Even among emigrants with anti-Soviet attitude, this “document” caused a sceptical reaction:
“And finally, one cannot ignore the noisy publication in the New York magazine Life (issue dated April 23) of a false document attempting to prove that Stalin was an agent of the Okhrana under tsarism. This pseudo-document was presented four years ago to B. Souvarine who immediately and categorically declared it a fake." Many historians believe that the letter is most likely a forgery.
Stephen Kotkin, an acclaimed biographer of Stalin, said that it was normal for the Okhrana to cast doubts over genuine revolutionaries, by saying they were police agents. Both
Leon Trotsky and Stalin came under suspicion of police collaboration. Those rumours always followed Stalin, but they were accusations his enemies failed to prove. Kotkin remarked that in a certain occasion, one former Okhrana chief boasted, triumphant, that the revolutionaries started to suspect each other, so that in the end none of them could trust each other. == See also ==