in
Moscow, 1920.
Left to right: Giacinto Serrati,
Leon Trotsky,
Alfred Rosmer,
Paul Levi,
Grigory Zinoviev,
Nikolai Bukharin,
Mikhail Kalinin,
Karl Radek. At the news of the
Russian Revolution of February 1917, exiled revolutionaries from around the world began to flock back to the homeland. Trotsky left New York on 27 March 1917, sailing for St. Petersburg. Bukharin left New York in early April and returned to Russia by way of Japan (where he was temporarily detained by local police), arriving in Moscow in early May 1917. Politically, the Bolsheviks in Moscow were a minority in relation to the Mensheviks and the
Socialist Revolutionaries. As more people began to be attracted to Lenin's promise to bring peace by withdrawing from the Great War, membership in the Bolshevik faction began to increase dramatically – from 24,000 members in February 1917 to 200,000 members in October 1917. Upon his return to Moscow, Bukharin resumed his seat on the Moscow City Committee and also became a member of the Moscow Regional Bureau of the party. To complicate matters further, the Bolsheviks themselves were divided into a right wing and a left wing. The right-wing of the Bolsheviks, including
Aleksei Rykov and
Viktor Nogin, controlled the Moscow Committee, while the younger left-wing Bolsheviks, including
Vladimir Smirnov,
Valerian Osinsky,
Georgii Lomov, Nikolay Yakovlev, Ivan Kizelshtein and Ivan Stukov, were members of the Moscow Regional Bureau. On 10 October 1917, Bukharin was elected to the
Central Committee, along with two other Moscow Bolsheviks:
Andrei Bubnov and
Grigori Sokolnikov. This strong representation on the Central Committee was a direct recognition of the Moscow Bureau's increased importance. Whereas the Bolsheviks had previously been a minority in Moscow behind the Mensheviks and the Socialist Revolutionaries, by September 1917 the Bolsheviks were in the majority in Moscow. Furthermore, the Moscow Regional Bureau was formally responsible for the party organizations in each of the thirteen central provinces around Moscow – which accounted for 37% of the whole population of Russia and 20% of the Bolshevik membership. ,
Semyon Budyonny,
Mikhail Frunze and Nikolai Bukharin in
Novomoskovsk 1921 with the
1st Cavalry Army (Konarmia) While no one dominated revolutionary politics in Moscow during the
October Revolution as Trotsky did in St. Petersburg, Bukharin certainly was the most prominent leader in Moscow. During the October Revolution, Bukharin drafted, introduced, and defended the revolutionary decrees of the Moscow Soviet. Bukharin then represented the Moscow Soviet in their report to the revolutionary government in Petrograd. Following the October Revolution, Bukharin became the editor of the party's newspaper,
Pravda. Bukharin believed passionately in the promise of
world revolution. In the Russian turmoil near the end of
World War I, when a negotiated peace with the
Central Powers was looming, he demanded a continuance of the war, fully expecting to incite all the foreign proletarian classes to arms. Even as he was uncompromising toward Russia's battlefield enemies, he also rejected any fraternization with the capitalist
Allied powers: he reportedly wept when he learned of official negotiations for assistance. In this wartime power struggle, Lenin's arrest had been seriously discussed by them and
Left Socialist Revolutionaries in 1918. Bukharin revealed this in a Pravda article in 1924, and stated that it had been "a period when the party stood a hair from a split, and the whole country a hair from ruin". After the ratification of the treaty, Bukharin resumed his responsibilities within the party. In March 1919, he became a member of the Comintern's executive committee and a candidate member of the
Politburo. During the
Civil War period, he published several theoretical economic works, including the popular primer
The ABC of Communism (with
Yevgeni Preobrazhensky, 1919), and the more academic
Economics of the Transitional Period (1920) and
Historical Materialism (1921). By 1921, he changed his position and accepted Lenin's emphasis on the survival and strengthening of the Soviet state as the bastion of the future world revolution. He became the foremost supporter of the
New Economic Policy (NEP), to which he was to tie his political fortunes. Considered by the Left Communists as a retreat from socialist policies, the NEP reintroduced money and allowed private ownership and capitalistic practices in agriculture, retail trade, and light industry while the state retained control of heavy industry. == Power struggle ==