fbpx
Wikipedia

Allied intervention in the Russian Civil War

Allied intervention in the Russian Civil War or Allied Powers intervention in the Russian Civil War consisted of a series of multi-national military expeditions which began in 1918. The initial impetus behind the interventions was to secure munitions and supply depots from falling into German hands after the Bolsheviks signed the Treaty of Brest Litovsk. American, British and French troops were welcomed by Bolshevik leaders.[20] By 1919 the Allied goal became to help the White forces in the Russian Civil War. When the Whites collapsed the Allies withdrew their forces from Russia by 1920 and further withdrawing from Japan by 1922.[21]

Allied intervention in the Russian Civil War
Part of the Russian Civil War

Allied troops parading in Vladivostok, 1918
Date12 January 1918[4] – 20 May 1925[5]
(7 years, 4 months, 1 week and 1 day)
Location
Result

Bolshevik victory

  • Allied Powers withdrawal
  • Defeat and collapse of the Russian White movement
  • White victory in Finland, Latvia, and Estonia
Belligerents
Allied Powers:
Bolsheviks:
Commanders and leaders
Strength
  • 50,000–70,000 troops
  • 15,600 troops
  • 30,000 troops[6]
  • 11,000 troops
  • 11,300 troops
  • 70,000 troops
  • 59,150 troops[7][8][9][10]
  • 4,700+ troops
  • 2,500 troops
  • 2,300 troops [11]
  • 2,000 troops
  • 150 troops
Unknown
Casualties and losses
Unknown
1 landing craft captured by Romanians[19]

The goals of these small-scale interventions were partly to stop Germany from exploiting Russian resources, to defeat the Central Powers (prior to the Armistice of November 1918), and to support some of the Allied forces that had become trapped within Russia after the 1917 Bolshevik revolution.[22] Allied troops landed in Arkhangelsk (the North Russia intervention of 1918–1919) and in Vladivostok (as part of the Siberian intervention of 1918–1922). The British intervened in the Baltic theatre (1918–1919) and in the Caucasus (1917–1919). French-led Allied forces participated in the Southern Russia intervention (1918–1919). For most, overthrowing the Bolsheviks was never a primary aim of the interventions.[20]

Allied efforts were hampered by divided objectives and war-weariness from the overall global conflict. These factors, together with the evacuation of the Czechoslovak Legion in September 1920, compelled the western Allied powers to end the North Russia and Siberian interventions in 1920, though the Japanese intervention in Siberia continued until 1922 and the Empire of Japan continued to occupy the northern half of Sakhalin until 1925.[23]

Soviet and Russian interpretations greatly exaggerate the role of the Allies in the Civil War and try to portray these as attempts to suppress the Bolshevik revolution and to partition and Russia.[24] Overall the extent of allied intervention during the civil war was miniscule and inconsequential.[20]

Background

Revolution

In early 1917 the Russian Empire found itself wracked by political strife – public support for World War I and Tsar Nicholas II had started to dwindle, leaving the country on the brink of revolution. The February Revolution of March 1917 affected the course of the war; under intense political and personal pressure, the Tsar abdicated ( 16 March  [O.S. 3 March]  1917) and a Russian Provisional Government formed, led initially by Georgy Lvov (March to July 1917) and later by Alexander Kerensky (July to November 1917). The Provisional Government pledged to continue fighting the Germans on the Eastern Front.[23]

The Allied Powers had been shipping supplies to Russia since the beginning of the war in 1914 through the ports of Arkhangelsk, Murmansk (established in 1915), and Vladivostok. In April 1917 the United States entered the war on the Allied side. US President Woodrow Wilson dropped his reservations about joining the war with the despotic tsar as an ally, and the United States began providing economic and technical support to Kerensky's government.[23]

The war became increasingly unpopular with the Russian populace. Political and social unrest grew, with the Marxist antiwar Bolshevik Party, under Vladimir Lenin, increasing its support. Large numbers of common soldiers either mutinied or deserted from the Imperial Russian Army. The Kerensky Offensive started on 1 July  [O.S. 18 June]  1917, but a German and Austro-Hungarian counterattack defeated the Russian forces. This led to the collapse of the Eastern Front. The demoralised Russian Army stood on the verge of mutiny and most soldiers had deserted the front lines. Kerensky replaced Aleksei Brusilov with Lavr Kornilov as Commander-in-Chief of the Army (19 July 1917).

Kornilov attempted to set up a military dictatorship by staging a coup ( 10 September  [O.S. 27 August]  1917). He had the support of the British military attaché in Petrograd, Brigadier-General Alfred Knox, and Kerensky accused Knox of producing pro-Kornilov propaganda. Kerensky also claimed that Lord Milner, member of the British War Cabinet, wrote him a letter expressing support for Kornilov. A British armoured-car squadron commanded by Oliver Locker-Lampson and dressed in Russian uniforms participated in the failed coup.[25][26][27] The October Revolution of 7 November [O.S. 25 October]  1917 led to the overthrow of Kerensky's provisional government and to the Bolsheviks assuming power.

According to William Henry Chamberlin, "A few weeks after the Bolshevik Revolution, on December 23, 1917, an Anglo-French convention had been concluded in Paris, regulating the future operations of British and French forces on Russian territory. This convention defined as a British 'zone of influence' the Cossack regions, the territory of the Caucasus, Armenia, Georgia and Kurdistan, while the French zone was to consist of Bessarabia, Ukraina and Crimea. There was a certain economic background for this convention; British investment predominated in the Caucasian oil-fields, while the French were more interested in the coal and iron mines of Ukraina."[28]

Russia exits the war

In early 1918 forces of the Central Powers invaded Russia, occupying extensive territory[29] and threatening to capture Moscow and to impose pliant regimes. Lenin wanted to negotiate with Germany, but failed to get approval from his council until late February. In a desperate attempt to end the war, as promised in their slogan ‘Peace, Bread, Land’, the Russian Soviet Federative Socialist Republic signed the Treaty of Brest-Litovsk (3 March 1918), ending the bloodshed. The Allied Powers felt betrayed and turned against the new regime, aiding its "White" enemies and landing troops to prevent Russian supplies from reaching Germany.[30][verification needed] According to historian Spencer Tucker, the Allies believed the Bolsheviks wouldn't provide an orderly enough regime to stand up to German domination. "With Brest-Litovsk, the spectre of German domination in Eastern Europe threatened to become reality, and the Allies now began to think seriously about military intervention."[31]

The perception of betrayal removed whatever reservations the Allied Powers had about overthrowing the Bolsheviks. According to William Henry Chamberlin, even before Brest-Litovsk, "Downing Street contemplated a protectorate over the Caucasus and the Quai d'Orsay over Crimea, Bessarabia and Ukraine" and began negotiating deals for funding White generals to bring them into being. R. H. Bruce Lockhart and another British agent and a French official in Moscow tried to organize a coup that would overthrow the Bolshevik regime. They were dealing with double agents and were exposed and arrested.[32] French and British support for the Whites was also motivated by a desire to protect the assets they had acquired through extensive investment in Tsarist Russia.[33]

Czechoslovak Legions

 
Czechoslovak troops in Vladivostok (1918)

The Czechoslovak Legion was at times in control of most of the Trans-Siberian Railway and all major cities in Siberia. Austro-Hungarian prisoners were of a number of various nationalities; some Czechoslovak POWs deserted to the Russian Army. Czechoslovaks had long desired to create their own independent state, and the Russians aided in establishing special Czechoslovak units (the Czechoslovak Legions) to fight the Central Powers.

The signing of the Treaty of Brest-Litovsk ensured that prisoners-of-war (POW) would be repatriated. In 1917, the Bolsheviks stated that if the Czechoslovak Legions remained neutral and agreed to leave Russia, they would be granted safe passage through Siberia en route to France via Vladivostok to fight with the Allied forces on the Western Front. The Czechoslovak Legions travelled via the Trans-Siberian Railway to Vladivostok. However, fighting between the Legions and the Bolsheviks erupted in May 1918.

Allied concerns

The Allied Powers became concerned at the collapse of the Eastern Front and the loss of their Tsarist ally to communism, and there was also the question of the large quantities of supplies and equipment in Russian ports, which the Allied Powers feared might be seized by the Germans. Also worrisome to the Allied Powers was the April 1918 landing of a division of German troops in Finland, increasing speculation they might attempt to capture the Murmansk-Petrograd railway, and subsequently the strategic port of Murmansk and possibly Arkhangelsk. Other concerns regarded the potential destruction of the Czechoslovak Legions and the threat of Bolshevism, the nature of which worried many Allied governments. Meanwhile, Allied materiel in transit quickly accumulated in the warehouses in Arkhangelsk and Murmansk. Estonia had established a national army and, with the support of the British Royal Navy and Finnish volunteers, were defending against the 7th Red Army's attack.[34]

Faced with these events, the British and French governments decided upon an Allied military intervention in Russia. The first British landing in Russia came at the request of a local (Bolshevik) Soviet council. Fearing a German attack on the town, the Murmansk Soviet requested that the Allies landed troops for protection. British troops arrived on 4 March 1918, the day after the signing of the Treaty of Brest-Litovsk between Germany and the Bolshevik government.[35] In the summer of 1918, Leon Trotsky, the head of the Red Army, welcomed the arrival of British, American and French troops in Murmansk.[20]

 
American troops parading in Vladivostok, August 1918

Severely short of troops to spare, the British and French requested that President Wilson provide American soldiers for the campaign. In July 1918, against the advice of the United States Department of War, Wilson agreed to the limited participation of 5,000 United States Army troops in the campaign. This force, which became known as the "American North Russia Expeditionary Force"[36] (a.k.a. the Polar Bear Expedition) were sent to Arkhangelsk while another 8,000 soldiers, organised as the American Expeditionary Force Siberia,[37] were shipped to Vladivostok from the Philippines and from Camp Fremont in California.

That same month, the Canadian government agreed to the British government's request to command and provide most of the soldiers for a combined British Empire force, which also included Australian and Indian troops. Some of this force was the Canadian Siberian Expeditionary Force; another part was the North Russia Intervention. A Royal Navy squadron was sent to the Baltic under Rear-Admiral Edwyn Alexander-Sinclair. This force consisted of modern C-class cruisers and V and W-class destroyers. In December 1918, Sinclair sailed into Estonian and Latvian ports, sending in troops and supplies, and promising to attack the Bolsheviks "as far as my guns can reach". In January 1919, he was succeeded in command by Rear-Admiral Walter Cowan.

The Japanese, concerned about their northern border, sent the largest military force, numbering about 70,000. They desired the establishment of a buffer state in Siberia,[38] and the Imperial Japanese Army General Staff viewed the situation in Russia as an opportunity for settling Japan's "northern problem". The Japanese government was also intensely hostile to communism.

The Italians created the special "Corpo di Spedizione" with Alpini troops sent from Italy and ex-POWs of Italian ethnicity from the former Austro-Hungarian army who were recruited to the Italian Legione Redenta. They were initially based in the Italian Concession in Tientsin and numbered about 2,500.

However, while Soviet propaganda often portrayed Allied intervention as an alliance dedicated to crushing a nascent, worldwide communist revolution in the cradle, in reality the Allies were not particularly interested in intervention. While there were some loud voices in favour, such as Winston Churchill, these were very much in the minority. The main concern for the Allies was to defeat the German Empire on the Western Front. While the Bolshevik's repudiation of Russia's national debt and seizure of foreign-owned industries did cause tension, the main concern for the Allies was the Bolshevik's desire to get Russia out of the First World War. The Allies disliked the Whites, who were seen as nothing more than a small group of conservative nationalists who showed no signs of planning reform. Government ministers were also influenced by anti-White public opinion, which was being mobilised by trade unions. The low casualties suffered by the Allies is indicative of the low-level of their combat involvement. However, the Soviets were able to exploit the Allied intervention for propaganda purposes.[39][40][41][42]

Churchill, the loudest voice in favour of action, was a vehement anti-socialist and saw Bolshevism as socialism's worst form. As a result, he attempted to gain Allied support for intervention on ideological grounds.[43] Most of the British press were ideologically hostile to the Bolshevik regime, and supported the intervention. Many newspapers actively encouraged Allied intervention during the war.[44]

Foreign forces throughout Russia

 
The positions of the Allied expeditionary forces and of the White Armies in European Russia, 1919

Numbers of foreign soldiers who were present in the indicated regions of Russia:

Campaigns

North Russia

The First British involvement in the war was the landing in Murmansk in early March 1918. 170 British troops arrived on 4 March 1918, the day after the signing of the Treaty of Brest-Litovsk.[35] On 2 May, British troops took part in their first military engagement. A party of White Finns had captured the Russian town of Pechenga, and British marines fought alongside Red Guards to capture the area by 10 May with several casualties. In this first engagement, British troops had fought against a White force in support of the Red Army. In the following months, British forces in the area were largely engaged in small battles and skirmishes with White Finns.[35] However, Soviet–Allied relations were passing from distrust to open hostility. A Bolshevik force was sent to take control of the town up the Murmansk-Petrograd railway, but in a series of skirmishes the Allied forces repelled the attack. This was the first real fighting between the troops of the Allies and the Reds.[55] A trainload of Bolshevik troops was also found at Kandalaksha heading north, but the British managed to convince them to stop, before Serb reinforcements arrived and took over the train.[56]

 
Captured British Mark V tank in Arkhangelsk

In September, a force of 1,200 Italians arrived as well as small Canadian and French battalions. By early Autumn, British forces were also 6,000 strong.[57] On 2 August 1918, anti-Bolshevik forces, led by Tsarist Captain Georgi Chaplin, staged a coup against the local Soviet government at Archangelsk. General Poole had coordinated the coup with Chaplin.[58] Allied warships sailed into the port from the White Sea.[59] There was some resistance at first,[60] but 1,500 French and British troops soon occupied the city.[45] The Northern Region Government was established by Chaplin and popular revolutionary Nikolai Tchaikovsky.[61]

On the Murmansk front, the British 6th Royal Marine Light Infantry Battalion was ordered to seize the village of Koikori on 28 August as part of a wide offensive into East Karelia. The attack on the village was disorganized and resulted in three marines killed and 18 wounded.[62] An attack on Ussuna was also repulsed.[62] The next morning, faced with the prospect of another attack on the village, one Marine company refused to obey orders and withdrew themselves to a nearby friendly village. As a result, 93 men were sentenced to death and others received substantial sentences of hard labour. In December 1919, the government, under pressure from several MPs, revoked the sentence of death and considerably reduced the sentences of all the convicted men.[63]

On 4 September 1918 the promised American forces arrived. Three battalions of troops, supported by engineers and under the command of Colonel George Stewart, landed in Archangel. This force numbered 4,500 troops.[64] A British River Force of 11 monitors (HMS M33, HMS Fox and others), minesweepers, and Russian gunboats was formed to use the navigable waters at the juncture of the rivers Vaga and Northern Dvina. Some 30 Bolshevik gunboats, mines, and armed motor launches took their toll on the Allied forces.

