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Continuation War

Continuation War
Part of the Eastern Front of World War II

Finnish soldiers at the VT-line of fortifications during the Soviet Vyborg–Petrozavodsk Offensive in June 1944
Date25 June 1941 – 19 September 1944
(3 years, 2 months, 3 weeks and 4 days)
Location
Result

Soviet victory[5][6][7]

Territorial
changes
  • Petsamo ceded to the USSR
  • Porkkala Peninsula leased for 12 years
  • Belligerents
     Finland
     Germany
    Naval support:
     Italy[Note 1]
     Soviet Union
    Air support:
     United Kingdom[Note 2]
    Commanders and leaders
    Strength
    Average: 450,000 Finns[8]
    Peak: 700,000 Finns[8]
    1941: 67,000 Germans[9]
    1944: 214,000 Germans[9]
    2,000 Estonian volunteers
    1,000 Swedish volunteers
    99 Italian navy personnel
    Total: 900,000–1,500,000[10]
    June 1941: 450,000[11]
    June 1944: 650,000[12]
    Casualties and losses
    • Finnish
    • 63,200 dead or missing[13][14]
    • 158,000 wounded[13]
    • 2,370–3,500 captured[15]
    • 225,000 total casualties
    • Not including civilian casualties
    • German
    • 23,200 dead or missing
    • 60,400 wounded
    • 84,000 total casualties[14]
    • Not including civilian casualties

    The Continuation War, also known as the Second Soviet-Finnish War, was a conflict fought by Finland and Nazi Germany against the Soviet Union (USSR) from 1941 to 1944, as part of World War II.[Note 3] In Soviet historiography, the war was called the Finnish Front of the Great Patriotic War.[Note 4] Germany regarded its operations in the region as part of its overall war efforts on the Eastern Front and provided Finland with critical materiel support and military assistance, including economic aid.[19]

    The Continuation War began 15 months after the end of the Winter War, also fought between Finland and the USSR. Numerous reasons have been proposed for the Finnish decision to invade, with regaining territory lost during the Winter War being regarded as the most common. Other justifications for the conflict included Finnish President Risto Ryti's vision of a Greater Finland and Commander-in-Chief Carl Gustaf Emil Mannerheim's desire to annex East Karelia. Plans for the attack were developed jointly between the Wehrmacht and a faction of Finnish political and military leaders, with the rest of the government remaining ignorant. Despite the co-operation in the conflict, Finland never formally signed the Tripartite Pact, though it did sign the Anti-Comintern Pact. Finnish leadership justified its alliance with Germany as self-defence.

    On 22 June 1941, Germany launched an invasion of the Soviet Union. Three days later, the Soviet Union conducted an air raid on Finnish cities, prompting Finland to declare war and allow German troops stationed in Finland to begin offensive warfare. By September 1941, Finland had regained its post–Winter War concessions to the Soviet Union: the Karelian Isthmus and Ladoga Karelia. However, the Finnish Army continued the offensive past the 1939 border during the conquest of East Karelia, including Petrozavodsk, and halted only around 30–32 km (19–20 mi) from the centre of Leningrad. It participated in besieging the city by cutting the northern supply routes and by digging in until 1944.[Note 5]

    In Lapland, joint German-Finnish forces failed to capture Murmansk or to cut the Kirov (Murmansk) Railway, a transit route for Soviet lend-lease equipment. The conflict stabilised with only minor skirmishes until the tide of the war turned against the Germans. The Soviet Vyborg–Petrozavodsk Offensive of June–August 1944 drove the Finns from most of the territories that they had gained during the war, but the Finnish Army halted the offensive in August 1944.

    Hostilities between Finland and the USSR ended with a ceasefire on 5 September 1944, formalised by the signing of the Moscow Armistice on 19 September 1944. One of the conditions of this agreement was the expulsion or disarming of German troops in Finnish territory, leading to the Lapland War between Finland and Germany.

