Why Was Stalin Like That? Psychology Explains
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title: "Stalin: A Psychological Profile"
slug: staline-portrait-psychologique
date: 2026-03-28
author: Gildas Garrec
category: "Historical Personalities"
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Stalin: A Psychological Profile
Clinical psychology offers us invaluable tools for understanding historical figures who have shaped humanity. Joseph Stalin represents a fascinating case study for the CBT psychopractitioner (Cognitive Behavioral Therapy), revealing how early dysfunctional schemas can shape a tragic historical destiny.
1. Young's Early Maladaptive Schemas
Jeffrey Young identified eighteen maladaptive schemas. In Stalin, several are particularly prominent.
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Prendre RDV en visioséanceAbandonment and Instability
Son of an alcoholic and violent father who abandoned him, Stalin developed an early intense fear of abandonment. His father Vissarion progressively disappeared from his childhood, creating an existential anxiety that Stalin would compensate for through an obsessive need for control. This schema explains his pathological distrust of his collaborators, always suspected of "betrayal".
Defectiveness and Shame
Orphaned at a young age, living in Georgia in a modest family, Stalin internalized a sense of social inadequacy. His seminary classmates mocked him; he remained physically smaller, isolated. This "less-than-others" schema would generate a paranoid compensation: he must not only equal others, but completely dominate them.
Maltreatment and Injustice
Victim of paternal brutality, then school humiliations, Stalin internalized a dangerous universe where one must strike before being struck. This schema fuels a paranoid worldview: everyone is a potential enemy, hence the need to eliminate them preemptively.
2. Personality Structure: Paranoid and Narcissistic Traits
Advanced Paranoid Profile
Historians and psychologists agree on a diagnosis of paranoid personality disorder in Stalin. The clinical characteristics are evident:
- Pervasive suspicion: he spies on those close to him, maintains networks of spies infiltrated throughout the administration
- Malevolent interpretations: every event is reinterpreted as a personal threat or conspiracy
- Prolonged grudges: he remembers the slightest criticisms or disagreements for decades
- Reactive aggression: massive purges respond to perceived, not real, threats
Pathological Narcissism
Simultaneously, Stalin manifests grandiose narcissism characterized by:
- A compulsive need for personal admiration (the cult of personality)
- Absence of empathy toward the suffering he causes
- A sense of invulnerability and immunity from moral laws
- A demand for absolute obedience constructed as a divine right
3. Primitive Defense Mechanisms
Dynamic psychology has identified defense mechanisms as unconscious strategies against anxiety. Stalin deploys very primitive ones:
Massive Projection
Stalin attributes to others his own unacceptable thoughts. Having himself thoughts of "betrayal" (questioning his power), he projects these thoughts onto others. The "traitor-within-himself" becomes the "traitor-in-the-other", justifying purges.
Splitting and Dichotomous Thinking
Absence of nuance: one is entirely loyal or entirely enemy. Zinoviev, a former ally, becomes overnight a "fascist traitor". This binary thinking prevents any reconciliation or forgiveness.
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Prendre RDV en visioséanceIdealization / Devaluation
Stalin idealizes a concept: "the Soviet people", "the pure revolution". Anyone who deviates from this idealized image is immediately devalued, even eliminated. Trotsky represents the "ideal deviation", hence his exile and eventual assassination.
Rationalization
Mass murders are rationalized as "necessary to build socialism" or "eliminate counter-revolutionary elements". This cognitive rationalization allows Stalin to sleep soundly while signing execution lists.
4. Lessons for the CBT Practitioner
The study of Stalin offers crucial clinical teachings.
Understanding Origins Without Excusing
A good CBT practitioner recognizes that traumatic childhood never excuses an adult's actions, but it explains them. Stalin's paternal abuse does not justify thirty million deaths, but it illuminates how a wounded child can become a dangerous adult. This understanding helps the clinician combine empathy and accountability.
The Importance of Early Work on Schemas
Early maladaptive schemas, if untreated, become deeply rooted. Stalin would have benefited from early intervention on:
- His need for security against abandonment (grief therapy for his father)
- His sense of inadequacy (cognitive restructuring)
- His paranoid worldview (gradual exposure, alternative perspective)
This reminds the therapist of the urgency of treating traumatized children before their schemas become totalitarian organizing structures of personality.
The Limits of Empathy in the Face of Psychopathy
Although paranoia partially explains Stalin's actions, it is not an excuse. The clinician must recognize the ethical limits of benevolent understanding: understanding Stalin does not mean pitying him, but rather extracting preventive lessons.
The Danger of Dichotomous Thinking
Stalin's splitting (loyal/enemy) reminds the practitioner how binary thinking is pathogenic. CBT insists on learning nuance: people are complex, situations ambiguous, and tolerance for uncertainty is an essential therapeutic virtue.
Monitoring Clinical Rationalization
Practitioners must examine how their own rationalizations (therapeutic, theoretical) can become tools of harm. Stalin rationalized purges as "political therapy". Clinicians must remain vigilant not to rationalize coercive or humiliating approaches.
Conclusion
Joseph Stalin offers the CBT psychopractitioner a complete clinical portrait of a severely dysfunctional personality: early Young's schemas, paranoid-narcissistic structure, primitive defense mechanisms. More than a historical figure, Stalin is a living warning about the untreated consequences of childhood trauma and the destructive power of systematized cognitive distortions.
Therapeutic work always begins in childhood. This is the lesson that Stalin, despite himself, teaches every conscientious practitioner.
Also Worth Reading
To Go Further: My book Freeing Yourself from Toxic Relationships deepens the themes addressed in this article with practical exercises and concrete tools. Discover on Amazon | Read a free excerpt
Recommended Reading:
- Reinventing Your Life — Jeffrey Young
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