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Actually Lenin once said that "Russians by adoption" are worse than Russians when they become chauvinist. I think he was aiming at Stalin.
"Lenin's anger about such practices climaxed during the notorious Georgian affair of 1922, when he denounced Dzerzhinskii, Stalin, and Ordzhonikidze as Great Russian chauvinists (russified natives, he maintained, were often the worst chauvinists). Such Bolshevik chauvinism inspired Lenin to coin the term rusotiapstvo (mindless Russian chauvinism), which then entered the Bolshevik lexicon and became an invaluable weapon in the national republics' rhetorical arsenals."
A State of Nations: Empire and Nation-Making in the Age of Lenin and Stalin by Ronald Grigor Suny
This is a tricky bit of Soviet history. Lenin had, up until the end of December 1922, initiated the concept of the Transcaucasian Federation, denounced the "Georgian deviators," and defended Ordzhonikidze. It was right when he dictated the "Testament" to Maria Volodicheva (this being the year Lenin had undergone surgery to remove a bullet and suffered several strokes to the point of seeing his body paralyzed and his speech severely impaired) that his opinions on the matter were suddenly reversed. This is notably true, also, of Lenin's complete reversal of opinion with regards to Stalin and Trotsky. This may have had something to do not only with Lenin's illness, but also with his isolation. It isn't any secret his wife Nadezhda Krupskaya was supportive of the Trotsky-Zinoviev opposition and even signed its manifesto, the Declaration of the Thirteen. It was also true that, at the time of Lenin's illness, Krupskaya was his sole contact with the outside world. Stalin rebuked Krupskaya on December 22, 1922 for feeding Lenin selective "information," and she wrote a letter of complaint to Kamenev:
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Originally Posted by N.K. Krupskaya: Letter to Lev Kamenev; December 23, 1922; M. Lewin: Lenin's Last Struggle; London, 1969; pp.152-153
"Stalin subjected me to a storm of the coarsest abuse yesterday about a brief note that Lenin dictated to me. . I know better than all the doctors what can and what cannot be said to Ilyich, for I know what disturbs him and what doesn't. And in any case I know better than Stalin. I have no doubt as to the unanimous decision of the Control Commission with which Stalin takes it upon himself to threaten me, but I have neither the time nor the energy to lose in such a stupid farce.
Afterwards, Lenin became very upset with Stalin said that he would break his friendship with Stalin off should he refuse to apologize. Lenin's sister, Maria Ulyanova, wrote to the Presidium of the 1926 Joint Plenum of the C.C. and C.C.C., noting that Stalin did indeed offer to apologize. Of interesting note is that, after Krupskaya sent the "Testament" to Kamenev, it was passed to Stalin, as General Secretary. He passed the documents on May 19 to the steering committee for the 13th Congress, due to begin in four days. At the Congress, which voted 30-10 not to publish the "Testament," Stalin offered his resignation as General Secretary in his speech to the Joint Plenum. At the first plenum of the C.C. after the 14th Congress, Stalin
again offered his resignation. A year later, he put in
yet another request to be released from his duties as General Secretary.