
The Lockhart Plot
Love, Betrayal, Assassination, and Counter-Revolution in Lenin's Russia
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Narrated by:
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Traber Burns
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By:
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Jonathan Schneer
About this listen
During the spring and summer of 1918, with World War I still undecided, British, French and American agents in Russia developed a breathtakingly audacious plan. Led by Robert Hamilton Bruce Lockhart, a dashing, cynical, urbane thirty-year-old Scot, they conspired to overthrow Lenin’s newly established Bolshevik regime, and to install one that would continue the war against Germany on the Eastern Front. Lockhart’s confidante and chief support, with whom he engaged in a passionate love affair, was the mysterious, alluring Moura von Benkendorff, wife of a former aide-de-camp to the Tsar.
The plotters’ chief opponent was "Iron Felix" Dzerzhinsky. He led the Cheka, "Sword and Shield" of the Russian Revolution and forerunner of the KGB. Dzerzhinsky loved humanity—in the abstract. He believed socialism represented humanity’s best hope. To preserve and protect it he would unleash unbounded terror.
Revolutionary Russia provided the setting for the ensuing contest. In the back streets of Petrograd and Moscow, in rough gypsy cabarets, in glittering nightclubs, in cells beneath the Cheka’s Lubianka prison, the conspirators engaged in a deadly game of wits for the highest possible stakes—not merely life and death, but the outcome of a world war and the nature of Russia’s post-war regime.
Confident of success, the conspirators set the date for an uprising, September 8, 1918, but the Cheka had penetrated their organization and pounced just beforehand. The Lockhart Plot was a turning point in world history, except it failed to turn. At a time when Russian meddling in British and American politics now sounds warning bells, however, we may sense its reverberations and realize that it is still relevant.
©2020 Jonathan Schneer (P)2022 Blackstone PublishingListeners also enjoyed...
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What listeners say about The Lockhart Plot
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- Dennis Jameson
- 06-19-24
Not for the casual reader.
Took classes on Modern Russian Hiatory and Totalitarian Politics, over the years have read histories and historical novels about Russia and I always come way with more questions than answers. Churchill said it right, "Russia . . . is a riddle wrapped in a mystery inside an enigma . . .” I think Lockhart's role is overstated, partly because it is documented, more or less, while other players and plots are more conjecture than evidence. Anyway if you're a Russia Buff, or studying that period of time, this is a useful book, though I think it overstates Lockhart's role, and it's not set in the context of the mileau of plots and counter plots where Lockhart is just one more, and not really the most important plot. The west was in over its head and saw what it wanted to see.
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