    World War II was concluded formally for Finland and the minor Axis powers with the signing of the Paris Peace Treaties in 1947. This confirmed the territorial provisions of the 1944 armistice: the restoration of borders per the 1940 Moscow Peace Treaty, the ceding of the municipality of Petsamo (Russian: Пе́ченгский райо́н, Pechengsky raion) and the leasing of Porkkala Peninsula to the Soviets. Furthermore, Finland was required to pay US$300 million (equivalent to US$5.8 billion in 2021) in war reparations to the Soviet Union, accept partial responsibility for the war and to acknowledge that it had been a German ally.[28][29] Because of Soviet pressure, Finland was also forced to refuse Marshall Plan aid.

    Casualties were 63,200 Finns and 23,200 Germans dead or missing during the war and 158,000 Finns and 60,400 Germans wounded. Estimates of dead or missing Soviets range from 250,000 to 305,000, and 575,000 have been estimated to have been wounded or fallen sick.

    Background

    Winter War

    On 23 August 1939, the Soviet Union and Germany signed the Molotov–Ribbentrop Pact in which both parties agreed to divide the independent countries of Finland, Estonia, Latvia, Lithuania, Poland, and Romania into spheres of interest, with Finland falling within the Soviet sphere.[30] One week later, Germany invaded Poland, leading to the United Kingdom and France declaring war on Germany. The Soviet Union invaded eastern Poland on 17 September.[31] Moscow turned its attention to the Baltic states, demanding that they allow Soviet military bases to be established and troops stationed on their soil. The Baltic governments acquiesced to these demands and signed agreements in September and October.[32]

     
    Finnish flags at half-mast in Helsinki on 13 March 1940 after the Moscow Peace Treaty became public

    In October 1939, the Soviet Union attempted to negotiate with Finland to cede Finnish territory on the Karelian Isthmus and the islands of the Gulf of Finland, and to establish a Soviet military base near the Finnish capital of Helsinki.[33] The Finnish government refused, and the Red Army invaded Finland on 30 November 1939.[34] The USSR was expelled from the League of Nations and was condemned by the international community for the illegal attack.[35] Foreign support for Finland was promised, but very little actual help materialised, except from Sweden.[36] The Moscow Peace Treaty concluded the 105-day Winter War on 13 March 1940 and started the Interim Peace.[37] By the terms of the treaty, Finland ceded 9% of its national territory and 13% of its economic capacity to the Soviet Union.[38] Some 420,000 evacuees were resettled from the ceded territories.[39] Finland avoided total conquest of the country by the Soviet Union and retained its sovereignty.[40]

    Prior to the war, Finnish foreign policy had been based on multilateral guarantees of support from the League of Nations and Nordic countries, but this policy was considered a failure.[41] After the war, Finnish public opinion favored the reconquest of Finnish Karelia. The government declared national defence to be its first priority, and military expenditure rose to nearly half of public spending. Finland purchased and received donations of war materiel during and immediately after the Winter War.[39] Likewise, Finnish leadership wanted to preserve the spirit of unanimity that was felt throughout the country during the Winter War. The divisive White Guard tradition of the Finnish Civil War's 16 May victory-day celebration was therefore discontinued.[42]

    The Soviet Union had received the Hanko Naval Base, on Finland's southern coast near the capital Helsinki, where it deployed over 30,000 Soviet military personnel.[39] Relations between Finland and the Soviet Union remained strained after the signing of the one-sided peace treaty, and there were disputes regarding the implementation of the treaty. Finland sought security against further territorial depredations by the USSR and proposed mutual defence agreements with Norway and Sweden, but these initiatives were quashed by Moscow.[43][44]

    German and Soviet expansion in Europe

     
    Vasilievsky Island in Saint Petersburg, pictured in 2017. During the Winter and Continuation Wars, Leningrad, as it was then known, was of strategic importance to both sides.

    After the Winter War, Germany was viewed with distrust by the Finnish, as it was considered an ally of the Soviet Union. Nonetheless, the Finnish government sought to restore diplomatic relations with Germany, but also continued its Western-orientated policy and negotiated a war trade agreement with the United Kingdom.[43] The agreement was renounced after the German invasion of Denmark and Norway on 9 April 1940 resulted in the UK cutting all trade and traffic communications with the Nordic countries. With the fall of France, a Western orientation was no longer considered a viable option in Finnish foreign policy.[45] On 15 and 16 June, the Soviet Union occupied three Baltic countries almost without any resistance and Soviet puppet regimes were installed. Within two months Estonia, Latvia and Lithuania were incorporated into the USSR and by mid–1940, the two remaining northern democracies, Finland and Sweden, were encircled by the hostile states of Germany and the Soviet Union.[46]

