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KARL MARX

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45 2 <strong>KARL</strong> <strong>MARX</strong>: A BIOGRAPHY<br />

and his supporters had set up a Jura Federation - with a Bakuninist group<br />

in Geneva in vehement opposition to the International's section there.<br />

The political situation in Europe after the Commune tended to sharpen<br />

the differences between Bakunin and Marx: Marx gradually gave up<br />

expecting a quick revolution and was unwilling to have the International<br />

committed to the support of spasmodic risings in Italy, Spain and Russia<br />

(the countries chiefly susceptible to anarchist doctrines). The anarchists<br />

considered any revolutionary uprising to be justified as a step towards the<br />

total destruction of contemporary society. To them, the General Council<br />

was an authoritarian irrelevance. 136<br />

The inevitable clash provoked by divergent assessments of the political<br />

situation was aggravated by more personal factors: extraordinary though<br />

it seems, Bakunin had undertaken in 1869 to translate Capital into Russian.<br />

About the same time Bakunin had had the misfortune to meet and trust<br />

a young psychopathic revolutionary, named Netchayev, who had just<br />

escaped from Russia with fabricated stories of widespread revolutionary<br />

activities among the students. Netchayev was utterly ruthless in his<br />

methods and when Bakunin - predictably in one who never completed<br />

any of his own works let alone the translation of those of others - wished<br />

to suspend his labours on Capital and pay back the advance, Netchayev<br />

wrote to Bakunin's agent threatening him with death if so much as asked<br />

for the money back. Marx attributed Netchayev's reported activities to<br />

Bakunin's hatred for him, and his unreasonable suspicion of Bakunin was<br />

fed by his Russophobe friend Borkheim and by Nicholas Utin, both of<br />

whom continually worked on Marx with tales of Bakunin's intrigues. Utin,<br />

a Russian exile who had collaborated and then quarrelled with Bakunin<br />

in Switzerland, had started a Russian section of the International in<br />

Geneva in opposition to Bakunin. 137 This section - which numbered only<br />

half-a-dozen members and was purely ephemeral - asked Marx to represent<br />

them on the General Council - a tribute which Marx accepted,<br />

remarking to Engels:<br />

A funny position for me, functioning as a representative of young<br />

Russia! A man can never tell what he is capable of and what strange<br />

bedfellows he may have to accept. In the official reply I praise Flerowski<br />

and emphasise that the main task of the Russian branch is to work for<br />

Poland (i.e. help Europe dispense with having Russia as a neighbour).<br />

I considered it safer to say no word about Bakunin, either in the official<br />

or in the confidential reply. 138<br />

The London Conference, held in an inn just off Tottenham Court<br />

Road in mid-September 1871, was not a very representative gathering:<br />

no Germans; only two Britishers; from France, only refugees; and from

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