In his speech, Khrushchev described Stalin as a "flawed leader" and a "despot" who had acted like a pathological criminal. Such accusations, coming less than three years after Stalin's death, caused a sensation. Many old party members felt he had gone too far, while others were clearly relieved. It seems that the speech was never intended to remain secret; copies of it were sent to party officials and to foreign communist parties. The CIA eventually obtained the speech, and it was published in the west in June 1956. Further links:
Nikita Khrushchev addresses assembled delegates at a closed-session on the last night of the 20th Congress of the Soviet Communist Party.
We praise democracy most of the time, but we practice it as if we had accepted every argument against it, as if we believed it must depress the level of culture and of public life
















