The "communist
left" is to a very large extent the product of those sections
of the world proletariat who posed the greatest threat to
capitalism during the international revolutionary wave that
followed the 1914-18 war: the Russian, the German, and the
Italian. It was these "national" sections which made the
most telling contribution to the enrichment of marxism in the
context of the new epoch of capitalist decline inaugurated by the
war. But those who rose the highest also fell the lowest. We saw
in previous articles in this series how the left currents of the
Bolshevik party, after their first heroic attempts to understand
and to resist the onset of the Stalinist counter-revolution, were
almost completely wiped out by the latter, leaving the left
groupings outside Russia to carry on the work of analysing what
had gone wrong with the revolution in Russia and of defining the
nature of the regime which had usurped its name. Here again, the
German and Italian fractions of the communist left played an
absolutely key role, even if they were not unique (the previous
article in this series, for example, looked at the emergence of a
left communist current in France in the 1920s-30s, and its
contribution to understanding the Russian question). But while the
proletariat in both Italy and Germany had suffered important
defeats, the proletariat in Germany - which had effectively held
the fate of the world revolution in its hands in 1918-19 - had
certainly been crushed more brutally and bloodily by the
interlocking efforts of social democracy, Stalinism and Nazism. It
was this tragic fact, together with certain vital theoretical and
organisational weaknesses that went back to the revolutionary wave
and even before, which contributed to a process of dissolution
hardly less devastating than that which had befallen the communist
movement in Russia.