The 2/10th Royal Scots cleared the triangle between the Dvina and Vaga and took a number of villages and prisoners. By late September, US Marines and 2/10th Royal Scots had reached Nijne-Toimski, which proved too strong for the lightly equipped Allied force. On 27 October, Allied forces were ambushed at Kulika near Topsa, losing at least 27 men killed and dozens wounded, a figure that could have been higher if it had not been for a detachment of Poles who bravely covered the retreat as others panicked.[65] The allied troops were mainly inactive in the winter of 1918, building blockhouses with only winter patrols sent out.[66] On the first occasion that White Russian troops were sent into the line of combat during the North Russian campaign, on 11 December 1918, the White Russian troops mutinied. The ringleaders were ordered to be shot by General Ironside.[67]

Within four months the Allied Powers' gains had shrunk by 30–50 kilometres (19–31 mi) along the Northern Dvina and Lake Onega area as Bolshevik attacks became more sustained. The Bolsheviks launched their largest offensive yet on Armistice Day 1918 along the Northern Divina front,[68] and there was heavy fighting at the Battle of Tulgas (Toulgas). When the news came through of the Armistice with Germany, many of the British troops in Archangel eagerly anticipated a quick withdrawal from North Russia, but their hopes were soon dashed.[69]

On 27 January 1919, word was received at Archangel that the Bolsheviks had fired poison gas shells at British positions on the Archangel-Vologda railway. The use of poison gas by the Bolsheviks was soon announced in the British press. The Bolsheviks would use poison gas shells against the British on at least two occasions in North Russia, although its effectiveness was limited.[70]

In the Murmansk sector, the British decided that the only way to achieve success in ejecting the Bolsheviks from power was by raising a large White Russian Army. However, recruitment and conscription attempts failed to provide a sizable enough force. It was therefore decided in February 1919 to move south to capture more populated areas from which recruits could be conscripted.[71] This would be the first significant action on the Murmansk front between the Allies and the Bolsheviks. Met with stiff opposition, the town of Segeja was captured and half the Red Army garrison was killed, wounded or taken prisoner. During the February offensive, the British forces pushed the Red Army beyond Soroko and as far south as Olimpi.[72] Despite an attempted Bolshevik counter-attack, by 20 February 3,000 square miles of territory had been taken.[73]

The furthest advance south on the northern front in early 1919 was an Allied Mission in Shenkursk on the Vaga River and Nizhnyaya Toyma on the Northern Dvina. The strategically important city of Shenkursk was described by British commander Ironside as 'the most important city in North Russia' after Archangel and he was determined to hold the line.[74] However, British and Allied troops were expelled from Shenkursk after an intense battle on 19–20 January 1919.[75] Over the following days, RAF aircraft flew several bombing and reconnaissance missions to support the withdrawal from Shenkursk.[76] The battle of Shenkursk was a key turning point in the campaign, and the Allied loss put them very much on the back foot for the next few months along the railway and Dvina fronts.[77]

On the railway front south of Archangel, the Allied forces were gradually advancing.[78] On 23 March, British and American troops attacked the village of Bolshie Ozerki, but the first wave of attackers were pushed back. The next day, 500 Bolsheviks attacked Shred Mekhrenga but were eventually repelled, with over 100 Red troops being killed despite the British suffering no fatal casualties.[79] Another Bolshevik attack was launched on Seltskoe, but that attack also failed. In total, the Bolsheviks lost 500 men in one day in the two attacks.[80]

Many of the British and foreign troops often refused to fight, and Bolshevik attacks were launched with the belief that some British troops may even defect to their side once their commanders had been killed. The numerous White mutinies demoralised Allied soldiers and affected morale.[81] The Allied forces were affected by their own mutinies, with the British Yorkshire Regiment and Royal Marines rebelling at points as well as American and Canadian forces.[81]

A major offensive was launched in May in the Murmansk sector. During the advance on Medvyeja-Gora on 15 May, the stubborn Bolshevik defence was only ended with a bayonet charge. British and Bolshevik armoured trains then traded blows as the British attempted to seize control of more of the local railway. The town was finally seized on 21 May, as Italians and French troops pushed forward with the British.[82] The May offensive never quite carried the Allies as far as the largest town in the region, Petrozavodsk.[83]

In April, public recruiting began at home in Britain for the newly created 'North Russian Relief Force', a voluntary force which had the claimed sole purpose of defending the existing British positions in Russia.[84] By the end of April 3,500 men had enlisted, and they were then sent to North Russia.[84] Public opinion regarding the formation of the force was mixed, with some newspapers being more supportive than others.[85] The relief force eventually arrived in North Russia in late May–June.[86]

 
Polish, British and French officers inspecting a detachment of Polish troops of so-called Murmansk Battalion before their departure for the front, Archangelsk 1919.

On 25 April a White Russian battalion mutinied, and, after 300 men went over to the Bolsheviks, they turned and attacked the Allied troops at Tulgas.[87] In May and June, the units of the original British force which had arrived in Archangel in August and September 1918 finally received orders for home.[88] In early June the French troops were withdrawn and the Royal Marines detachment was also sent home, followed by all Canadian troops after it was requested that they be repatriated. All remaining American troops also left for home.[89] The Serbian troops (perhaps Maynard's best infantry fighters) became unreliable as others withdrew around them.[90] By 3 July, the Italian company was on the verge of mutiny as its men were seriously disaffected with their continued presence in Russia so long after the Armistice. In mid July, the two companies of American railway troops were also withdrawn. The French and American troops stationed in the north were similarly reluctant to fight, and French troops in Archangel refused to take part in any action that was not merely defensive.[91] Despite being told when volunteering that they were only to be used for defensive purposes, plans were made in June to use the men of the North Russian Relief Force in a new offensive aimed at capturing the key city of Kotlas and linking up with Kolchak's White forces in Siberia.[92] The villages of Topsa and Troitsa were attacked in anticipation of this action, with 150 Bolsheviks being killed and 450 being captured.[93] However, with Kolchak's forces being pushed back rapidly, the Kotlas offensive was cancelled.[94]

In early July 1919 another White unit under British command mutinied and killed its British officers, with 100 men then deserting to the Bolsheviks.[95] Another White mutiny was foiled later in the month by Australian troops.[96] On 20 July, 3,000 White troops in the key city of Onega mutinied and handed over the city to the Bolsheviks. The loss of the city was a significant blow to the Allied forces as it was the only overland route available for the transfer of supplies and men between the Murmansk and Arkhangel theatres.[97] This event led to the British losing all remaining trust for the Whites and contributed to the desire to withdraw.[97] Attempts were soon made to retake the city, but in a failed attack in late July the British had to force detachments of White forces to land at gunpoint in the city, since they were adamant that they would not take part in any fighting.[98] On one Allied ship, 5 Bolshevik prisoners captured in battle even managed to temporarily subdue the 200 White Russians on board and take control of the ship with little resistance.[99] Despite the Allied setbacks, a battalion of marines, the 6th Royal Marine Light Infantry, was sent to assist the British at the end of July.[100]

The final two months on the Dvina front, August and September 1919, would see some of the fiercest fighting between British and Red Army troops of the Civil War.[101] In August, a major offensive was launched along the Dvina to try and strike a blow at Bolshevik morale and to increase the morale of the White forces before a withdrawal.[101] As part of this, an attack was made on the village of Gorodok. During the attack, 750 Bolshevik prisoners were taken, and one battery was found to have been manned by German troops.[102] The village of Seltso was also attacked, but a strong Bolshevik defence halted any British progress.[103] However, the villages of Kochamika, Jinta, Lipovets and Zaniskaya were captured with little resistance. In total the offensive led to the deaths of around 700 Reds and was considered a success.[104]

A final offensive on the Murmansk front was launched by the Allied forces in September, aimed at destroying the Bolshevik forces to leave the White forces in a good position after the planned withdrawal.[105] Serbian forces supported the British as they attempted to push on to the Bolshevik villages of Koikori and Ussuna and attack Konchozero.[105] However, the defences at Koikori and Ussuna were much stronger than expected, and the attacks failed.[106] The Serbs and White Russian forces attacked again on 11 and 14 September, but these attacks also failed.[107] However, the British did manage to reach the Nurmis river by 18 September, with 9,000 troops, including 6,000 White Russians, participating in this final offensive.[107]

On 22 September, with the Allied withdrawal already ongoing, a British detachment from the Royal Scots was sent by river to Kandalaksha on four fishing boats to stop sabotage operations carried out by Finnish Bolsheviks against the railway there. The British party was ambushed even before landing and suffered heavy casualties, with 13 men killed and 4 wounded. Consequently, the unopposed Bolsheviks destroyed a number of bridges, delaying the evacuation for a time.[107][108] One of the fatalities, a private from Ormesby, Yorkshire, who succumbed to his injuries on 26 September, was the last British servicemen to die in action in Northern Russia.[108]

By this point, British troops had started withdrawing to Archangel in order to prepare themselves for the evacuation of North Russia.[109] On the morning of September 27, 1919, the last Allied troops departed from Archangel, and on October 12, Murmansk was abandoned.

Baltics and Northwestern Russia

 
Russian Civil War in the west in 1918–19

Although the Estonian Army had attained control over its country, the opposing 7th and Estonian Red Armies were still active. The Estonian High Command decided to invade across the border into Russia in support of the White Russian Northern Corps. They went on offensive at Narva, catching the Soviets by surprise and destroying their 6th Division.[113] Estonian and White attacks were supported along the Gulf of Finland's coast by the Royal Navy and the Estonian Navy and marines. On the night of 4 December, the cruiser HMS Cassandra struck a German-laid mine while on patrol duties north of Liepāja, and sank with the loss of 11 of her crew. At this time, the new Estonian government was weak and desperate. The Estonian Prime Minister asked Britain to send military forces to defend his capital, and even requested that his state be declared a British protectorate. The British would not meet these pleas.[114]

British cruisers and destroyers soon sailed up the coast close to the Estonian–Russian border and laid down a devastating barrage on the advancing Bolsheviks' supply lines.[114] On 26 December, British warships captured the Bolshevik destroyers Avtroil and Spartak,[115] which at the time were shelling the port of Tallinn. Both units were presented to the Estonian Provisional Government and, as Lennuk and Vambola, formed the nucleus of the Estonian Navy.

The Estonian Pskov offensive commenced simultaneously on 13 May 1919. Its Petseri Battle Group destroyed the Estonian Red Army, captured the town on 25 May, and cleared the territory between Estonia and the Velikaya River.[116] A few days later, the Northern Corps forces arrived in Pskov. On 19 June 1919, the Estonian Commander-in-Chief Johan Laidoner rescinded his command over the White Russians, and they were renamed the Northwestern Army. Shortly afterward, General Nikolai N. Yudenich took command of the troops.[113]

With the front approaching, the garrison of the Krasnaya Gorka fort mutinied.[117] To support the mutiny, a flotilla of British Coastal Motor Boats under the command of Lieutenant Augustus Agar raided Kronstadt Harbour, sinking the cruiser Oleg and the depot ship Pamiat Azova on 17 June 1919.[118][119][120][121] In a second attack in August, the Bolshevik battleships Petropavlovsk and Andrei Pervozvanny were damaged, at the cost of three CMBs.[122][119][121] The attackers also managed to sink the important Russian submarine depot ship.[123] Despite the actions, the mutiny was eventually suppressed by the 12 in (300 mm) guns of the Bolshevik battleships.

The next offensive of the Northwestern Army was planned on 10 July 1919, but the armaments and supplies expected from the Allies did not arrive. Nor did the Estonians desire to proceed with the fruitless war since with the initial peace approach of April 1919 the Russian Bolshevik government already guaranteed the recognition of the independent Estonian state. So when British Gen. Gough requested on 8 August Estonians for the military assistance to Yudenich, Estonians in return asked both Yudenich and the Allies to recognise their state first. Gough's deputy, Brigadier Gen. Frank Marsh required Yudenich to immediately issue a statute that would establish the Government of the North-West Russian Region[124] encompassing Petrograd, Pskov and Novgorod Governorates that would officially guarantee de jure recognition of Estonia. On 16 August Times made the deal public that angered the Foreign Office and the War Cabinet, and caused a decline in further military aid to Yudenich.[125]

However, the Northwestern Army launched operation White Sword, the last major effort to capture Petrograd on 9 October, with arms provided by Britain and France, and the operational support by the Estonian Army, Estonian Navy, and the Royal Navy.[34] Securing Petrograd for the White forces was one of the main goals of the campaign for the British.[126] The Estonian and British forces made a joint land and naval attack against Krasnaya Gorka, while the Estonian 2nd Division attempted to throw the 10th Red Division across the Velikaya, and the 3rd Division attacked toward Pytalovo and Ostrov. The Northwestern Army approached to within 16 km (10 mi) of Petrograd, but the Red Army repulsed them back to the Narva River.[116] Distrustful of the White Russians, the Estonian High Command disarmed and interned the remains of the Northwestern Army that retreated behind the state border.[127] With the failure to capture Petrograd, the British had failed to achieve one of their main goals.

Significant unrest took place among British sailors in the Baltic.[126] This included small-scale mutinies amongst the crews of HMS Vindictive, Delhi – the latter due in part to the behaviour of Admiral Cowan – and other ships stationed in Björkö Sound. The causes were a general war-weariness (many of the crews had fought in World War I), poor food and accommodation, a lack of leave, and the effects of Bolshevik propaganda.[128]

In total, the British lost 128 men in the Baltic campaign, with at least 27 also being wounded and 9 being captured.[129] Britain committed around 90 ships to the campaign, and of this number 17 ships were lost and around 70 were damaged.[129]

Southern Russia and Ukraine

On 18 December 1918, a month after the armistice, the French landed in Odessa and Sevastopol. In Odessa, a 7-hour battle ensued between the French and the forces of the Ukrainian People's Republic before they gained full control of the city.[21] The landings began the intervention in southern Russia (later Ukraine) which was to aid and supply General Denikin's White Army forces, the Volunteer Army, fighting the Bolsheviks there. The campaign involved mainly French, Greek and Polish troops. The morale of the French troops and the sailors of their fleet in the Black Sea was always low, and most wanted to be demobilised and sent home. The morale of the Greek and Polish interventionist forces was no better.[130] A local warlord, Otaman Nykyfor Hryhoriv, aligned himself with the Bolsheviks on 18 February 1919 and advanced his army against the foreign invaders. With his army of 10–12,000 men, he first attacked allied-held Kherson on 2 March which was occupied by just 150 French, 700 Greek and a few hundred Volunteers of questionable reliability. After heavy fighting, the city was taken on 9 March. The French lost 4 killed and 22 wounded, while the Greeks had some 250 casualties. Local Greek residents were also killed in the aftermath. After the conquest of Kherson, Hryhoriv turned his forces against Nikolaev, where there were even less allied troops present. There were still 12,000 well equipped German troops in the city, but they had no intention to participate in the fighting. The local French commander was allowed to negotiate a truce with Hryhoriv, and on 14–16 March all allied and German troops were evacuated by sea without any fighting, leaving considerable quantities of war material behind.

By April 1919, the troops were withdrawn from Odessa after further threats from Nykyfor Hryhoriv's Army,[131] before the defeat of the White Army's march against Moscow. A major mutiny amongst French sailors on the Black Sea had in part necessitated the withdrawal. Some British sailors dispatched to the Black Sea had also mutinied.[132] The last Allied troops left Crimea on 29 April 1919.

General Wrangel reorganized his army in the Crimea; however, with the deteriorating situation, he and his soldiers fled Russia aboard Allied ships on 14 November 1920.

Bessarabia

After the Bolshevik forces of the Rumcherod attacked the region of Bessarabia, the Romanian government of Ion I. C. Brătianu decided to intervene, and on January 26 [O.S. January 13] 1918, the 11th Infantry Division under General Ernest Broșteanu entered Chișinău. The Bolshevik troops retreated to Tighina, and after a battle retreated further beyond the Dniester.[133] The battle of Tighina was one of the two significant engagements of the 1918 Bessarabian Campaign. It lasted for five days, between 20 and 25 January, and ended in a Romanian victory, albeit with significant Romanian casualties (141 dead). Romanian troops captured 800 guns.[134]

 
Russud-class vessel

The second important battle was fought at Vâlcov, between 27 January and 3 February. The actions of Bolshevik warships (including three Donetsk-class gunboats), managed to delay the Romanians for several days, but the ships had to retreat on 3 February due to no longer being able to adjust and correct their aiming, after Romanian artillery destroyed the shore-based Bolshevik artillery observation posts. Later that day, Romanian troops occupied Vâlcov. The Romanians captured the Russud-class landing craft K-2 as well as several more barges armed with a total of eight 152 mm Obuchov guns.[135][136][137]

Siberia

 
A Japanese lithograph showing troops occupying Blagoveschensk

The joint Allied intervention began in August 1918.[38] Britain sent a 1,800-strong unit to Siberia commanded by Labour Party MP and trade union leader Lieutenant Colonel John Ward, which was the first Allied force to land in Vladivostok on 3 August.[138] The Japanese entered through Vladivostok and points along the China–Russia border with more than 70,000 troops eventually being deployed. The Japanese were joined by American, Canadian, French, and Italian troops. Elements of the Czechoslovak Legion[139] which had reached Vladivostok greeted the Allied forces. The Americans deployed the 27th Infantry and 31st Infantry regiments out of the Philippines, plus elements of the 12th, 13th and 62nd Infantry Regiments out of Camp Fremont.[140] Chinese troops were also sent to Vladivostok by the Beiyang government partly to protect Chinese merchants there.[11]

The Japanese were expected to send only around 7,000 troops for the expedition, but by the end of their involvement in Siberia had deployed 70,000. The deployment of such a large force for a rescue operation made the Allied Powers wary of Japanese intentions.[141] On 5 September, the Japanese linked up with the vanguard of the Czech Legion,[141] a few days later the British, Italian and French contingents joined the Czechs in an effort to re-establish the Eastern Front beyond the Urals; as a result the European Allied Powers trekked westward.[141] The Canadians largely remained in Vladivostok for the duration. The Japanese, with their own objectives in mind, refused to proceed west of Lake Baikal.[141] The Americans, suspicious of Japanese intentions, also stayed behind to keep an eye on them.[141] By November, the Japanese occupied all ports and major towns in the Russian Maritime Provinces and Siberia east of the city of Chita.[141]

The Allied Powers lent their support to White Russian elements from the summer of 1918.[141] There were tensions between the two anti-Bolshevik factions, the White Russian government led by Admiral Alexander Kolchak and the Cossacks led by Grigory Semyonov and Ivan Kalmykov, which also hampered efforts. The Allied forces originally took over from some front-line White forces and helped hold the line against the Bolsheviks in the far-east. The British unit helped defend the line at Kraevesk. Outnumbered and outgunned, the small Allied forces were forced to withdraw. Two British armoured trains with two 12-pounder naval guns and two machine guns each were sent from Vladivostok as reinforcements.[142] Operating under a Japanese commander, the small British unit and other Allied forces played a small but important part in the battle of Dukhovskaya on 23–24 August 1918. Five Bolshevik armed trains were attacked, supported by the British forces' own two armoured trains, and there were 600 Japanese casualties. This limited but decisive action eliminated organised Bolshevik resistance on the Ussuri front.[143]

By the end of October, the British force had finished its journey West from Vladivostok all the way to the front lines at Omsk. The unit stayed in the city for the next six months over the cold Siberian winter.[144] It may have played a role in the coup in the city in November 1918 which brought Admiral Kolchack to power as 'Supreme Leader' of Russia.[145] The force went forward with the advancing Czechs and Russians and continued to provide artillery support along the railway from Omsk to Ufa in October and November.[146] The British would later form an important part of the 'Kama River Flotilla', a boat unit that assisted the Whites by attacking the Bolshevik forces along the course of the river. They bombarded Red troop concentrations, protected bridges and provided direct fire support and attacked Bolshevik boats on the river. In one action, the flotilla sank the Bolshevik flagship on the river and destroyed one other boat. They were later driven back by the Bolshevik advance on Perm.[147]

The small British force was withdrawn in the summer of 1919.[47] All remaining Allied forces were evacuated in 1920, apart from the Japanese who stayed until 1922.

