Lenin's "For Bread and Peace"

The excerpt is from a speech titled "For Bread and Peace," delivered by the revolutionary leader V.I. Lenin in December 1917. At the time, Lenin was the leader of the Bolsheviks, a Marxist party that had seized power in Russia during the October Revolution.
Two questions now take precedence over all other political questions—the question of bread and the question of peace. The imperialist war, the war between the biggest and richest banking firms, Britain and Germany, that is being waged for world domination, the division of the spoils, for the plunder of small and weak nations; this horrible, criminal war has ruined all countries, exhausted all peoples, and confronted mankind with the alternative—either sacrifice all civilisation and perish or throw off the capitalist yoke in the revolutionary way, do away with the rule of the bourgeoisie and win socialism and durable peace.

If socialism is not victorious, peace between the capitalist States will be only a truce, an interlude, a time of preparation for a fresh slaughter of the peoples. Peace and bread are the basic demands of the workers and the exploited. The war has made these demands extremely urgent. The war has brought hunger to the most civilised countries, to those most culturally developed. On the other hand, the war, as a tremendous historical process, has accelerated social development to an unheard-of degree. Capitalism had developed into imperialism, i.e., into monopoly capitalism, and under the influence of the war it has become state monopoly capitalism. We have now reached the stage of world economy that is the immediate stepping stone to socialism.
V.I. Lenin, "For Bread and Peace," December 1917

Question 1

Short answer
Describe the attitude toward the First World War described in the excerpt. 

Question 2

Short answer
Describe a broader context in which the excerpt was written.

Question 3

Short answer
Explain one way V.I. Lenin attempted to provide "peace and bread" during his brief rule over the Soviet Union. 

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