• cfgaussian@lemmygrad.ml
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    25 days ago

    If you look at who the most demonization and smears were spread about then certainly you get the impression that the revisionists feared Beria the most. And he does indeed seem to have been the most politically capable of the potential successors, but i’ve always thought Molotov was perhaps after Stalin the most principled and most “true believer” Marxist-Leninist of the Soviet leadership at the time.

    • PolandIsAStateOfMind@lemmygrad.ml
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      25 days ago

      that the revisionists feared Beria the most

      Yes they did. If you read the famous Furr book “Khrushchev lied”, Furr explains there that at first he didn’t even paid special attention, but it’s the blatant lies Khrushchev told about Beria made him to look closer and investigate entire speech.

      Molotov

      Quite possibly

    • multitotal@lemmygrad.ml
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      24 days ago

      Are you claiming there was a soviet-union-wide conspiracy to smear Beria, consisting of falsified documents and spanning over 20 years? Involving not only the Russian SFSR, but Georgian, Azerbaijani, Abkhazian communist parties as well?

      Khrushchev and his cronies managed to invent in a couple of months a trove of evidence against Beria that was corroborated by many others (co-conspirators, no doubt).

      OR, Beria was a monster.

      I’m gonna go with Occam’s razor here.