Stalin: Waiting For Hitler, 1929вђ“1941 May 2026

The Domestic Revolution: Collectivization and Industrialization

Kotkin portrays the Great Terror not as a sign of madness, but as a calculated political tool. Stalin believed that in the event of an inevitable war, internal rivals—former comrades and military leaders—could become a "fifth column" for foreign enemies. Stalin: Waiting for Hitler, 1929–1941

: Over 120 million peasants were forced into state-controlled collective farms. This triggered a catastrophic famine (1931–1933) that killed millions, particularly in Ukraine and Kazakhstan . Kotkin argues that while Stalin caused the famine, his goal was not ethnic extermination but the absolute control of resources. By the late 1930s, the Red Army was

: Stalin built over 9,000 industrial enterprises, transforming the USSR into a modern war machine. By the late 1930s, the Red Army was the best-armed force in the world, with tens of thousands of tanks and planes. The Great Terror (1936–1938) By the late 1930s

Stalin’s primary goal in 1929 was to force a backward peasant economy into "socialist modernity". This was achieved through two brutal, simultaneous campaigns:

: The purges allowed Stalin to replace the old Bolshevik guard with a new elite of "young strivers" completely dependent on him for their status. Geopolitics and the "Waiting" for Hitler Stalin: Waiting for Hitler, 1929–1941