In a detailed review in the current issue of “Klio,” Aleksey Teplyakov says these in-house studies are characterized by “the archaic quality of its ideology propositions, poor knowledge of contemporary work of civilian historians, tendentiousness, and an inclination to accept without criticism Chekist documents” ( no. 6 (66) (2012), at rusk.ru/st.php?idar=57826).
While there are some notable exceptions, Teplyakov argues, most of the in-house historians display “a tendentious superficiality, crude errors and distortions of reality to the point of intentionally false assertions,” qualities that are having an ever more dangerous impact on understanding as access to the archives is restricted.
Indeed, it has reached the point that “the major contribution of these authors” is to bring certain archival documents to light, but their willingness to accept Chekist definitions and even to distort the record to make the Chekists look good and their opponents at any point look bad limits the usefulness of such citations.
Few of these writers appear to be familiar with the works of others either in Russia or abroad, but “the most serious questions” concern the statistics of repression, numbers which the FSB writers typically understate and which they argue have been “consciously distorted by the ‘so-called’ ‘democrats.’”
Teplyakov gives numerous examples of this approach. One case, however, is especially instructive: the official data on repressions in 1933 “did not include data on the shootings by troikas in Western and Eastern Siberia, in the Far East, the North Caucasus, and in Nizhny-Volga and Middle Volga krays” – in sum, most of the country!
These works, Teplyakov continues, citing dozens of examples, accept without criticism the descriptions offered at the time of the regime’s supposed opponents, descriptions that were often made of whole cloth. And they overstate the number of victims among the Chekists while ignoring the crimes and immorality the latter were involved in.
All these shortcomings demonstrate, Teplyakov concludes, that “the special status of the force structures in the contemporary system of power [in the Russian Federation under Vladimir Putin] is being extended to the interpretation of their own history,” an extension that threatens to open the way to the repetition of Soviet-era criminality by them.