, the
Germans reached the Caucasus. But Stalingrad was held. The Russian people held.
The Russian Army came back with four offensives that had the Germans in serious
trouble at year's end.
Russia was displaying greater strength than at any point in the war. The
general who had won that overall battle was the man who runs Russia.
The Man. In his birch-paneled office within the dark-towered Kremlin,
Joseph Stalin (pronounced Stal-yn), an imponderable, soberly persistent
Asiatic, worked at his desk 16 to 18 hours a day. Before him he kept a huge
globe showing the course of campaigns over territory he himself defended in the
civil wars of 1917-20. This time he again defended it, and mostly by will
power. There were new streaks of grey in his hair and new etchings of fatigue
in his granite face. (Stalin was 63 on Dec. 21, a date not recorded in the
Soviet Encyclopedia and not mentioned in the Soviet press for the past three
years.) But there was no break in his hold on Russia and there was long-
neglected recognition of his abilities by nations outside the Soviet borders.
The problem for Stalin the statesman was to present the seriousness of the
plight of Russia as an ally to Western leaders long suspicious of Stalin and
his workers' State. Stalin, who had every reason to expect the city named for
him to fall shortly after its heroic siege began on Aug. 24, desperately wanted
aid from his allies. Stalin the politician made these desires the hope of the
Russian people. He made them think that a continental second front had been
promised to them, and thereby strengthened their will to hang on.
For his armies Stalin coined the slogan Umeraite No Ne Otstupaite (Die,
But Do Not Retreat). It had been shown at Moscow that a strongly fortified city
can be held as a strong point against attack by mechanized forces. Stalin chose
to make Stalingrad another such point. While Germans and Russians were booting
each other to death in the bomb-pocked streets, Stalin was organizing the
winter offensive which burst into the Don basin with the fury of the snowstorms
that accompanied it.
To keep his home front intact, Stalin had only work and black bread to
offer. He added a promise of victory in 1942 and called to his people to
sacrifice collectively to preserve the things they had built collectively.
Children and women foraged in the forests for wood. A ballerina canceled one
performance because she was stiff from chopping wood. Production norms were
increased, apartments went unheated, electricity was turned off four days a
week. At year's end the Russian children had no new toys for the New Year's
celebration. There were no red-cloaked wooden replicas of Dyed Moross (Granddad
Frost). There was no smoked salmon, no pickled herring, no goose, no vodka, no
coffee for the grownups. But there was rejoicing. The Rodina (Motherland) had
been saved for the second time in two years and now victory and peace could not
be too far off.
The trek of world dignitaries to Moscow in 1942 brought Stalin out of his
inscrutable shell, revealed a pleasant host and an expert at playing his cards
in international affairs. At banquets for such men as Winston Churchill, W.
Averill Harriman and Wendell Willkie, Host Stalin drank his vodka straight,
talked the same way. He sent Foreign Minister Viacheslav Molotov to London and
Washington to promote the second front and jack up laggard shipments of war
materiel. In two letters to Henry Cassidy of the A.P., Stalin shrewdly used the
world's headlines to state the Russian case for more aid.
Stalin did not get his continental second front in 1942, but when a new
front was opened in North Africa he publicly approved. On the 25th anniversary
of the Bolshevist Revolution, Stalin, in his big state speech of the year,
reviewed the past and for the future struck the note of statesmanship.
The Past. The Revolution that was begun in 1917 by a handful of
leather-coated working men and pallid intellectuals waving the red flag, by
1942 had congealed into a party government that has remained in power longer
than any other major party in the world. It began under the leadership of
Vladimir Ilyich Lenin, on Marxist principles of a moneyless economy which
challenged the right to accumulate wealth by private initiative.
The world reviled and caricatured the early Bolsheviks as bush-whiskered
anarchists with a bomb in each hand. But Lenin, faced with hard facts and a
war-beaten, superstitious, illiterate people, compromised with Marxism. Stalin,
succeeding him, compromised still further, concentrated on building socialism
in one state. Retained through the years of Russia's great upheaval was the
basic conception that the ownership and operation of the means of production
must be kept in the hands of the state.
Within Russia's immense disorderliness, Stalin faced the fundamental
problems of providing enough food for the people and improving their lot,
through 20th-Century industrial methods. He collectivized the farms and he
built Russia into one of the four great industrial powers on earth. How well he
succeeded was evident in Russia's world-surprising strength in World War II.
Stalin's methods were tough, but they paid off.
The Present. The U.S., of all nations, should have been the first to
understand Russia. Ignorance of Russia and suspicion of Stalin were two things
that prevented it. Old prejudices and the antics of U.S. communists dangling at
the end of the Party line were others. As Allies fighting the common enemy, the
Russians have fought the best fight so far. As post-war collaborators, they
hold many of the keys to a successful peace.
The two peoples who talk the most and scheme the biggest schemes are the
Americans and the Russians. Both can be sentimental one moment, blazingly angry
the next. Both spend their money freely for goods and pleasures, drink too
much, argue interminably. Both are builders. The U.S. built mills and factories
and tamed the land across a continent 3,000 miles wide. Russia tried to catch
up by doing the same thing through a planned program that post-pioneer
Americans would not have suffered. The rights as individuals that U.S. citizens
have, the Russians want and believe they eventually will receive. Some of the
discipline that the Russians have, the U.S. may need before the end of World
War II.
The Future. In his 25th-anniversary speech Stalin emphasized that the most
important event in foreign affairs, both for war and peace, was Allied
collaboration. "We have the facts and events," he said, "pointing to a
progressive rapprochement among the members of the Anglo-Soviet-American
coalition and their uniting in a single fighting alliance." This was a frank
approach to the post-war world, as realistically sensible as Stalin's expressed
ideas on dealings with Germany. "Our aim," he said, "is not to destroy all
armed force in Germany, because any intelligent man will understand that this
is as impossible in the case of Germany as in the case of Russia. It would be
unreasonable on the part of the victor to do so. To destroy Hitler's army is
possible and necessary."
What other war aims Stalin has are not officially known, but there are
reports in high circles that he wants no new territories except at points
needed to make Russia impregnable against invasion. There is also a story in
high places that, in keeping with the "tough-guy" tradition, credits Stalin
with one other desire: permission from his allies to raze Berlin, as a lesson
in psychology to the Germans and as a burnt offering to his own heroic people.
COVERS GALLERY: Click here to see the cover image from 1942
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