Caucasus

 
Indian troops at a Persian well in Baku, 1917.

In 1917, Dunsterforce, an Allied military mission of under 1,000 Australian, British, and Canadian troops (drawn from the Mesopotamian and Western Fronts), accompanied by armoured cars, deployed from Hamadan some 350 km (220 mi) across Qajar Persia. It was named after its commander General Lionel Dunsterville. Its mission was to gather information, train and command local forces, and prevent the spread of German propaganda.[148]

Later on, Dunsterville was told to take and protect the city of Baku and its oil fields. During the early stages of the Russian Civil War the Caucasus region was governed by three de facto independent states, the Menshevik-dominated Democratic Republic of Georgia, the Republic of Armenia and the Azerbaijan Democratic Republic, and the main White Russian forces had no real control.[149] The British feared that Baku could be captured by the Ottoman Empire, since their forces in the area were advancing, and if they gained control of the fleet in the port they could transport troops to the city of Krasnovodsk directly across the Caspian Sea from Baku. This action would open Central Asia to the Turks and give them access to British-controlled India through Afghanistan.[150]

 
Indian troops at a parade in Batum to mark the Allied evacuation, 1920.

The British landed in Baku on 17 August 1918.[151] The British force was at this time 1,200 men strong.[152] Dunsterforce was initially delayed by 3,000 Russian Bolshevik troops at Enzeli but then proceeded by ship to Baku on the Caspian Sea. This was the primary target for the advancing Ottoman forces and Dunsterforce endured a short, brutal siege in September 1918. The British held out for the first two weeks of September, inflicting heavy casualties on the enemy. A final Turkish attack on 14 September lasted until sunset, and, facing an overwhelmingly larger force, the British were forced to withdraw. The troops escaped from the port on three waiting ships on the same day.[153] In total, the battle for Baku had resulted in around 200 British casualties, including 95 dead.[154][15]

However, having been defeated in World War I, the Ottoman Empire had to withdraw its forces from the borders of Azerbaijan in the middle of November 1918. Headed by General William Thomson, a British force of 1,600 troops[155] arrived in Baku on 17 November, and martial law was implemented on the capital of Azerbaijan Democratic Republic until "the civil power would be strong enough to release the forces from the responsibility to maintain the public order". There were also British occupations of the Georgian cities of Tiflis and Batum in Georgia, along with the full length of the Baku-Batum railway, since the British wanted to protect this strategic line which connected the Black Sea and the Caspian Sea.[156] By January 1919, the British presence was 40,000 strong, the largest of all British intervention contingents in Russia.[9] Again, these British occupations of territory in the Caucasus were in part motivated by a desire to 'protect India's flank' and secure the local oilfields, but they were also motivated by a desire to support the three new independent states and supervise the German and Ottoman withdrawal.[145] The British forces served only a defensive purpose and were withdrawn in the summer of 1919, as regular troops were needed elsewhere and others were long overdue for demobilisation after the Armistice that ended the First World War.[157] The last British forces left Baku on 24 August.[158]

Trans-Caspian Campaign

With the British fearing that German and Ottoman forces may penetrate into Russian central Asia, possibly via a crossing of the Caspian sea to the key port of Krasnovodsk, the Trans-Caspian area became an area of interest.[159] Allied military action began on 11 August 1918, when General Malleson intervened in support of the Ashkhabad Executive Committee, who had ousted the Tashkent Soviet Bolsheviks from the western end of the Trans-Caspian Railway in July 1918 and had taken control of Krasnovodsk.[160] Malleson had been authorised to intervene with Empire and British troops, in what would be referred to as the Malleson mission. He sent the Machine Gun Section of the 19th Punjabi Rifles to Baýramaly located on the Trans-Caspian railway. On 28 August, the Bolsheviks attacked Kushkh on the Afgan border but were repulsed, with 3 officers and 24 rank and file being killed or wounded. 2 British liaison officers were shot from behind as they advanced, presumably treacherously.[161] There was further action at Kaka on 28 August as well as 11 and 18 September. The British forces were reinforced on 25 September by two squadrons of the 28th Light Cavalry. At this point, Malleson, against the wishes of the Indian Government, decided to push further into Transcaspia and attack the Bolsheviks. Fighting alongside Trans-Caspian troops, they subsequently fought at Arman Sagad (between 9 and 11 October) and Dushak (14 October). At Dushak, the British force suffered 54+ killed and 150+ wounded while inflicting 1,000 casualties on the Bolsheviks.[162] British attacks continued to inflict heavy losses on Bolshevik forces.[160]

By 1 November, the British force had re-occupied Merv and on instructions of the British government, halted their advance and took up defensive positions at Bairam Ali. The Trans-Caspian forces continued to attack the Bolsheviks to the north. After the Trans-Caspian forces were routed at Uch Aji, their commander Colonel Knollys sent the 28th Cavalry to their support at Annenkovo. In January 1919, one company of the 19th Punjabi Rifles was sent to reinforce the position at Annenkovo, where a second battle took place on 16 January that resulted in 48 casualties.[163] During February, the British continued to inflict heavy losses on Bolshevik forces.[164] The British Government had decided on 21 January to withdraw the force, and the last troops left for Persia on 5 April.[165]

Aftermath

According to John Bradley, the Allied intervention, which treated White generals as "servile satellites" with little independence, gave the White generals' a reputation as "undignified puppets". This caused the White movement to be discredited while the Bolsheviks appeared more independent and patriotic, driving former Imperial military leaders into joining the Bolsheviks instead.[166][167] The Allied intervention helped to bolster the Bolsheviks, as they also successfully used this to attack the Whites and paint themselves in a positive light.[168]

Allied withdrawal

The Allied Powers withdrew in 1920. The Japanese military stayed in the Maritime Provinces of the Russian Far East until 1922 and in northern Sakhalin until 1925, following the signing of the Soviet–Japanese Basic Convention in Beijing, in which Japan agreed to withdraw its troops from Russia. In return, the Soviet Union agreed to honor the provisions of the Treaty of Portsmouth.[51][169]

Assessment by historians

In 1957, Frederick L. Schuman wrote that the consequences of the expedition "were to poison East-West relations forever after, to contribute significantly to the origins of World War II and the later 'Cold War,' and to fix patterns of suspicion and hatred on both sides which even today threaten worse catastrophes in time to come."[170] For Soviet leaders, the operation was proof that Western powers were keen to destroy the Soviet government if they had the opportunity to do so.[171] Modern historian Robert Maddox summarised, "The immediate effect of the intervention was to prolong a bloody civil war, thereby costing thousands of additional lives and wreaking enormous destruction on an already battered society."[172]

Historian John Thompson argues that while the intervention failed to stop the Bolshevik revolution in Russia, it did prevent its spread to central Europe:[173]

However, it did succeed in so thoroughly engaging the forces of revolutionary expansionism that the countries of war-torn eastern and central Europe, potentially most susceptible to the Bolshevik contagion, were able to recover enough social and economic balance to withstand Bolshevism. The interventionist attempt left an ugly legacy of fear and suspicion to future relations between Russia and the other great powers, and it strengthened the hand of those among the Bolshevik leadership who were striving to impose monolithic unity and unquestioning obedience on the Russian people.

Legacy

According to Sheldon M. Stern, Stalinist propaganda later portrayed the Allied intervention as a U.S. military invasion of Russia while denying or minimizing the American famine relief effort that saved millions of Russian lives during 1921–1923.[174]

Winston Churchill, who had been the most prominent supporter of a campaign to remove the Bolsheviks from power, long lamented the Allies' failure to crush the Soviet state in its infancy. This was especially the case during the breakdown of western-Soviet relations in the aftermath of World War II and the start of the Cold War. In 1949, Churchill stated to the British parliament:

I think the day will come when it will be recognized without doubt, not only on one side of the House, but throughout the civilized world, that the strangling of Bolshevism at its birth would have been an untold blessing to the human race.[175]

In a further speech at the National Press Club, Washington D.C. in June 1954, Churchill lamented:

If I had been properly supported in 1919, I think we might have strangled Bolshevism in its cradle, but everybody turned up their hands and said, ‘How shocking!’[176]

