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      • The Bloc of Oppositions, also known as Trotsky's bloc and called by the Soviet press the Bloc of Rights and Trotskyites, was a political alliance created by oppositionists in the USSR and Leon Trotsky by the end of 1932. It was a secret organization to fight Stalinist repression in the Soviet Union.
      en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bloc_of_Soviet_Oppositions
  1. The Case of the Anti-Soviet "Bloc of Rightists and Trotskyites" (or "Bloc of Rights and Trotskyites") (Russian: Процесс антисоветского «право-троцкистского блока»), also known as the Trial of the Twenty-One, was the last of the three public Moscow trials charging prominent Bolsheviks with espionage ...

  2. The Bloc of Oppositions, also known as Trotsky's bloc and called by the Soviet press the Bloc of Rights and Trotskyites, was a political alliance created by oppositionists in the USSR and Leon Trotsky by the end of 1932.

  3. The "Case of the Anti-Soviet 'Bloc of Rightists and Trotskyites ' " (or the Bukharin–Rykov Trial, also known as the 'Trial of the Twenty-One', March 1938). The defendants were Old Bolshevik Party leaders and top officials of the Soviet secret police .

  4. Committee vote on the Brest-Litovsk treaty in March 1918 and, having made good use of the indecisiveness of Trotsky and the Left Communists, pushed the treaty. through the Party Congress, managing also to destroy the rival Left SR Party. during the Congress of Soviets, on 6 July 1918.

  5. At a meeting convened by the Union of Soviet Writers in April 1937, Aleksandr Afinogenov, an acclaimed young Soviet playwright, was accused of having partaken in a Trotskyite conspiracy against the Soviet sys-tem. Only a few weeks before, two Communists with whom Afinogenov had maintained close personal and professional ties, the critic Leopold ...

  6. survivals of fascism, and various forms of dissent in the Soviet Union, it is unexpected to find Trotskyism at the head of the list of ideological enemies. Perhaps it is for this reason that Western commentators on Brezhnev's Russia seem not to have noticed the revival of official anti-Trotskyism in the Soviet Union. (I find it

  7. These “anti-Soviet and anti-socialist” movements and riots both in Poland and Hungary greatly shocked the Chinese leadership, prompting them to analyze where the popular discontent in the socialist system came from and why such violent anti-party, anti-socialist, and anti-Soviet riots had occurred.