Hammer and Rifle
The Militarization of the Soviet Union, 19261933
David R. Stone
September 2000
304 pages, 6 x 9
Modern War Studies
Cloth ISBN 978-0-7006-1037-2, $39.95
SELECTION OF THE HISTORY BOOK CLUB
WINNER OF THE HISTORICAL SOCIETY'S INAUGURAL BEST FIRST BOOK
PRIZE
From 1926 to 1933, a vast transformation
swept through the Soviet Union, a massive militarization of society
that was as powerful and far-reaching as the Revolution itself.
In Hammer and Rifle, David Stone chronicles this transformation
and shows why it is so central to our understanding of Stalin's
emergence and consolidation of power.
While collectivization dramatically altered rural Russia and
Stalin ruthlessly secured his control over the state apparatus,
a military-industrial revolution remade the USSR into an immensely
powerful war machine. As Stone reveals, the militarization of
the Soviet economy--marked by a rapidly expanding defense industry,
increasing centralized control, and growing military influence
over economic policies--was an essential element in Stalin's
strong-armed revolution from above.
Spurred by the Bolsheviks' unrelenting suspicions of other
nations, the Soviet state embraced rearmament and military preparedness
as its guarantee for national survival. Soviet military thinkers,
Stone shows, pushed for a ruthlessly centralized economy--one
requiring total integration of state and society--as the necessary
means for achieving victory in future wars. The result was an
ever upwardly spiraling defense budget and increasing military
domination of civilian society.
Stone demonstrates how this domination emerged, evolved, and
entrenched itself. But he also suggests that this military-industrial
revolution, theoretically designed to protect the Soviet Union's
national security, instead nearly destroyed it at the beginning
of World War II. The rigid and inflexible economy that resulted
ultimately undermined the Soviet state itself, destroying from
within much of what it had tried to defend.
Based on unprecedented use of new archival sources, Stone's
study also provides a cautionary tale about civil-military relations
in an increasingly dangerous world. As such, it should appeal
to readers well beyond those interested in Russian and Soviet
history.
"Based on extensive research in newly opened Russian
archives, this careful study is the best analysis to date of
the central role of militarization in the development of state,
society, and economy in the U.S.S.R. between the end of the 'New
Economic Plan' in 1926 and the conclusion of the first 'Five-year
Plan in 1933.'"--Publishers Weekly
"Based on prodigious research in newly-accessible Russian
archives, Stone's landmark book makes a significant contribution
to our understanding of the advent of the Soviet garrison state.
Touching on nearly every significant issue of the period, he
deepens, challenges, or modifies many existing interpretations
and cuts through the fog of conjecture, theory, and half-truths
that still cloaks the era between 1926 and 1933."--Bruce
Menning, author of Bayonets before Bullets: The Imperial
Russian Army, 1861-1914
"An important contribution to the field of Soviet military,
economic, and political history."--Steven Miner,
author of Between Churchill and Stalin and Stalin's Holy War
DAVID R. STONE is assistant professor of history at
Kansas State University. He has also taught in the history department
at Hamilton College and in the International Security Studies
Program at Yale University.
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