See also

References

  1. ^ Scientia Militaria: South African Journal of Military Studies, Vol 15, Nr 4, 1985, pp. 46–48. Accessed January 24, 2016.
  2. ^ "Britain and the Russian Civil War". University of Warwick.
  3. ^ "Western intervention during the Russian Civil War". Historiana.
  4. ^ "The March of the Japanese Army at Vladivostok City". 1919.
  5. ^ "Japan and Union of Soviet Socialist Republics – Convention embodying basic rules of the Relations between Japan and the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics, together with Protocols a and B, Declaration, Exchange of Notes, Annexed Note and Protocol of Signature. Peking, January 20, 1925 [1925] LNTSer 69; 34 LNTS 31".
  6. ^ Wright 2017, p. 302.
  7. ^ Kinvig 2006, pp. 297, 304.
  8. ^ a b Sargent 2004, p. 33.
  9. ^ a b c Winegard 2016, p. 229.
  10. ^ Wright 2017, pp. 305–306, 394, 526–528, 530–535.
  11. ^ a b c Joana Breidenbach (2005). Pál Nyíri, Joana Breidenbach, ed. China inside out: contemporary Chinese nationalism and transnationalism (illustrated ed.). Central European University Press. p. 90. ISBN 9637326146. Retrieved 18 March 2012. "At the end of the year 1918, after the Russian Revolution, the Chinese merchants in the Russian Far East demanded the Chinese government to send troops for their protection, and Chinese troops were sent to Vladivostok to protect the Chinese community: about 1600 soldiers and 700 support personnel."
  12. ^ Bradley, Czechoslovak Legion, 156.
  13. ^ Kinvig 2006, pp. 289, 315.
  14. ^ Wright 2017, pp. 490–492, 498–500, 504.
  15. ^ a b Winegard 2016, p. 208.
  16. ^ See also Malleson Mission – Casualties
  17. ^ a b Robert L. Willett, "Russian Sideshow" (Washington, D.C., Brassey's Inc., 2003), p. 267
  18. ^ https://dis.army.gr/sites/dis.army.gr/files/unmanaged/pdf/Articles_June14/Greek_French/EKSTR_MESHM_ROSIA_1919.pdf[bare URL PDF]
  19. ^ Siegfried Breyer, Soviet Warship Development: 1917–1937, Conway Maritime Press, 1992, p. 98[ISBN missing]
  20. ^ a b c d Lincoln E. Flake (19 December 2019). "'Nonsense From the Beginning' — Allied Intervention in Russia's Civil War at 100: Historical Perspectives from Combatant Countries". The Journal of Slavic Military Studies. ISSN 1351-8046. Wikidata Q116739770.
  21. ^ a b Kenez, Peter (1977). Civil War in South Russia, 1919–1920: The Defeat of the Whites. Hoover Institution on War, Revolution, and Peace. p. 182. ISBN 978-0520033467.
  22. ^ Mawdsley 2007, pp. 54–55.
  23. ^ a b c Beyer, Rick (2003). The Greatest Stories Never Told. A&E Television Networks / The History Channel. pp. 152–53. ISBN 0060014016.
  24. ^ Richard, Carl J. (2013) [2012]. When the United States Invaded Russia: Woodrow Wilson's Siberian Disaster. Rowman & Littlefield. pp. ix–x. ISBN 978-1442219892. Retrieved 28 August 2022. By contrast with their American counterparts, Soviet historians devote tremendous attention to the Siberian intervention during the Cold War. These historians contended that the United States was the instigator of the intervention, bullying its allies in a single-minded crusade to overthrow the Soviet government. They claimed that the United States attempted to partition Russia into a number of small states in order to restrict its power.
  25. ^ Intervention and the War by Richard Ullman, Princeton University Press, 1961, pp. 11–13
  26. ^ Keith Neilson, Strategy and Supply (RLE The First World War): The Anglo-Russian Alliance (Routledge, 2014), pp. 282–290
  27. ^ Michael Hughes, Inside the Enigma: British Officials in Russia, 1900–39 (Bloomsbury, 2006), pp. 111–114
  28. ^ Chamberlin, William (1935). The Russian Revolution, 1917-1921, Volume Two. New York: The Macmillan Company. pp. 153–154.
  29. ^ Intervention of the Central Powers in Russia [ru]
  30. ^ Robert Service (2000). Lenin: A Biography. p. 342. ISBN 978-0330476331.
  31. ^ Spencer C. Tucker (2013). The European Powers in the First World War: An Encyclopedia. p. 608. ISBN 978-1135506940.
  32. ^ John W. Long, "Plot and counter‐plot in revolutionary Russia: Chronicling the Bruce Lockhart conspiracy, 1918." Intelligence and National Security 10#1 (1995): 122–143.
  33. ^ Kalypso Nicolaïdis; Berny Sebe; Gabrielle Maas (2014). Echoes of Empire: Memory, Identity and Colonial Legacies. Bloomsbury Publishing. p. 131. ISBN 978-0857726292.
  34. ^ a b c Jaan Maide (1933). Ülevaade Eesti vabadussõjast 1918–1920 (Estonian War of Independence 1918–1920: Overview) (in Estonian). Tallinn: Estonian Defence League.
  35. ^ a b c Wright 2017, p. [page needed].
  36. ^ a b E.M. Halliday, When Hell Froze Over (New York City, ibooks, inc., 2000), p. 44
  37. ^ a b Robert L. Willett, Russian Sideshow, pp. 166–167, 170
  38. ^ a b Humphreys, The Way of the Heavenly Sword: The Japanese Army in the 1920s, p. 25
  39. ^ Lee, Stephen J. European Dictatorships 1918–1945. Routledge, 2012, p. 49
  40. ^ "Much Ado About Nothing: Allied Intervention in the Russian Civil War" in Nelson, Lynn H., and George Laughead. "WWW-VL Military History." (2001).
  41. ^ Mawdsley 2007, p. [page needed].
  42. ^ Swain, Geoffrey. The Origins of the Russian Civil War. Routledge, 2013.
  43. ^ Best, Geoffrey; Best, Senior Associate Member Geoffrey (2005). Churchill and War. Bloomsbury Academic. pp. 94–95. ISBN 978-1852854645.
  44. ^ Alston, Charlotte (1 June 2007). "British Journalism and the Campaign for Intervention in the Russian Civil War, 1918–20". Revolutionary Russia. 20 (1): 35–49. doi:10.1080/09546540701314343. ISSN 0954-6545. S2CID 219717886.
  45. ^ a b Kinvig 2006, p. 35.
  46. ^ Wright 2017, pp. 526–528, 530–535.
  47. ^ a b Kinvig 2006, p. 297.
  48. ^ Polivțev, Vladimir (2017). "На защите завоеваний революции и воссоздаваемой Молдавской Государственности (1917–1918 гг.)" [Protecting the Conquests of the Revolution and the Restruction of Moldovan Statehood (1917–1918)] (PDF). In Beniuc, Valentin; et al. (eds.). Statalitatea Moldovei: continuitatea istorică și perspectiva dezvoltării. Chișinău: International Relations Institute of Moldova. pp. 354–391. ISBN 978-9975564397.
  49. ^ Maltsev, Denis (2011). [The Bessarabian Question during the period of the Russian Civil War] (PDF). Problemy Nationalnoy Strategii (in Russian). 4 (9): 162–183. Archived from the original (PDF) on 25 July 2020. Retrieved 16 May 2020.
  50. ^ Olson, John Stuart; Pappas, Lee Brigance; Pappas, Nicholas Charles (1994). An Ethnohistorical Dictionary of the Russian and Soviet Empires. Greenwood Publishing. p. 273.
  51. ^ a b A History of Russia, 7th Edition, Nichlas V. Riasanovsky & Mark D. Steinberg, Oxford University Press, 2005.
  52. ^ www.esercito.difesa.it
  53. ^ Grey, Jeffrey (October 1985). "A 'Pathetic Sideshow': Australians and the Russian Intervention, 1918–19". Journal of the Australian War Memorial. Canberra: Australian War Memorial. 7. ISSN 0729-6274
  54. ^ Moffat, Ian C. D. "Forgotten Battlefields – Canadians in Siberia 1918–1919". Canadian Military Journal. Department of National Defence. Retrieved 8 April 2017.
  55. ^ Mawdsley 2007, p. 91.
  56. ^ Kinvig 2006, p. 26.
  57. ^ Kinvig 2006, p. 115.
  58. ^ Kinvig 2006, p. 29.
  59. ^ David S. Foglesong (2014), "Fighting, But Not At War", America's Secret War Against Bolshevism: U.S. Intervention in the Russian Civil War 1917–1920, ISBN 978-1469611136
  60. ^ Kinvig 2006, p. 34.
  61. ^ Kinvig 2006, p. 38.
  62. ^ a b Kinvig 2006, pp. 259–262.
  63. ^ Obituary: Brigadier Roy Smith-Hill, The Times, August 21, 1996
  64. ^ Kinvig 2006, p. 40.
  65. ^ Wright 2017, p. 147.
  66. ^ A. Michael Brander, Famous Regiments Series: The Royal Scots (The Royal Regiment), London: Leo Cooper, 1976, ISBN 0850521831, pp. 75–78.
  67. ^ Balbirnie 2016, pp. 131–132.
  68. ^ Kinvig 2006, p. 123.
  69. ^ Wright 2017, p. 149.
  70. ^ Wright 2017, p. 213.
  71. ^ Wright 2017, p. 38.
  72. ^ Kinvig 2006, p. 121.
  73. ^ Wright 2017, pp. 43–50.
  74. ^ Wright 2017, p. 190.
  75. ^ Kinvig 2006, pp. 125–126.
  76. ^ Wright 2017, pp. 193–194.
  77. ^ Wright 2017, p. 215.
  78. ^ Wright 2017, p. 165.
  79. ^ Wright 2017, p. 167.
  80. ^ Wright 2017, p. 168.
  81. ^ a b Balbirnie 2016, p. 130.
  82. ^ Wright 2017, pp. 62–66.
  83. ^ Mawdsley 2007, p. 257.
  84. ^ a b Kinvig 2006, pp. 180–181.
  85. ^ Wright 2017, p. 218.
  86. ^ Wright 2017, pp. 223–225.
  87. ^ Kinvig 2006, p. 185.
  88. ^ Wright 2017, p. 217.
  89. ^ Wright 2017, p. 229.
  90. ^ Kinvig 2006, p. 178.
  91. ^ Wright 2017, p. 129.
  92. ^ Kinvig 2006, pp. 191–192.
  93. ^ Kinvig 2006, p. 193.
  94. ^ Kinvig 2006, p. 198.
  95. ^ Balbirnie 2016, p. 136.
  96. ^ Wright 2017, p. 174.
  97. ^ a b Balbirnie 2016, p. 142.
  98. ^ Wright 2017, p. 170.
  99. ^ Wright 2017, p. 171.
  100. ^ Kinvig 2006, p. 255.
  101. ^ a b Wright 2017, p. 253.
  102. ^ Kinvig 2006, pp. 241–242.
  103. ^ Wright 2017, p. 264.
  104. ^ Wright 2017, p. 278.
  105. ^ a b Kinvig 2006, pp. 258–259.
  106. ^ Kinvig 2006, pp. 261–262.
  107. ^ a b c Kinvig 2006, p. 265.
  108. ^ a b Wright 2017, p. 131.
  109. ^ Wright 2017, pp. 291–292.
  110. ^ The British 6th Battalion Royal Marines Light Infantry (RMLI) was scratched together from a company of the Royal Marine Artillery and companies from each of the three naval port depots. Very few of their officers had seen any land fighting. Their original purpose had been only to deploy to Flensburg to supervise a vote to decide whether northern Schleswig-Holstein should remain German or be given to Denmark. Many of the Marines were less than 19 years old; it would have been unusual to send them overseas. Others were ex-prisoners of war who had only recently returned from Germany and had no home leave. There was outrage when on short notice, the 6th Battalion was shipped to Murmansk, Russia, on the Arctic Ocean, to assist in the withdrawal of British forces. Still not expecting to have to fight, the battalion was ordered forward under army command to hold certain outposts.
  111. ^ "British Military Aviation in 1918 – Part 2". Rafmuseum.org. 6 June 1918. Archived from the original on 30 June 2012. Retrieved 28 April 2012.
  112. ^ Bowyer, Chaz (1988). RAF Operations 1918–1938. London: William Kimber. p. 38. ISBN 0718306716.
  113. ^ a b Traksmaa, August: Lühike vabadussõja ajalugu, p. 141. Olion, 1992, ISBN 5450013256
  114. ^ a b Kinvig 2006, p. 138.
  115. ^ Raskolnikov, Fedor. "Tales of Sub-Lieutenant Ilyin".
  116. ^ a b Estonian War of Independence 1918–1920. Jyri Kork (Ed.). Esto, Baltimore, 1988 (Reprint from Estonian War of Independence 1918–1920. Historical Committee for the War of Independence, Tallinn, 1938)
  117. ^ Traksmaa, August: Lühike vabadussõja ajalugu, p. 142. Olion, 1992, ISBN 5450013256
  118. ^ "Baltic and North Russia 1919". Retrieved 4 December 2014.
  119. ^ a b "Winkleigh Devon its Sons & Heroes – History of the Village part 5 – Medals of honour, the Victoria Cross, Captain Gordon Steele, Lieutenant Henry Hartnol- Photographs, stories". Retrieved 4 December 2014.
  120. ^ Dreadnought Petropavlovsk 1 October 2007 at the Wayback Machine
  121. ^ a b
  122. ^ "Baltic and North Russia 1919". Retrieved 4 December 2014.
  123. ^ Kinvig 2006, p. 279.
  124. ^ Jon, Smele (2015). Historical dictionary of the Russian civil wars, 1916–1926. Lanham, Maryland. ISBN 978-1442252806. OCLC 907965486.
  125. ^ Moffat 2015, pp. 242–244.
  126. ^ a b Kinvig 2006, pp. 271–290.
  127. ^ Fletcher, William A. (1976). "The British navy in the Baltic, 1918–1920: Its contribution to the independence of the Baltic nations". Journal of Baltic Studies. 7 (2): 134–144. doi:10.1080/01629777600000141.
  128. ^ Kinvig 2006, p. [page needed].
  129. ^ a b Kinvig 2006, p. 289.
  130. ^ Shmelev, Anatol (1 June 2003). "The allies in Russia, 1917–20: Intervention as seen by the whites". Revolutionary Russia. 16 (1): 93–94. doi:10.1080/09546540308575766. ISSN 0954-6545. S2CID 145442425.
  131. ^ (in Greek) The Campaign in the Ukraine 9 March 2008 at the Wayback Machine, at sansimera.gr
  132. ^ Balbirnie 2016, pp. 130–131.
  133. ^ Ion Nistor, Istoria Basarabiei, page 284. Humanitas, 1991. ISBN 9732802839
  134. ^ Stanescu Marin, Armata română şi unirea Basarabiei şi Bucovinei cu România: 1917–1918, pp. 105–107 (in Romanian)
  135. ^ Stanescu Marin, Armata română şi unirea Basarabiei şi Bucovinei cu România: 1917–1918, pp. 115–118 (in Romanian)
  136. ^ Adrian Storea, Gheorghe Băjenaru, Artileria română în date și imagini (Romanian artillery in data and pictures), p. 107 (in Romanian)
  137. ^ Siegfried Breyer, Soviet Warship Development: 1917–1937, p. 98
  138. ^ Kinvig 2006, p. 56.
  139. ^ Paper Heritage – 1919 Railway-related issues of the Czech Army in Siberia
  140. ^ Willett, Robert L. (2003). Russian Sideshow. Washington: Brassey's. pp. 166–167. ISBN 1574884298.
  141. ^ a b c d e f g Humphreys, Leonard A. (1995). The Way of the Heavenly Sword: The Japanese Army in the 1920s. Stanford University Press. p. 26. ISBN 0804723753.
  142. ^ Kinvig 2006, p. 58.
  143. ^ Kinvig 2006, p. 59.
  144. ^ Kinvig 2006, p. 69.
  145. ^ a b Kinvig 2006, p. 79.
  146. ^ Kinvig 2006, p. 211.
  147. ^ Kinvig 2006, p. 298.
  148. ^ Audrey L. Altstadt The Azerbaijani Turks: power and identity under Russian rule Hoover Press, 1992, ISBN 978-0817991821
  149. ^ Kenez, pp. 202–203
  150. ^ Moffat 2015, p. 85.
  151. ^ Moffat 2015, p. 93.
  152. ^ Winegard 2016, p. 202.
  153. ^ Moffat 2015, pp. 93–94.
  154. ^ Missen, Leslie (1984). Dunsterforce. Marshall Cavendish Illustrated Encyclopedia of World War I. Marshall Cavendish Corporation. pp. 2766–2772. ISBN 0863071813.
  155. ^ Winegard 2016, p. 210.
  156. ^ Kinvig 2006, pp. 78–79.
  157. ^ Kinvig 2006, p. 230.
  158. ^ Winegard 2016, p. 239.
  159. ^ Kinvig 2006, pp. 15–16.
  160. ^ a b Kinvig 2006, p. 16.
  161. ^ Sargent 2004, p. 19.
  162. ^ Sargent 2004, p. 21.
  163. ^ Ellis, C. H, "The British Intervention in Transcaspia 1918–1919", University of California Press, Berkeley and Los Angeles, 1963 [1], p. 132
  164. ^ Kinvig 2006, p. 114.
  165. ^ Operations in Trans-Caspia 2 April 2009 at the Wayback Machine, Behind the Lines. Retrieved 23 September 2009
  166. ^ Jacques Bertin, Pierre Vidal-Naquet (1992). The Harper Atlas of World History (illustrated ed.). HarperCollins. p. 250. ISBN 0062700677.
  167. ^ John Francis Nejez Bradley (1975). Civil War in Russia, 1917–1920. B. T. Batsford. p. 178. ISBN 0713430141.
  168. ^ Liudmila G. Novikova, "Red Patriots against White Patriots: Contesting Patriotism in the Civil War in North Russia." Europe-Asia Studies 71.2 (2019): 183–202.
  169. ^ League of Nations Treaty Series, vol. 34, pp. 32–53.
  170. ^ Frederick L. Schuman, Russia Since 1917: Four Decades of Soviet Politics (New York: Alfred A. Knopf, 1957), 109.
  171. ^ Robert J. Maddox, "The Unknown War with Russia," (San Rafael, CA: Presidio Press., 1977) p. 137
  172. ^ James W. Loewen, Lies My Teacher Told Me: Everything Your American History Textbook Got Wrong (The New Press, 2007), p. 17
  173. ^ John M. Thompson, "Allied and American Intervention in Russia, 1918–1921," in Rewriting Russian History: Soviet Interpretations of Russia's Past, ed. Cyril E. Black (New York, 1962), pp. 319–380. online, at p. 325.
  174. ^ Stern, Sheldon M. (11 July 2008). "Cold War Origins". Washington Decoded. Retrieved 22 March 2022.
  175. ^ "Bolshevism: "Foul baboonery...Strangle at Birth"". 11 March 2016.
  176. ^ "Bolshevism: "Foul baboonery...Strangle at Birth"". The Churchill Project – Hillsdale College. 11 March 2016. Retrieved 27 August 2020.

Bibliography

  • Balbirnie, Steven (2 July 2016). "'A Bad Business': British Responses to Mutinies Among Local Forces in Northern Russia". Revolutionary Russia. 29 (2): 129–148. doi:10.1080/09546545.2016.1243613. ISSN 0954-6545. S2CID 152050937.
  • Kinvig, Clifford (2006). Churchill's Crusade: The British Invasion of Russia 1918–1920. London: Hambledon Continuum. ISBN 1852854774.
  • Mawdsley, Evan (2007). The Russian Civil War. Pegasus Books. ISBN 978-1933648156.
  • Moffat, Ian C. D. (2015). The allied intervention in Russia, 1918–1920: the diplomacy of chaos. Houndsmills, Basingstoke, Hampshire. ISBN 978-1137435736. OCLC 909398151.
  • Sargent, Michael (April 2004). British Military Involvement in Transcaspia: 1918–1919 (PDF). Camberley: Conflict Studies Research Centre, Defence Academy of the United Kingdom.
  • Winegard, Timothy C. (2016). The First World Oil War. University of Toronto Press. ISBN 978-1487522582. JSTOR 10.3138/j.ctv1005dpz.
  • Wright, Damien (2017). Churchill's Secret War with Lenin: British and Commonwealth Military Intervention in the Russian Civil War, 1918–20. Solihull: Helion. ISBN 978-1911512103.

Further reading

  • Carley, Michael Jabara. "Allied Intervention and the Russian Civil War, 1917–1922," International History Review 11#4 (1989), pp. 689–700 in JSTOR. Historiography.
  • Dobson, Christopher and Miller, John (1986). The Day We Almost Bombed Moscow The Allied War in Russia 1918–1920 (Hodder and Stoughton)[ISBN missing]
  • Flake, Lincoln. "‘Nonsense From the Beginning’ – Allied Intervention in Russia's Civil War at 100: Historical Perspectives from Combatant Countries." Journal of Slavic Military Studies 32.4 (2019): 549–552. online
  • Foglesong, David S. "Policies Toward Russia and Intervention in the Russian Revolution." in Ross A. Kennedy ed., A Companion to Woodrow Wilson (2013): 386–405.[ISBN missing]
  • Foglesong, David S. (2014), America's Secret War Against Bolshevism: U.S. Intervention in the Russian Civil War 1917–1920, ISBN 978-1469611136
  • Fuller, Howard. "Great Britain and Russia's Civil War: 'The Necessity for a Definite and Coherent Policy'." Journal of Slavic Military Studies 32.4 (2019): 553–559.
  • Guard, John (2001). "Question 38/99: British Operations in the Caspian Sea 1918–1919". Warship International. International Naval Research Organization. XXXVIII (1): 87–88. ISSN 0043-0374.
  • Head, Michael, S. J. (2016). "The Caspian Campaign, Part I: First Phase – 1918". Warship International. LIII (1): 69–81. ISSN 0043-0374.
  • Humphreys, Leonard A. (1996). The Way of the Heavenly Sword: The Japanese Army in the 1920s. Stanford University Press. ISBN 0804723753.
  • Isitt, Benjamin (2010). . University of British Columbia Press. ISBN 978-0774818025. Archived from the original on 6 July 2011.
  • Isitt, Benjamin (2006). . Canadian Historical Review. University of Toronto Press. 87 (2): 223–264. doi:10.3138/CHR/87.2.223. Archived from the original on 6 July 2011.
  • Kurilla, Ivan. "Allied Intervention From Russia's Perspective: Modern-Day Interpretations." Journal of Slavic Military Studies 32.4 (2019): 570–573.
  • Long, John W. "American Intervention in Russia: The North Russian Expedition, 1918–19." Diplomatic History 6.1 (1982): 45–68.
  • Luckett, Richard. The White Generals: An Account of the White Movement and the Russian Civil War (1971)[ISBN missing]
  • Moffat, Ian C.D. The Allied Intervention in Russia, 1918–1920: The Diplomacy of Chaos (2015) excerpt
  • Moore, Perry. Stamping Out the Virus: Allied Intervention in the Russian Civil War 1918–1920 (2002).[ISBN missing]
  • Nelson, James Carl. The Polar Bear Expedition: The Heroes of America's Forgotten Invasion of Russia, 1918–1919 (2019) excerpt
  • Plotke, AJ (1993). Imperial Spies Invade Russia. Westport CT; London: Greenwood Press. ISBN 0313286116.
  • Richard, Carl J. "'The Shadow of a Plan': The Rationale Behind Wilson's 1918 Siberian Intervention." Historian 49.1 (1986): 64–84. Historiography
  • Silverlight, John. The Victors' Dilemma: Allied Intervention in the Russian Civil War, 1917–1920 (1970).[ISBN missing]
  • Swettenham, John. Allied Intervention in Russia 1918–1919: and the part played by Canada (Routledge, 2017).[ISBN missing]
  • Thompson, John M. "Allied and American Intervention in Russia, 1918–1921," in Rewriting Russian History: Soviet Interpretations of Russia's Past, ed. Cyril E. Black (New York, 1962), pp. 319–380. online, how Soviet view changed over time.
  • Trani, Eugene P. "Woodrow Wilson and the decision to intervene in Russia: a reconsideration." Journal of Modern History 48.3 (1976): 440–461. in JSTOR
  • Unterberger, Betty Miller. "Woodrow Wilson and the Bolsheviks: The "Acid Test" of Soviet–American Relations." Diplomatic History 11.2 (1987): 71–90.
  • Willett, Robert L. (2003). Russian Sideshow: America's Undeclared War, 1918–1920. Washington D.C.: Brassey's. ISBN 1574884298.

External links

allied, intervention, russian, civil, allied, powers, intervention, russian, civil, consisted, series, multi, national, military, expeditions, which, began, 1918, initial, impetus, behind, interventions, secure, munitions, supply, depots, from, falling, into, . Allied intervention in the Russian Civil War or Allied Powers intervention in the Russian Civil War consisted of a series of multi national military expeditions which began in 1918 The initial impetus behind the interventions was to secure munitions and supply depots from falling into German hands after the Bolsheviks signed the Treaty of Brest Litovsk American British and French troops were welcomed by Bolshevik leaders 20 By 1919 the Allied goal became to help the White forces in the Russian Civil War When the Whites collapsed the Allies withdrew their forces from Russia by 1920 and further withdrawing from Japan by 1922 21 Allied intervention in the Russian Civil WarPart of the Russian Civil WarAllied troops parading in Vladivostok 1918Date12 January 1918 4 20 May 1925 5 7 years 4 months 1 week and 1 day LocationFormer Russian EmpireResultBolshevik victory Allied Powers withdrawal Defeat and collapse of the Russian White movement White victory in Finland Latvia and EstoniaBelligerentsAllied Powers White MovementCzechoslovaks 1918 1919 United Kingdom 1918 1920 Canada 1918 1919 Australia 1918 1919 India South Africa 1 United States 1918 1920 France 1918 1920 Japan Greece Estonia Serbia Italy RomaniaChina 2 3 Bolsheviks Soviet Russia Far Eastern RepublicLatvian SSRUkrainian SSRCommanders and leadersAlexander KolchakMikhail DiterikhsGrigory SemyonovNikolai YudenichEvgeny MillerAnton DenikinPyotr WrangelRadola GajdaStanislav CecekSergei WojciechowskiJan SyrovyKikuzo OtaniYui MitsueWoodrow WilsonWilliam S GravesGeorge E StewartRobert L EichelbergerWilds P RichardsonEdmund IronsideFrederick PooleLionel DunstervilleWilliam ThomsonWilfrid MallesonWalter CowanJames H ElmsleyHenri BertholotPhilippe d AnselmeKonstantinos NiderErnest BroșteanuVladimir LeninLeon TrotskyJukums VacietisSergey KamenevPavel DybenkoNikolai KrylenkoVladimir Antonov OvseenkoMikhail TukhachevskyMikhail FrunzeVasily BlyukherAlexander SamoyloJoseph StalinKliment VoroshilovFedor RaskolnikovDmitry ZhlobaSemyon BudyonnyHayk BzhishkyanMikhail MuravyovDmitry NadyozhnyDmitri ParskyAlexander KrasnoshchyokovStrength50 000 70 000 troops15 600 troops30 000 troops 6 11 000 troops11 300 troops70 000 troops59 150 troops 7 8 9 10 4 700 troops2 500 troops2 300 troops 11 2 000 troops150 troopsUnknownCasualties and losses Czechoslovakia 4 112 killed 12 United Kingdom 938 killed 13 14 15 16 United States 424 killed 17 Greece 18 179 killed173 missing46 dead from wounds or non combat related causes657 woundedUnknown1 landing craft captured by Romanians 19 The goals of these small scale interventions were partly to stop Germany from exploiting Russian resources to defeat the Central Powers prior to the Armistice of November 1918 and to support some of the Allied forces that had become trapped within Russia after the 1917 Bolshevik revolution 22 Allied troops landed in Arkhangelsk the North Russia intervention of 1918 1919 and in Vladivostok as part of the Siberian intervention of 1918 1922 The British intervened in the Baltic theatre 1918 1919 and in the Caucasus 1917 1919 French led Allied forces participated in the Southern Russia intervention 1918 1919 For most overthrowing the Bolsheviks was never a primary aim of the interventions 20 Allied efforts were hampered by divided objectives and war weariness from the overall global conflict These factors together with the evacuation of the Czechoslovak Legion in September 1920 compelled the western Allied powers to end the North Russia and Siberian interventions in 1920 though the Japanese intervention in Siberia continued until 1922 and the Empire of Japan continued to occupy the northern half of Sakhalin until 1925 23 Soviet and Russian interpretations greatly exaggerate the role of the Allies in the Civil War and try to portray these as attempts to suppress the Bolshevik revolution and to partition and Russia 24 Overall the extent of allied intervention during the civil war was miniscule and inconsequential 20 Contents 1 Background 1 1 Revolution 1 2 Russia exits the war 1 3 Czechoslovak Legions 1 4 Allied concerns 2 Foreign forces throughout Russia 3 Campaigns 3 1 North Russia 3 2 Baltics and Northwestern Russia 3 3 Southern Russia and Ukraine 3 4 Bessarabia 3 5 Siberia 3 6 Caucasus 3 7 Trans Caspian Campaign 4 Aftermath 4 1 Allied withdrawal 4 2 Assessment by historians 4 3 Legacy 5 See also 6 References 7 Bibliography 8 Further reading 9 External linksBackground EditRevolution Edit Main article Russian Revolution In early 1917 the Russian Empire found itself wracked by political strife public support for World War I and Tsar Nicholas II had started to dwindle leaving the country on the brink of revolution The February Revolution of March 1917 affected the course of the war under intense political and personal pressure the Tsar abdicated 16 March O S 3 March 1917 and a Russian Provisional Government formed led initially by Georgy Lvov March to July 1917 and later by Alexander Kerensky July to November 1917 The Provisional Government pledged to continue fighting the Germans on the Eastern Front 23 The Allied Powers had been shipping supplies to Russia since the beginning of the war in 1914 through the ports of Arkhangelsk Murmansk established in 1915 and Vladivostok In April 1917 the United States entered the war on the Allied side US President Woodrow Wilson dropped his reservations about joining the war with the despotic tsar as an ally and the United States began providing economic and technical support to Kerensky s government 23 The war became increasingly unpopular with the Russian populace Political and social unrest grew with the Marxist antiwar Bolshevik Party under Vladimir Lenin increasing its support Large numbers of common soldiers either mutinied or deserted from the Imperial Russian Army The Kerensky Offensive started on 1 July O S 18 June 1917 but a German and Austro Hungarian counterattack defeated the Russian forces This led to the collapse of the Eastern Front The demoralised Russian Army stood on the verge of mutiny and most soldiers had deserted the front lines Kerensky replaced Aleksei Brusilov with Lavr Kornilov as Commander in Chief of the Army 19 July 1917 Kornilov attempted to set up a military dictatorship by staging a coup 10 September O S 27 August 1917 He had the support of the British military attache in Petrograd Brigadier General Alfred Knox and Kerensky accused Knox of producing pro Kornilov propaganda Kerensky also claimed that Lord Milner member of the British War Cabinet wrote him a letter expressing support for Kornilov A British armoured car squadron commanded by Oliver Locker Lampson and dressed in Russian uniforms participated in the failed coup 25 26 27 The October Revolution of 7 November O S 25 October 1917 led to the overthrow of Kerensky s provisional government and to the Bolsheviks assuming power According to William Henry Chamberlin A few weeks after the Bolshevik Revolution on December 23 1917 an Anglo French convention had been concluded in Paris regulating the future operations of British and French forces on Russian territory This convention defined as a British zone of influence the Cossack regions the territory of the Caucasus Armenia Georgia and Kurdistan while the French zone was to consist of Bessarabia Ukraina and Crimea There was a certain economic background for this convention British investment predominated in the Caucasian oil fields while the French were more interested in the coal and iron mines of Ukraina 28 Russia exits the war Edit Main article Treaty of Brest Litovsk In early 1918 forces of the Central Powers invaded Russia occupying extensive territory 29 and threatening to capture Moscow and to impose pliant regimes Lenin wanted to negotiate with Germany but failed to get approval from his council until late February In a desperate attempt to end the war as promised in their slogan Peace Bread Land the Russian Soviet Federative Socialist Republic signed the Treaty of Brest Litovsk 3 March 1918 ending the bloodshed The Allied Powers felt betrayed and turned against the new regime aiding its White enemies and landing troops to prevent Russian supplies from reaching Germany 30 verification needed According to historian Spencer Tucker the Allies believed the Bolsheviks wouldn t provide an orderly enough regime to stand up to German domination With Brest Litovsk the spectre of German domination in Eastern Europe threatened to become reality and the Allies now began to think seriously about military intervention 31 The perception of betrayal removed whatever reservations the Allied Powers had about overthrowing the Bolsheviks According to William Henry Chamberlin even before Brest Litovsk Downing Street contemplated a protectorate over the Caucasus and the Quai d Orsay over Crimea Bessarabia and Ukraine and began negotiating deals for funding White generals to bring them into being R H Bruce Lockhart and another British agent and a French official in Moscow tried to organize a coup that would overthrow the Bolshevik regime They were dealing with double agents and were exposed and arrested 32 French and British support for the Whites was also motivated by a desire to protect the assets they had acquired through extensive investment in Tsarist Russia 33 Czechoslovak Legions Edit Main article Czechoslovak Legion Czechoslovak troops in Vladivostok 1918 The Czechoslovak Legion was at times in control of most of the Trans Siberian Railway and all major cities in Siberia Austro Hungarian prisoners were of a number of various nationalities some Czechoslovak POWs deserted to the Russian Army Czechoslovaks had long desired to create their own independent state and the Russians aided in establishing special Czechoslovak units the Czechoslovak Legions to fight the Central Powers The signing of the Treaty of Brest Litovsk ensured that prisoners of war POW would be repatriated In 1917 the Bolsheviks stated that if the Czechoslovak Legions remained neutral and agreed to leave Russia they would be granted safe passage through Siberia en route to France via Vladivostok to fight with the Allied forces on the Western Front The Czechoslovak Legions travelled via the Trans Siberian Railway to Vladivostok However fighting between the Legions and the Bolsheviks erupted in May 1918 Allied concerns Edit Canadian Siberian Expeditionary Force 1919 The Allied Powers became concerned at the collapse of the Eastern Front and the loss of their Tsarist ally to communism and there was also the question of the large quantities of supplies and equipment in Russian ports which the Allied Powers feared might be seized by the Germans Also worrisome to the Allied Powers was the April 1918 landing of a division of German troops in Finland increasing speculation they might attempt to capture the Murmansk Petrograd railway and subsequently the strategic port of Murmansk and possibly Arkhangelsk Other concerns regarded the potential destruction of the Czechoslovak Legions and the threat of Bolshevism the nature of which worried many Allied governments Meanwhile Allied materiel in transit quickly accumulated in the warehouses in Arkhangelsk and Murmansk Estonia had established a national army and with the support of the British Royal Navy and Finnish volunteers were defending against the 7th Red Army s attack 34 Faced with these events the British and French governments decided upon an Allied military intervention in Russia The first British landing in Russia came at the request of a local Bolshevik Soviet council Fearing a German attack on the town the Murmansk Soviet requested that the Allies landed troops for protection British troops arrived on 4 March 1918 the day after the signing of the Treaty of Brest Litovsk between Germany and the Bolshevik government 35 In the summer of 1918 Leon Trotsky the head of the Red Army welcomed the arrival of British American and French troops in Murmansk 20 American troops parading in Vladivostok August 1918 Severely short of troops to spare the British and French requested that President Wilson provide American soldiers for the campaign In July 1918 against the advice of the United States Department of War Wilson agreed to the limited participation of 5 000 United States Army troops in the campaign This force which became known as the American North Russia Expeditionary Force 36 a k a the Polar Bear Expedition were sent to Arkhangelsk while another 8 000 soldiers organised as the American Expeditionary Force Siberia 37 were shipped to Vladivostok from the Philippines and from Camp Fremont in California That same month the Canadian government agreed to the British government s request to command and provide most of the soldiers for a combined British Empire force which also included Australian and Indian troops Some of this force was the Canadian Siberian Expeditionary Force another part was the North Russia Intervention A Royal Navy squadron was sent to the Baltic under Rear Admiral Edwyn Alexander Sinclair This force consisted of modern C class cruisers and V and W class destroyers In December 1918 Sinclair sailed into Estonian and Latvian ports sending in troops and supplies and promising to attack the Bolsheviks as far as my guns can reach In January 1919 he was succeeded in command by Rear Admiral Walter Cowan The Japanese concerned about their northern border sent the largest military force numbering about 70 000 They desired the establishment of a buffer state in Siberia 38 and the Imperial Japanese Army General Staff viewed the situation in Russia as an opportunity for settling Japan s northern problem The Japanese government was also intensely hostile to communism The Italians created the special Corpo di Spedizione with Alpini troops sent from Italy and ex POWs of Italian ethnicity from the former Austro Hungarian army who were recruited to the Italian Legione Redenta They were initially based in the Italian Concession in Tientsin and numbered about 2 500 However while Soviet propaganda often portrayed Allied intervention as an alliance dedicated to crushing a nascent worldwide communist revolution in the cradle in reality the Allies were not particularly interested in intervention While there were some loud voices in favour such as Winston Churchill these were very much in the minority The main concern for the Allies was to defeat the German Empire on the Western Front While the Bolshevik s repudiation of Russia s national debt and seizure of foreign owned industries did cause tension the main concern for the Allies was the Bolshevik s desire to get Russia out of the First World War The Allies disliked the Whites who were seen as nothing more than a small group of conservative nationalists who showed no signs of planning reform Government ministers were also influenced by anti White public opinion which was being mobilised by trade unions The low casualties suffered by the Allies is indicative of the low level of their combat involvement However the Soviets were able to exploit the Allied intervention for propaganda purposes 39 40 41 42 Churchill the loudest voice in favour of action was a vehement anti socialist and saw Bolshevism as socialism s worst form As a result he attempted to gain Allied support for intervention on ideological grounds 43 Most of the British press were ideologically hostile to the Bolshevik regime and supported the intervention Many newspapers actively encouraged Allied intervention during the war 44 Foreign forces throughout Russia Edit The positions of the Allied expeditionary forces and of the White Armies in European Russia 1919 Numbers of foreign soldiers who were present in the indicated regions of Russia 1 500 French and British troops originally landed in Arkhangelsk 45 14 378 British troops in North Russia 46 1 800 British troops in Siberia 47 50 000 Romanian troops belonging to the 6th Romanian Corps under General Ioan Istrate in Bessarabia 48 375 376 49 167 168 23 351 Greeks who withdrew after three months part of I Army Corps under Maj Gen Konstantinos Nider comprising 2nd and 13th Infantry Divisions in the Crimea and around Odessa and Kherson 50 15 000 French also in the Southern Russia intervention 40 000 British troops in the Caucasus region by January 1919 9 13 000 Americans in the Arkhangelsk and Vladivostok regions 36 37 11 500 Estonians in northwestern Russia 34 2 500 Italians in the Arkhangelsk region and Siberia 51 1 300 Italians in the Murmansk region 52 150 Australians mostly in the Arkhangelsk regions 53 950 British troops in Trans Caspia 8 70 000 Japanese soldiers in the Eastern region 4 192 Canadians in Siberia 600 Canadians in Arkhangelsk 54 2 300 Chinese troops in Vladivostok 11 Campaigns EditNorth Russia Edit Main article North Russia interventionThe First British involvement in the war was the landing in Murmansk in early March 1918 170 British troops arrived on 4 March 1918 the day after the signing of the Treaty of Brest Litovsk 35 On 2 May British troops took part in their first military engagement A party of White Finns had captured the Russian town of Pechenga and British marines fought alongside Red Guards to capture the area by 10 May with several casualties In this first engagement British troops had fought against a White force in support of the Red Army In the following months British forces in the area were largely engaged in small battles and skirmishes with White Finns 35 However Soviet Allied relations were passing from distrust to open hostility A Bolshevik force was sent to take control of the town up the Murmansk Petrograd railway but in a series of skirmishes the Allied forces repelled the attack This was the first real fighting between the troops of the Allies and the Reds 55 A trainload of Bolshevik troops was also found at Kandalaksha heading north but the British managed to convince them to stop before Serb reinforcements arrived and took over the train 56 Captured British Mark V tank in Arkhangelsk In September a force of 1 200 Italians arrived as well as small Canadian and French battalions By early Autumn British forces were also 6 000 strong 57 On 2 August 1918 anti Bolshevik forces led by Tsarist Captain Georgi Chaplin staged a coup against the local Soviet government at Archangelsk General Poole had coordinated the coup with Chaplin 58 Allied warships sailed into the port from the White Sea 59 There was some resistance at first 60 but 1 500 French and British troops soon occupied the city 45 The Northern Region Government was established by Chaplin and popular revolutionary Nikolai Tchaikovsky 61 On the Murmansk front the British 6th Royal Marine Light Infantry Battalion was ordered to seize the village of Koikori on 28 August as part of a wide offensive into East Karelia The attack on the village was disorganized and resulted in three marines killed and 18 wounded 62 An attack on Ussuna was also repulsed 62 The next morning faced with the prospect of another attack on the village one Marine company refused to obey orders and withdrew themselves to a nearby friendly village As a result 93 men were sentenced to death and others received substantial sentences of hard labour In December 1919 the government under pressure from several MPs revoked the sentence of death and considerably reduced the sentences of all the convicted men 63 On 4 September 1918 the promised American forces arrived Three battalions of troops supported by engineers and under the command of Colonel George Stewart landed in Archangel This force numbered 4 500 troops 64 A British River Force of 11 monitors HMS M33 HMS Fox and others minesweepers and Russian gunboats was formed to use the navigable waters at the juncture of the rivers Vaga and Northern Dvina Some 30 Bolshevik gunboats mines and armed motor launches took their toll on the Allied forces The 2 10th Royal Scots cleared the triangle between the Dvina and Vaga and took a number of villages and prisoners By late September US Marines and 2 10th Royal Scots had reached Nijne Toimski which proved too strong for the lightly equipped Allied force On 27 October Allied forces were ambushed at Kulika near Topsa losing at least 27 men killed and dozens wounded a figure that could have been higher if it had not been for a detachment of Poles who bravely covered the retreat as others panicked 65 The allied troops were mainly inactive in the winter of 1918 building blockhouses with only winter patrols sent out 66 On the first occasion that White Russian troops were sent into the line of combat during the North Russian campaign on 11 December 1918 the White Russian troops mutinied The ringleaders were ordered to be shot by General Ironside 67 Within four months the Allied Powers gains had shrunk by 30 50 kilometres 19 31 mi along the Northern Dvina and Lake Onega area as Bolshevik attacks became more sustained The Bolsheviks launched their largest offensive yet on Armistice Day 1918 along the Northern Divina front 68 and there was heavy fighting at the Battle of Tulgas Toulgas When the news came through of the Armistice with Germany many of the British troops in Archangel eagerly anticipated a quick withdrawal from North Russia but their hopes were soon dashed 69 Monument to the Victims of the Intervention in Murmansk On 27 January 1919 word was received at Archangel that the Bolsheviks had fired poison gas shells at British positions on the Archangel Vologda railway The use of poison gas by the Bolsheviks was soon announced in the British press The Bolsheviks would use poison gas shells against the British on at least two occasions in North Russia although its effectiveness was limited 70 In the Murmansk sector the British decided that the only way to achieve success in ejecting the Bolsheviks from power was by raising a large White Russian Army However recruitment and conscription attempts failed to provide a sizable enough force It was therefore decided in February 1919 to move south to capture more populated areas from which recruits could be conscripted 71 This would be the first significant action on the Murmansk front between the Allies and the Bolsheviks Met with stiff opposition the town of Segeja was captured and half the Red Army garrison was killed wounded or taken prisoner During the February offensive the British forces pushed the Red Army beyond Soroko and as far south as Olimpi 72 Despite an attempted Bolshevik counter attack by 20 February 3 000 square miles of territory had been taken 73 The furthest advance south on the northern front in early 1919 was an Allied Mission in Shenkursk on the Vaga River and Nizhnyaya Toyma on the Northern Dvina The strategically important city of Shenkursk was described by British commander Ironside as the most important city in North Russia after Archangel and he was determined to hold the line 74 However British and Allied troops were expelled from Shenkursk after an intense battle on 19 20 January 1919 75 Over the following days RAF aircraft flew several bombing and reconnaissance missions to support the withdrawal from Shenkursk 76 The battle of Shenkursk was a key turning point in the campaign and the Allied loss put them very much on the back foot for the next few months along the railway and Dvina fronts 77 On the railway front south of Archangel the Allied forces were gradually advancing 78 On 23 March British and American troops attacked the village of Bolshie Ozerki but the first wave of attackers were pushed back The next day 500 Bolsheviks attacked Shred Mekhrenga but were eventually repelled with over 100 Red troops being killed despite the British suffering no fatal casualties 79 Another Bolshevik attack was launched on Seltskoe but that attack also failed In total the Bolsheviks lost 500 men in one day in the two attacks 80 Many of the British and foreign troops often refused to fight and Bolshevik attacks were launched with the belief that some British troops may even defect to their side once their commanders had been killed The numerous White mutinies demoralised Allied soldiers and affected morale 81 The Allied forces were affected by their own mutinies with the British Yorkshire Regiment and Royal Marines rebelling at points as well as American and Canadian forces 81 A major offensive was launched in May in the Murmansk sector During the advance on Medvyeja Gora on 15 May the stubborn Bolshevik defence was only ended with a bayonet charge British and Bolshevik armoured trains then traded blows as the British attempted to seize control of more of the local railway The town was finally seized on 21 May as Italians and French troops pushed forward with the British 82 The May offensive never quite carried the Allies as far as the largest town in the region Petrozavodsk 83 In April public recruiting began at home in Britain for the newly created North Russian Relief Force a voluntary force which had the claimed sole purpose of defending the existing British positions in Russia 84 By the end of April 3 500 men had enlisted and they were then sent to North Russia 84 Public opinion regarding the formation of the force was mixed with some newspapers being more supportive than others 85 The relief force eventually arrived in North Russia in late May June 86 Polish British and French officers inspecting a detachment of Polish troops of so called Murmansk Battalion before their departure for the front Archangelsk 1919 On 25 April a White Russian battalion mutinied and after 300 men went over to the Bolsheviks they turned and attacked the Allied troops at Tulgas 87 In May and June the units of the original British force which had arrived in Archangel in August and September 1918 finally received orders for home 88 In early June the French troops were withdrawn and the Royal Marines detachment was also sent home followed by all Canadian troops after it was requested that they be repatriated All remaining American troops also left for home 89 The Serbian troops perhaps Maynard s best infantry fighters became unreliable as others withdrew around them 90 By 3 July the Italian company was on the verge of mutiny as its men were seriously disaffected with their continued presence in Russia so long after the Armistice In mid July the two companies of American railway troops were also withdrawn The French and American troops stationed in the north were similarly reluctant to fight and French troops in Archangel refused to take part in any action that was not merely defensive 91 Despite being told when volunteering that they were only to be used for defensive purposes plans were made in June to use the men of the North Russian Relief Force in a new offensive aimed at capturing the key city of Kotlas and linking up with Kolchak s White forces in Siberia 92 The villages of Topsa and Troitsa were attacked in anticipation of this action with 150 Bolsheviks being killed and 450 being captured 93 However with Kolchak s forces being pushed back rapidly the Kotlas offensive was cancelled 94 In early July 1919 another White unit under British command mutinied and killed its British officers with 100 men then deserting to the Bolsheviks 95 Another White mutiny was foiled later in the month by Australian troops 96 On 20 July 3 000 White troops in the key city of Onega mutinied and handed over the city to the Bolsheviks The loss of the city was a significant blow to the Allied forces as it was the only overland route available for the transfer of supplies and men between the Murmansk and Arkhangel theatres 97 This event led to the British losing all remaining trust for the Whites and contributed to the desire to withdraw 97 Attempts were soon made to retake the city but in a failed attack in late July the British had to force detachments of White forces to land at gunpoint in the city since they were adamant that they would not take part in any fighting 98 On one Allied ship 5 Bolshevik prisoners captured in battle even managed to temporarily subdue the 200 White Russians on board and take control of the ship with little resistance 99 Despite the Allied setbacks a battalion of marines the 6th Royal Marine Light Infantry was sent to assist the British at the end of July 100 The final two months on the Dvina front August and September 1919 would see some of the fiercest fighting between British and Red Army troops of the Civil War 101 In August a major offensive was launched along the Dvina to try and strike a blow at Bolshevik morale and to increase the morale of the White forces before a withdrawal 101 As part of this an attack was made on the village of Gorodok During the attack 750 Bolshevik prisoners were taken and one battery was found to have been manned by German troops 102 The village of Seltso was also attacked but a strong Bolshevik defence halted any British progress 103 However the villages of Kochamika Jinta Lipovets and Zaniskaya were captured with little resistance In total the offensive led to the deaths of around 700 Reds and was considered a success 104 A final offensive on the Murmansk front was launched by the Allied forces in September aimed at destroying the Bolshevik forces to leave the White forces in a good position after the planned withdrawal 105 Serbian forces supported the British as they attempted to push on to the Bolshevik villages of Koikori and Ussuna and attack Konchozero 105 However the defences at Koikori and Ussuna were much stronger than expected and the attacks failed 106 The Serbs and White Russian forces attacked again on 11 and 14 September but these attacks also failed 107 However the British did manage to reach the Nurmis river by 18 September with 9 000 troops including 6 000 White Russians participating in this final offensive 107 On 22 September with the Allied withdrawal already ongoing a British detachment from the Royal Scots was sent by river to Kandalaksha on four fishing boats to stop sabotage operations carried out by Finnish Bolsheviks against the railway there The British party was ambushed even before landing and suffered heavy casualties with 13 men killed and 4 wounded Consequently the unopposed Bolsheviks destroyed a number of bridges delaying the evacuation for a time 107 108 One of the fatalities a private from Ormesby Yorkshire who succumbed to his injuries on 26 September was the last British servicemen to die in action in Northern Russia 108 By this point British troops had started withdrawing to Archangel in order to prepare themselves for the evacuation of North Russia 109 On the morning of September 27 1919 the last Allied troops departed from Archangel and on October 12 Murmansk was abandoned British Empire Royal Navy a flotilla of over 20 ships including the seaplane carriers HMS Pegasus and HMS Nairana British Army 236th Infantry Brigade 6th Battalion Royal Marine Light Infantry RMLI 548th Dundee Army Troops Company Royal Engineers 2 10th Cyclist Battalion Royal ScotsRoyal Scots 110 52nd Battalion Manchester Regiment and elements of the Royal Dublin Fusiliers Slavo British Allied Legion SBAL a British trained and led contingent composed mostly of expatriate Russian anti Bolshevik Finnish and Estonian volunteers including Dyer s Battalion Canadian Field Artillery 67th and 68th Batteries of the 16th Brigade Canadian Field Artillery Royal Air Force contingent comprising Airco DH 4 bombers Fairey Campania and Sopwith Baby seaplanes along with a single Sopwith Camel fighter 111 112 United States North Russia Expeditionary Force also known as the Polar Bear Expedition approximately 8 000 personnel from the US Army 17 including the 310th Engineers 339th Infantry 337th Field Hospital and 337th Ambulance Company Also the 167th and 168th Railroad Companies which were sent to Murmansk to operate the Murmansk to Petrograd line US Navy the cruiser USS Olympia during August and September 1918 including 53 personnel attached to British naval units France 2 000 French Army personnel mainly from the Armee coloniale e g the 21st Colonial Battalion and engineers Other countries 1 000 Serbian and Polish infantry attached to White Russian forces in the north as distinct to those in Siberia forces which included the Czechoslovak Legion 1 200 Italians a small number of volunteers from other countries Baltics and Northwestern Russia Edit Further information Estonian War of Independence and British campaign in the Baltic 1918 1919 Russian Civil War in the west in 1918 19 Although the Estonian Army had attained control over its country the opposing 7th and Estonian Red Armies were still active The Estonian High Command decided to invade across the border into Russia in support of the White Russian Northern Corps They went on offensive at Narva catching the Soviets by surprise and destroying their 6th Division 113 Estonian and White attacks were supported along the Gulf of Finland s coast by the Royal Navy and the Estonian Navy and marines On the night of 4 December the cruiser HMS Cassandra struck a German laid mine while on patrol duties north of Liepaja and sank with the loss of 11 of her crew At this time the new Estonian government was weak and desperate The Estonian Prime Minister asked Britain to send military forces to defend his capital and even requested that his state be declared a British protectorate The British would not meet these pleas 114 British cruisers and destroyers soon sailed up the coast close to the Estonian Russian border and laid down a devastating barrage on the advancing Bolsheviks supply lines 114 On 26 December British warships captured the Bolshevik destroyers Avtroil and Spartak 115 which at the time were shelling the port of Tallinn Both units were presented to the Estonian Provisional Government and as Lennuk and Vambola formed the nucleus of the Estonian Navy The Estonian Pskov offensive commenced simultaneously on 13 May 1919 Its Petseri Battle Group destroyed the Estonian Red Army captured the town on 25 May and cleared the territory between Estonia and the Velikaya River 116 A few days later the Northern Corps forces arrived in Pskov On 19 June 1919 the Estonian Commander in Chief Johan Laidoner rescinded his command over the White Russians and they were renamed the Northwestern Army Shortly afterward General Nikolai N Yudenich took command of the troops 113 With the front approaching the garrison of the Krasnaya Gorka fort mutinied 117 To support the mutiny a flotilla of British Coastal Motor Boats under the command of Lieutenant Augustus Agar raided Kronstadt Harbour sinking the cruiser Oleg and the depot ship Pamiat Azova on 17 June 1919 118 119 120 121 In a second attack in August the Bolshevik battleships Petropavlovsk and Andrei Pervozvanny were damaged at the cost of three CMBs 122 119 121 The attackers also managed to sink the important Russian submarine depot ship 123 Despite the actions the mutiny was eventually suppressed by the 12 in 300 mm guns of the Bolshevik battleships The next offensive of the Northwestern Army was planned on 10 July 1919 but the armaments and supplies expected from the Allies did not arrive Nor did the Estonians desire to proceed with the fruitless war since with the initial peace approach of April 1919 the Russian Bolshevik government already guaranteed the recognition of the independent Estonian state So when British Gen Gough requested on 8 August Estonians for the military assistance to Yudenich Estonians in return asked both Yudenich and the Allies to recognise their state first Gough s deputy Brigadier Gen Frank Marsh required Yudenich to immediately issue a statute that would establish the Government of the North West Russian Region 124 encompassing Petrograd Pskov and Novgorod Governorates that would officially guarantee de jure recognition of Estonia On 16 August Times made the deal public that angered the Foreign Office and the War Cabinet and caused a decline in further military aid to Yudenich 125 However the Northwestern Army launched operation White Sword the last major effort to capture Petrograd on 9 October with arms provided by Britain and France and the operational support by the Estonian Army Estonian Navy and the Royal Navy 34 Securing Petrograd for the White forces was one of the main goals of the campaign for the British 126 The Estonian and British forces made a joint land and naval attack against Krasnaya Gorka while the Estonian 2nd Division attempted to throw the 10th Red Division across the Velikaya and the 3rd Division attacked toward Pytalovo and Ostrov The Northwestern Army approached to within 16 km 10 mi of Petrograd but the Red Army repulsed them back to the Narva River 116 Distrustful of the White Russians the Estonian High Command disarmed and interned the remains of the Northwestern Army that retreated behind the state border 127 With the failure to capture Petrograd the British had failed to achieve one of their main goals Significant unrest took place among British sailors in the Baltic 126 This included small scale mutinies amongst the crews of HMS Vindictive Delhi the latter due in part to the behaviour of Admiral Cowan and other ships stationed in Bjorko Sound The causes were a general war weariness many of the crews had fought in World War I poor food and accommodation a lack of leave and the effects of Bolshevik propaganda 128 In total the British lost 128 men in the Baltic campaign with at least 27 also being wounded and 9 being captured 129 Britain committed around 90 ships to the campaign and of this number 17 ships were lost and around 70 were damaged 129 Southern Russia and Ukraine Edit Main article Southern Russia intervention On 18 December 1918 a month after the armistice the French landed in Odessa and Sevastopol In Odessa a 7 hour battle ensued between the French and the forces of the Ukrainian People s Republic before they gained full control of the city 21 The landings began the intervention in southern Russia later Ukraine which was to aid and supply General Denikin s White Army forces the Volunteer Army fighting the Bolsheviks there The campaign involved mainly French Greek and Polish troops The morale of the French troops and the sailors of their fleet in the Black Sea was always low and most wanted to be demobilised and sent home The morale of the Greek and Polish interventionist forces was no better 130 A local warlord Otaman Nykyfor Hryhoriv aligned himself with the Bolsheviks on 18 February 1919 and advanced his army against the foreign invaders With his army of 10 12 000 men he first attacked allied held Kherson on 2 March which was occupied by just 150 French 700 Greek and a few hundred Volunteers of questionable reliability After heavy fighting the city was taken on 9 March The French lost 4 killed and 22 wounded while the Greeks had some 250 casualties Local Greek residents were also killed in the aftermath After the conquest of Kherson Hryhoriv turned his forces against Nikolaev where there were even less allied troops present There were still 12 000 well equipped German troops in the city but they had no intention to participate in the fighting The local French commander was allowed to negotiate a truce with Hryhoriv and on 14 16 March all allied and German troops were evacuated by sea without any fighting leaving considerable quantities of war material behind By April 1919 the troops were withdrawn from Odessa after further threats from Nykyfor Hryhoriv s Army 131 before the defeat of the White Army s march against Moscow A major mutiny amongst French sailors on the Black Sea had in part necessitated the withdrawal Some British sailors dispatched to the Black Sea had also mutinied 132 The last Allied troops left Crimea on 29 April 1919 General Wrangel reorganized his army in the Crimea however with the deteriorating situation he and his soldiers fled Russia aboard Allied ships on 14 November 1920 Bessarabia Edit Main article Romanian military intervention in Bessarabia After the Bolshevik forces of the Rumcherod attacked the region of Bessarabia the Romanian government of Ion I C Brătianu decided to intervene and on January 26 O S January 13 1918 the 11th Infantry Division under General Ernest Broșteanu entered Chișinău The Bolshevik troops retreated to Tighina and after a battle retreated further beyond the Dniester 133 The battle of Tighina was one of the two significant engagements of the 1918 Bessarabian Campaign It lasted for five days between 20 and 25 January and ended in a Romanian victory albeit with significant Romanian casualties 141 dead Romanian troops captured 800 guns 134 Russud class vessel The second important battle was fought at Valcov between 27 January and 3 February The actions of Bolshevik warships including three Donetsk class gunboats managed to delay the Romanians for several days but the ships had to retreat on 3 February due to no longer being able to adjust and correct their aiming after Romanian artillery destroyed the shore based Bolshevik artillery observation posts Later that day Romanian troops occupied Valcov The Romanians captured the Russud class landing craft K 2 as well as several more barges armed with a total of eight 152 mm Obuchov guns 135 136 137 Siberia Edit Main article Siberian intervention A Japanese lithograph showing troops occupying Blagoveschensk The joint Allied intervention began in August 1918 38 Britain sent a 1 800 strong unit to Siberia commanded by Labour Party MP and trade union leader Lieutenant Colonel John Ward which was the first Allied force to land in Vladivostok on 3 August 138 The Japanese entered through Vladivostok and points along the China Russia border with more than 70 000 troops eventually being deployed The Japanese were joined by American Canadian French and Italian troops Elements of the Czechoslovak Legion 139 which had reached Vladivostok greeted the Allied forces The Americans deployed the 27th Infantry and 31st Infantry regiments out of the Philippines plus elements of the 12th 13th and 62nd Infantry Regiments out of Camp Fremont 140 Chinese troops were also sent to Vladivostok by the Beiyang government partly to protect Chinese merchants there 11 The Japanese were expected to send only around 7 000 troops for the expedition but by the end of their involvement in Siberia had deployed 70 000 The deployment of such a large force for a rescue operation made the Allied Powers wary of Japanese intentions 141 On 5 September the Japanese linked up with the vanguard of the Czech Legion 141 a few days later the British Italian and French contingents joined the Czechs in an effort to re establish the Eastern Front beyond the Urals as a result the European Allied Powers trekked westward 141 The Canadians largely remained in Vladivostok for the duration The Japanese with their own objectives in mind refused to proceed west of Lake Baikal 141 The Americans suspicious of Japanese intentions also stayed behind to keep an eye on them 141 By November the Japanese occupied all ports and major towns in the Russian Maritime Provinces and Siberia east of the city of Chita 141 The Allied Powers lent their support to White Russian elements from the summer of 1918 141 There were tensions between the two anti Bolshevik factions the White Russian government led by Admiral Alexander Kolchak and the Cossacks led by Grigory Semyonov and Ivan Kalmykov which also hampered efforts The Allied forces originally took over from some front line White forces and helped hold the line against the Bolsheviks in the far east The British unit helped defend the line at Kraevesk Outnumbered and outgunned the small Allied forces were forced to withdraw Two British armoured trains with two 12 pounder naval guns and two machine guns each were sent from Vladivostok as reinforcements 142 Operating under a Japanese commander the small British unit and other Allied forces played a small but important part in the battle of Dukhovskaya on 23 24 August 1918 Five Bolshevik armed trains were attacked supported by the British forces own two armoured trains and there were 600 Japanese casualties This limited but decisive action eliminated organised Bolshevik resistance on the Ussuri front 143 By the end of October the British force had finished its journey West from Vladivostok all the way to the front lines at Omsk The unit stayed in the city for the next six months over the cold Siberian winter 144 It may have played a role in the coup in the city in November 1918 which brought Admiral Kolchack to power as Supreme Leader of Russia 145 The force went forward with the advancing Czechs and Russians and continued to provide artillery support along the railway from Omsk to Ufa in October and November 146 The British would later form an important part of the Kama River Flotilla a boat unit that assisted the Whites by attacking the Bolshevik forces along the course of the river They bombarded Red troop concentrations protected bridges and provided direct fire support and attacked Bolshevik boats on the river In one action the flotilla sank the Bolshevik flagship on the river and destroyed one other boat They were later driven back by the Bolshevik advance on Perm 147 The small British force was withdrawn in the summer of 1919 47 All remaining Allied forces were evacuated in 1920 apart from the Japanese who stayed until 1922 Caucasus Edit Indian troops at a Persian well in Baku 1917 In 1917 Dunsterforce an Allied military mission of under 1 000 Australian British and Canadian troops drawn from the Mesopotamian and Western Fronts accompanied by armoured cars deployed from Hamadan some 350 km 220 mi across Qajar Persia It was named after its commander General Lionel Dunsterville Its mission was to gather information train and command local forces and prevent the spread of German propaganda 148 Later on Dunsterville was told to take and protect the city of Baku and its oil fields During the early stages of the Russian Civil War the Caucasus region was governed by three de facto independent states the Menshevik dominated Democratic Republic of Georgia the Republic of Armenia and the Azerbaijan Democratic Republic and the main White Russian forces had no real control 149 The British feared that Baku could be captured by the Ottoman Empire since their forces in the area were advancing and if they gained control of the fleet in the port they could transport troops to the city of Krasnovodsk directly across the Caspian Sea from Baku This action would open Central Asia to the Turks and give them access to British controlled India through Afghanistan 150 Indian troops at a parade in Batum to mark the Allied evacuation 1920 The British landed in Baku on 17 August 1918 151 The British force was at this time 1 200 men strong 152 Dunsterforce was initially delayed by 3 000 Russian Bolshevik troops at Enzeli but then proceeded by ship to Baku on the Caspian Sea This was the primary target for the advancing Ottoman forces and Dunsterforce endured a short brutal siege in September 1918 The British held out for the first two weeks of September inflicting heavy casualties on the enemy A final Turkish attack on 14 September lasted until sunset and facing an overwhelmingly larger force the British were forced to withdraw The troops escaped from the port on three waiting ships on the same day 153 In total the battle for Baku had resulted in around 200 British casualties including 95 dead 154 15 However having been defeated in World War I the Ottoman Empire had to withdraw its forces from the borders of Azerbaijan in the middle of November 1918 Headed by General William Thomson a British force of 1 600 troops 155 arrived in Baku on 17 November and martial law was implemented on the capital of Azerbaijan Democratic Republic until the civil power would be strong enough to release the forces from the responsibility to maintain the public order There were also British occupations of the Georgian cities of Tiflis and Batum in Georgia along with the full length of the Baku Batum railway since the British wanted to protect this strategic line which connected the Black Sea and the Caspian Sea 156 By January 1919 the British presence was 40 000 strong the largest of all British intervention contingents in Russia 9 Again these British occupations of territory in the Caucasus were in part motivated by a desire to protect India s flank and secure the local oilfields but they were also motivated by a desire to support the three new independent states and supervise the German and Ottoman withdrawal 145 The British forces served only a defensive purpose and were withdrawn in the summer of 1919 as regular troops were needed elsewhere and others were long overdue for demobilisation after the Armistice that ended the First World War 157 The last British forces left Baku on 24 August 158 Trans Caspian Campaign Edit Main article Malleson mission With the British fearing that German and Ottoman forces may penetrate into Russian central Asia possibly via a crossing of the Caspian sea to the key port of Krasnovodsk the Trans Caspian area became an area of interest 159 Allied military action began on 11 August 1918 when General Malleson intervened in support of the Ashkhabad Executive Committee who had ousted the Tashkent Soviet Bolsheviks from the western end of the Trans Caspian Railway in July 1918 and had taken control of Krasnovodsk 160 Malleson had been authorised to intervene with Empire and British troops in what would be referred to as the Malleson mission He sent the Machine Gun Section of the 19th Punjabi Rifles to Bayramaly located on the Trans Caspian railway On 28 August the Bolsheviks attacked Kushkh on the Afgan border but were repulsed with 3 officers and 24 rank and file being killed or wounded 2 British liaison officers were shot from behind as they advanced presumably treacherously 161 There was further action at Kaka on 28 August as well as 11 and 18 September The British forces were reinforced on 25 September by two squadrons of the 28th Light Cavalry At this point Malleson against the wishes of the Indian Government decided to push further into Transcaspia and attack the Bolsheviks Fighting alongside Trans Caspian troops they subsequently fought at Arman Sagad between 9 and 11 October and Dushak 14 October At Dushak the British force suffered 54 killed and 150 wounded while inflicting 1 000 casualties on the Bolsheviks 162 British attacks continued to inflict heavy losses on Bolshevik forces 160 By 1 November the British force had re occupied Merv and on instructions of the British government halted their advance and took up defensive positions at Bairam Ali The Trans Caspian forces continued to attack the Bolsheviks to the north After the Trans Caspian forces were routed at Uch Aji their commander Colonel Knollys sent the 28th Cavalry to their support at Annenkovo In January 1919 one company of the 19th Punjabi Rifles was sent to reinforce the position at Annenkovo where a second battle took place on 16 January that resulted in 48 casualties 163 During February the British continued to inflict heavy losses on Bolshevik forces 164 The British Government had decided on 21 January to withdraw the force and the last troops left for Persia on 5 April 165 Aftermath EditAccording to John Bradley the Allied intervention which treated White generals as servile satellites with little independence gave the White generals a reputation as undignified puppets This caused the White movement to be discredited while the Bolsheviks appeared more independent and patriotic driving former Imperial military leaders into joining the Bolsheviks instead 166 167 The Allied intervention helped to bolster the Bolsheviks as they also successfully used this to attack the Whites and paint themselves in a positive light 168 Allied withdrawal Edit The Allied Powers withdrew in 1920 The Japanese military stayed in the Maritime Provinces of the Russian Far East until 1922 and in northern Sakhalin until 1925 following the signing of the Soviet Japanese Basic Convention in Beijing in which Japan agreed to withdraw its troops from Russia In return the Soviet Union agreed to honor the provisions of the Treaty of Portsmouth 51 169 Assessment by historians Edit In 1957 Frederick L Schuman wrote that the consequences of the expedition were to poison East West relations forever after to contribute significantly to the origins of World War II and the later Cold War and to fix patterns of suspicion and hatred on both sides which even today threaten worse catastrophes in time to come 170 For Soviet leaders the operation was proof that Western powers were keen to destroy the Soviet government if they had the opportunity to do so 171 Modern historian Robert Maddox summarised The immediate effect of the intervention was to prolong a bloody civil war thereby costing thousands of additional lives and wreaking enormous destruction on an already battered society 172 Historian John Thompson argues that while the intervention failed to stop the Bolshevik revolution in Russia it did prevent its spread to central Europe 173 However it did succeed in so thoroughly engaging the forces of revolutionary expansionism that the countries of war torn eastern and central Europe potentially most susceptible to the Bolshevik contagion were able to recover enough social and economic balance to withstand Bolshevism The interventionist attempt left an ugly legacy of fear and suspicion to future relations between Russia and the other great powers and it strengthened the hand of those among the Bolshevik leadership who were striving to impose monolithic unity and unquestioning obedience on the Russian people Legacy Edit According to Sheldon M Stern Stalinist propaganda later portrayed the Allied intervention as a U S military invasion of Russia while denying or minimizing the American famine relief effort that saved millions of Russian lives during 1921 1923 174 Winston Churchill who had been the most prominent supporter of a campaign to remove the Bolsheviks from power long lamented the Allies failure to crush the Soviet state in its infancy This was especially the case during the breakdown of western Soviet relations in the aftermath of World War II and the start of the Cold War In 1949 Churchill stated to the British parliament I think the day will come when it will be recognized without doubt not only on one side of the House but throughout the civilized world that the strangling of Bolshevism at its birth would have been an untold blessing to the human race 175 In a further speech at the National Press Club Washington D C in June 1954 Churchill lamented If I had been properly supported in 1919 I think we might have strangled Bolshevism in its cradle but everybody turned up their hands and said How shocking 176 See also EditArthur Sullivan Australian soldier Australian contribution to the Allied Intervention in Russia 1918 1919 British campaign in the Baltic 1918 1919 Canadian Siberian Expeditionary Force Italian Legione Redenta Japanese intervention in Siberia American Expeditionary Force North RussiaReferences Edit Scientia Militaria South African Journal of Military Studies Vol 15 Nr 4 1985 pp 46 48 Accessed January 24 2016 Britain and the Russian Civil War University of Warwick Western intervention during the Russian Civil War Historiana The March of the Japanese Army at Vladivostok City 1919 Japan and Union of Soviet Socialist Republics Convention embodying basic rules of the Relations between Japan and the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics together with Protocols a and B Declaration Exchange of Notes Annexed Note and Protocol of Signature Peking January 20 1925 1925 LNTSer 69 34 LNTS 31 Wright 2017 p 302 Kinvig 2006 pp 297 304 a b Sargent 2004 p 33 a b c Winegard 2016 p 229 Wright 2017 pp 305 306 394 526 528 530 535 a b c Joana Breidenbach 2005 Pal Nyiri Joana Breidenbach ed China inside out contemporary Chinese nationalism and transnationalism illustrated ed Central European University Press p 90 ISBN 9637326146 Retrieved 18 March 2012 At the end of the year 1918 after the Russian Revolution the Chinese merchants in the Russian Far East demanded the Chinese government to send troops for their protection and Chinese troops were sent to Vladivostok to protect the Chinese community about 1600 soldiers and 700 support personnel Bradley Czechoslovak Legion 156 Kinvig 2006 pp 289 315 Wright 2017 pp 490 492 498 500 504 a b Winegard 2016 p 208 See also Malleson Mission Casualties a b Robert L Willett Russian Sideshow Washington D C Brassey s Inc 2003 p 267 https dis army gr sites dis army gr files unmanaged pdf Articles June14 Greek French EKSTR MESHM ROSIA 1919 pdf bare URL PDF Siegfried Breyer Soviet Warship Development 1917 1937 Conway Maritime Press 1992 p 98 ISBN missing a b c d Lincoln E Flake 19 December 2019 Nonsense From the Beginning Allied Intervention in Russia s Civil War at 100 Historical Perspectives from Combatant Countries The Journal of Slavic Military Studies ISSN 1351 8046 Wikidata Q116739770 a b Kenez Peter 1977 Civil War in South Russia 1919 1920 The Defeat of the Whites Hoover Institution on War Revolution and Peace p 182 ISBN 978 0520033467 Mawdsley 2007 pp 54 55 a b c Beyer Rick 2003 The Greatest Stories Never Told A amp E Television Networks The History Channel pp 152 53 ISBN 0060014016 Richard Carl J 2013 2012 When the United States Invaded Russia Woodrow Wilson s Siberian Disaster Rowman amp Littlefield pp ix x ISBN 978 1442219892 Retrieved 28 August 2022 By contrast with their American counterparts Soviet historians devote tremendous attention to the Siberian intervention during the Cold War These historians contended that the United States was the instigator of the intervention bullying its allies in a single minded crusade to overthrow the Soviet government They claimed that the United States attempted to partition Russia into a number of small states in order to restrict its power Intervention and the War by Richard Ullman Princeton University Press 1961 pp 11 13 Keith Neilson Strategy and Supply RLE The First World War The Anglo Russian Alliance Routledge 2014 pp 282 290 Michael Hughes Inside the Enigma British Officials in Russia 1900 39 Bloomsbury 2006 pp 111 114 Chamberlin William 1935 The Russian Revolution 1917 1921 Volume Two New York The Macmillan Company pp 153 154 Intervention of the Central Powers in Russia ru Robert Service 2000 Lenin A Biography p 342 ISBN 978 0330476331 Spencer C Tucker 2013 The European Powers in the First World War An Encyclopedia p 608 ISBN 978 1135506940 John W Long Plot and counter plot in revolutionary Russia Chronicling the Bruce Lockhart conspiracy 1918 Intelligence and National Security 10 1 1995 122 143 Kalypso Nicolaidis Berny Sebe Gabrielle Maas 2014 Echoes of Empire Memory Identity and Colonial Legacies Bloomsbury Publishing p 131 ISBN 978 0857726292 a b c Jaan Maide 1933 Ulevaade Eesti vabadussojast 1918 1920 Estonian War of Independence 1918 1920 Overview in Estonian Tallinn Estonian Defence League a b c Wright 2017 p page needed a b E M Halliday When Hell Froze Over New York City ibooks inc 2000 p 44 a b Robert L Willett Russian Sideshow pp 166 167 170 a b Humphreys The Way of the Heavenly Sword The Japanese Army in the 1920s p 25 Lee Stephen J European Dictatorships 1918 1945 Routledge 2012 p 49 Much Ado About Nothing Allied Intervention in the Russian Civil War in Nelson Lynn H and George Laughead WWW VL Military History 2001 Mawdsley 2007 p page needed Swain Geoffrey The Origins of the Russian Civil War Routledge 2013 Best Geoffrey Best Senior Associate Member Geoffrey 2005 Churchill and War Bloomsbury Academic pp 94 95 ISBN 978 1852854645 Alston Charlotte 1 June 2007 British Journalism and the Campaign for Intervention in the Russian Civil War 1918 20 Revolutionary Russia 20 1 35 49 doi 10 1080 09546540701314343 ISSN 0954 6545 S2CID 219717886 a b Kinvig 2006 p 35 Wright 2017 pp 526 528 530 535 a b Kinvig 2006 p 297 Polivțev Vladimir 2017 Na zashite zavoevanij revolyucii i vossozdavaemoj Moldavskoj Gosudarstvennosti 1917 1918 gg Protecting the Conquests of the Revolution and the Restruction of Moldovan Statehood 1917 1918 PDF In Beniuc Valentin et al eds Statalitatea Moldovei continuitatea istorică și perspectiva dezvoltării Chișinău International Relations Institute of Moldova pp 354 391 ISBN 978 9975564397 Maltsev Denis 2011 Bessarabskij vopros v gody Grazhdanskoj vojny v Rossii The Bessarabian Question during the period of the Russian Civil War PDF Problemy Nationalnoy Strategii in Russian 4 9 162 183 Archived from the original PDF on 25 July 2020 Retrieved 16 May 2020 Olson John Stuart Pappas Lee Brigance Pappas Nicholas Charles 1994 An Ethnohistorical Dictionary of the Russian and Soviet Empires Greenwood Publishing p 273 a b A History of Russia 7th Edition Nichlas V Riasanovsky amp Mark D Steinberg Oxford University Press 2005 www esercito difesa it Grey Jeffrey October 1985 A Pathetic Sideshow Australians and the Russian Intervention 1918 19 Journal of the Australian War Memorial Canberra Australian War Memorial 7 ISSN 0729 6274 Moffat Ian C D Forgotten Battlefields Canadians in Siberia 1918 1919 Canadian Military Journal Department of National Defence Retrieved 8 April 2017 Mawdsley 2007 p 91 Kinvig 2006 p 26 Kinvig 2006 p 115 Kinvig 2006 p 29 David S Foglesong 2014 Fighting But Not At War America s Secret War Against Bolshevism U S Intervention in the Russian Civil War 1917 1920 ISBN 978 1469611136 Kinvig 2006 p 34 Kinvig 2006 p 38 a b Kinvig 2006 pp 259 262 Obituary Brigadier Roy Smith Hill The Times August 21 1996 Kinvig 2006 p 40 Wright 2017 p 147 A Michael Brander Famous Regiments Series The Royal Scots The Royal Regiment London Leo Cooper 1976 ISBN 0850521831 pp 75 78 Balbirnie 2016 pp 131 132 Kinvig 2006 p 123 Wright 2017 p 149 Wright 2017 p 213 Wright 2017 p 38 Kinvig 2006 p 121 Wright 2017 pp 43 50 Wright 2017 p 190 Kinvig 2006 pp 125 126 Wright 2017 pp 193 194 Wright 2017 p 215 Wright 2017 p 165 Wright 2017 p 167 Wright 2017 p 168 a b Balbirnie 2016 p 130 Wright 2017 pp 62 66 Mawdsley 2007 p 257 a b Kinvig 2006 pp 180 181 Wright 2017 p 218 Wright 2017 pp 223 225 Kinvig 2006 p 185 Wright 2017 p 217 Wright 2017 p 229 Kinvig 2006 p 178 Wright 2017 p 129 Kinvig 2006 pp 191 192 Kinvig 2006 p 193 Kinvig 2006 p 198 Balbirnie 2016 p 136 Wright 2017 p 174 a b Balbirnie 2016 p 142 Wright 2017 p 170 Wright 2017 p 171 Kinvig 2006 p 255 a b Wright 2017 p 253 Kinvig 2006 pp 241 242 Wright 2017 p 264 Wright 2017 p 278 a b Kinvig 2006 pp 258 259 Kinvig 2006 pp 261 262 a b c Kinvig 2006 p 265 a b Wright 2017 p 131 Wright 2017 pp 291 292 The British 6th Battalion Royal Marines Light Infantry RMLI was scratched together from a company of the Royal Marine Artillery and companies from each of the three naval port depots Very few of their officers had seen any land fighting Their original purpose had been only to deploy to Flensburg to supervise a vote to decide whether northern Schleswig Holstein should remain German or be given to Denmark Many of the Marines were less than 19 years old it would have been unusual to send them overseas Others were ex prisoners of war who had only recently returned from Germany and had no home leave There was outrage when on short notice the 6th Battalion was shipped to Murmansk Russia on the Arctic Ocean to assist in the withdrawal of British forces Still not expecting to have to fight the battalion was ordered forward under army command to hold certain outposts British Military Aviation in 1918 Part 2 Rafmuseum org 6 June 1918 Archived from the original on 30 June 2012 Retrieved 28 April 2012 Bowyer Chaz 1988 RAF Operations 1918 1938 London William Kimber p 38 ISBN 0718306716 a b Traksmaa August Luhike vabadussoja ajalugu p 141 Olion 1992 ISBN 5450013256 a b Kinvig 2006 p 138 Raskolnikov Fedor Tales of Sub Lieutenant Ilyin a b Estonian War of Independence 1918 1920 Jyri Kork Ed Esto Baltimore 1988 Reprint from Estonian War of Independence 1918 1920 Historical Committee for the War of Independence Tallinn 1938 Traksmaa August Luhike vabadussoja ajalugu p 142 Olion 1992 ISBN 5450013256 Baltic and North Russia 1919 Retrieved 4 December 2014 a b Winkleigh Devon its Sons amp Heroes History of the Village part 5 Medals of honour the Victoria Cross Captain Gordon Steele Lieutenant Henry Hartnol Photographs stories Retrieved 4 December 2014 Dreadnought Petropavlovsk Archived 1 October 2007 at the Wayback Machine a b Pre Dreadnought Andrei Pervozvanny Baltic and North Russia 1919 Retrieved 4 December 2014 Kinvig 2006 p 279 Jon Smele 2015 Historical dictionary of the Russian civil wars 1916 1926 Lanham Maryland ISBN 978 1442252806 OCLC 907965486 Moffat 2015 pp 242 244 a b Kinvig 2006 pp 271 290 Fletcher William A 1976 The British navy in the Baltic 1918 1920 Its contribution to the independence of the Baltic nations Journal of Baltic Studies 7 2 134 144 doi 10 1080 01629777600000141 Kinvig 2006 p page needed a b Kinvig 2006 p 289 Shmelev Anatol 1 June 2003 The allies in Russia 1917 20 Intervention as seen by the whites Revolutionary Russia 16 1 93 94 doi 10 1080 09546540308575766 ISSN 0954 6545 S2CID 145442425 in Greek The Campaign in the Ukraine Archived 9 March 2008 at the Wayback Machine at sansimera gr Balbirnie 2016 pp 130 131 Ion Nistor Istoria Basarabiei page 284 Humanitas 1991 ISBN 9732802839 Stanescu Marin Armata romană si unirea Basarabiei si Bucovinei cu Romania 1917 1918 pp 105 107 in Romanian Stanescu Marin Armata romană si unirea Basarabiei si Bucovinei cu Romania 1917 1918 pp 115 118 in Romanian Adrian Storea Gheorghe Băjenaru Artileria romană in date și imagini Romanian artillery in data and pictures p 107 in Romanian Siegfried Breyer Soviet Warship Development 1917 1937 p 98 Kinvig 2006 p 56 Paper Heritage 1919 Railway related issues of the Czech Army in Siberia Willett Robert L 2003 Russian Sideshow Washington Brassey s pp 166 167 ISBN 1574884298 a b c d e f g Humphreys Leonard A 1995 The Way of the Heavenly Sword The Japanese Army in the 1920s Stanford University Press p 26 ISBN 0804723753 Kinvig 2006 p 58 Kinvig 2006 p 59 Kinvig 2006 p 69 a b Kinvig 2006 p 79 Kinvig 2006 p 211 Kinvig 2006 p 298 Audrey L Altstadt The Azerbaijani Turks power and identity under Russian rule Hoover Press 1992 ISBN 978 0817991821 Kenez pp 202 203 Moffat 2015 p 85 Moffat 2015 p 93 Winegard 2016 p 202 Moffat 2015 pp 93 94 Missen Leslie 1984 Dunsterforce Marshall Cavendish Illustrated Encyclopedia of World War I Marshall Cavendish Corporation pp 2766 2772 ISBN 0863071813 Winegard 2016 p 210 Kinvig 2006 pp 78 79 Kinvig 2006 p 230 Winegard 2016 p 239 Kinvig 2006 pp 15 16 a b Kinvig 2006 p 16 Sargent 2004 p 19 Sargent 2004 p 21 Ellis C H The British Intervention in Transcaspia 1918 1919 University of California Press Berkeley and Los Angeles 1963 1 p 132 Kinvig 2006 p 114 Operations in Trans Caspia Archived 2 April 2009 at the Wayback Machine Behind the Lines Retrieved 23 September 2009 Jacques Bertin Pierre Vidal Naquet 1992 The Harper Atlas of World History illustrated ed HarperCollins p 250 ISBN 0062700677 John Francis Nejez Bradley 1975 Civil War in Russia 1917 1920 B T Batsford p 178 ISBN 0713430141 Liudmila G Novikova Red Patriots against White Patriots Contesting Patriotism in the Civil War in North Russia Europe Asia Studies 71 2 2019 183 202 League of Nations Treaty Series vol 34 pp 32 53 Frederick L Schuman Russia Since 1917 Four Decades of Soviet Politics New York Alfred A Knopf 1957 109 Robert J Maddox The Unknown War with Russia San Rafael CA Presidio Press 1977 p 137 James W Loewen Lies My Teacher Told Me Everything Your American History Textbook Got Wrong The New Press 2007 p 17 John M Thompson Allied and American Intervention in Russia 1918 1921 in Rewriting Russian History Soviet Interpretations of Russia s Past ed Cyril E Black New York 1962 pp 319 380 online at p 325 Stern Sheldon M 11 July 2008 Cold War Origins Washington Decoded Retrieved 22 March 2022 Bolshevism Foul baboonery Strangle at Birth 11 March 2016 Bolshevism Foul baboonery Strangle at Birth The Churchill Project Hillsdale College 11 March 2016 Retrieved 27 August 2020 Bibliography EditBalbirnie Steven 2 July 2016 A Bad Business British Responses to Mutinies Among Local Forces in Northern Russia Revolutionary Russia 29 2 129 148 doi 10 1080 09546545 2016 1243613 ISSN 0954 6545 S2CID 152050937 Kinvig Clifford 2006 Churchill s Crusade The British Invasion of Russia 1918 1920 London Hambledon Continuum ISBN 1852854774 Mawdsley Evan 2007 The Russian Civil War Pegasus Books ISBN 978 1933648156 Moffat Ian C D 2015 The allied intervention in Russia 1918 1920 the diplomacy of chaos Houndsmills Basingstoke Hampshire ISBN 978 1137435736 OCLC 909398151 Sargent Michael April 2004 British Military Involvement in Transcaspia 1918 1919 PDF Camberley Conflict Studies Research Centre Defence Academy of the United Kingdom Winegard Timothy C 2016 The First World Oil War University of Toronto Press ISBN 978 1487522582 JSTOR 10 3138 j ctv1005dpz Wright Damien 2017 Churchill s Secret War with Lenin British and Commonwealth Military Intervention in the Russian Civil War 1918 20 Solihull Helion ISBN 978 1911512103 Further reading EditCarley Michael Jabara Allied Intervention and the Russian Civil War 1917 1922 International History Review 11 4 1989 pp 689 700 in JSTOR Historiography Dobson Christopher and Miller John 1986 The Day We Almost Bombed Moscow The Allied War in Russia 1918 1920 Hodder and Stoughton ISBN missing Flake Lincoln Nonsense From the Beginning Allied Intervention in Russia s Civil War at 100 Historical Perspectives from Combatant Countries Journal of Slavic Military Studies 32 4 2019 549 552 online Foglesong David S Policies Toward Russia and Intervention in the Russian Revolution in Ross A Kennedy ed A Companion to Woodrow Wilson 2013 386 405 ISBN missing Foglesong David S 2014 America s Secret War Against Bolshevism U S Intervention in the Russian Civil War 1917 1920 ISBN 978 1469611136 Fuller Howard Great Britain and Russia s Civil War The Necessity for a Definite and Coherent Policy Journal of Slavic Military Studies 32 4 2019 553 559 Guard John 2001 Question 38 99 British Operations in the Caspian Sea 1918 1919 Warship International International Naval Research Organization XXXVIII 1 87 88 ISSN 0043 0374 Head Michael S J 2016 The Caspian Campaign Part I First Phase 1918 Warship International LIII 1 69 81 ISSN 0043 0374 Humphreys Leonard A 1996 The Way of the Heavenly Sword The Japanese Army in the 1920s Stanford University Press ISBN 0804723753 Isitt Benjamin 2010 From Victoria to Vladivostok Canada s Siberian Expedition 1917 19 University of British Columbia Press ISBN 978 0774818025 Archived from the original on 6 July 2011 Isitt Benjamin 2006 Mutiny from Victoria to Vladivostok December 1918 Canadian Historical Review University of Toronto Press 87 2 223 264 doi 10 3138 CHR 87 2 223 Archived from the original on 6 July 2011 Kurilla Ivan Allied Intervention From Russia s Perspective Modern Day Interpretations Journal of Slavic Military Studies 32 4 2019 570 573 Long John W American Intervention in Russia The North Russian Expedition 1918 19 Diplomatic History 6 1 1982 45 68 Luckett Richard The White Generals An Account of the White Movement and the Russian Civil War 1971 ISBN missing Moffat Ian C D The Allied Intervention in Russia 1918 1920 The Diplomacy of Chaos 2015 excerpt Moore Perry Stamping Out the Virus Allied Intervention in the Russian Civil War 1918 1920 2002 ISBN missing Nelson James Carl The Polar Bear Expedition The Heroes of America s Forgotten Invasion of Russia 1918 1919 2019 excerpt Plotke AJ 1993 Imperial Spies Invade Russia Westport CT London Greenwood Press ISBN 0313286116 Richard Carl J The Shadow of a Plan The Rationale Behind Wilson s 1918 Siberian Intervention Historian 49 1 1986 64 84 Historiography Silverlight John The Victors Dilemma Allied Intervention in the Russian Civil War 1917 1920 1970 ISBN missing Swettenham John Allied Intervention in Russia 1918 1919 and the part played by Canada Routledge 2017 ISBN missing Thompson John M Allied and American Intervention in Russia 1918 1921 in Rewriting Russian History Soviet Interpretations of Russia s Past ed Cyril E Black New York 1962 pp 319 380 online how Soviet view changed over time Trani Eugene P Woodrow Wilson and the decision to intervene in Russia a reconsideration Journal of Modern History 48 3 1976 440 461 in JSTOR Unterberger Betty Miller Woodrow Wilson and the Bolsheviks The Acid Test of Soviet American Relations Diplomatic History 11 2 1987 71 90 Willett Robert L 2003 Russian Sideshow America s Undeclared War 1918 1920 Washington D C Brassey s ISBN 1574884298 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Allied Intervention in the Civil war of Russia Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Allied intervention in the Russian Civil War amp oldid 1138584044, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.