    On 23 June, shortly after the Soviet occupation of the Baltic states began, Soviet Foreign Minister Vyacheslav Molotov contacted the Finnish government to demand that a mining licence be issued to the Soviet Union for the nickel mines in Pechengsky District (Russian: Pechengsky raion) or, alternatively, permission for the establishment of a joint Soviet-Finnish company to operate there. A licence to mine the deposit had already been granted to a British-Canadian company and so the demand was rejected by Finland. The following month, the Soviets demanded that Finland destroy the fortifications on the Åland Islands and to grant the Soviets the right to use Finnish railways to transport Soviet troops to the newly acquired Soviet base at Hanko. The Finns very reluctantly agreed to those demands.[47] On 24 July, Molotov accused the Finnish government of persecuting the communist Finland–Soviet Union Peace and Friendship Society and soon afterward publicly declared support for the group. The society organised demonstrations in Finland, some of which turned into riots.[48][49]

    Russian-language sources, such as the book Stalin's Missed Chance, maintain that Soviet policies leading up to the Continuation War were best explained as defensive measures by offensive means. The Soviet division of occupied Poland with Germany, the Soviet annexation of Lithuania, Latvia and Estonia and the Soviet invasion of Finland during the Winter War are described as elements in the Soviet construction of a security zone or buffer region from the perceived threat from the capitalist powers of Western Europe. Postwar Russian-language sources consider establishment of Soviet satellite states in the Warsaw Pact countries and the Finno-Soviet Treaty of 1948 as the culmination of the Soviet defence plan.[50][51][52] Western historians, such as Norman Davies and John Lukacs, dispute this view and describe pre-war Soviet policy as an attempt to stay out of the war and regain land lost after the fall of the Russian Empire.[53][54]

    Relations between Finland, Germany and Soviet Union

     
    The geopolitical status in Europe in May 1941:
      The United Kingdom and occupied areas
      Germany, its allies and occupied areas
      The Soviet Union and occupied areas.
    Note how Finland is marked as a German ally.

    On 31 July 1940, German Chancellor Adolf Hitler gave the order to plan an assault on the Soviet Union, meaning Germany had to reassess its position regarding both Finland and Romania. Until then, Germany had rejected Finnish appeals to purchase arms, but with the prospect of an invasion of Russia, that policy was reversed, and in August, the secret sale of weapons to Finland was permitted.[55] Military authorities signed an agreement on 12 September, and an official exchange of diplomatic notes was sent on 22 September. Meanwhile, German troops were allowed to transit through Sweden and Finland.[56] That change in policy meant Germany had effectively redrawn the border of the German and Soviet spheres of influence in violation of the Molotov-Ribbentrop Pact.[57]

    In response to that new situation, Molotov visited Berlin on 12–13 November 1940.[58] He requested for Germany to withdraw its troops from Finland[59] and to stop enabling Finnish anti-Soviet sentiments. He also reminded the Germans of the 1939 pact. Hitler inquired how the Soviets planned to settle the "Finnish question" to which Molotov responded that it would mirror the events in Bessarabia and the Baltic states. Hitler rejected that course of action.[60] In December, the Soviet Union, Germany and the United Kingdom all voiced opinions concerning suitable Finnish presidential candidates. Risto Ryti was the sole candidate not objected to by any of the three powers and was elected on 19 December.[61]

     
    Joachim von Ribbentrop (right) bidding farewell to Vyacheslav Molotov in Berlin on 14 November 1940 after discussing Finland's coming fate

    In January 1941, Moscow demanded Finland relinquish control of the Petsamo mining area to the Soviets, but Finland, emboldened by a rebuilt defence force and German support, rejected the proposition.[61] On 18 December 1940, Hitler officially approved Operation Barbarossa, paving the way for the German invasion of the Soviet Union,[62] in which he expected both Finland and Romania to participate.[63] Meanwhile, Finnish Major General Paavo Talvela met with German Generaloberst Franz Halder and Reichsmarschall Hermann Göring in Berlin, the first time that the Germans had advised the Finnish government, in-carefully couched diplomatic terms, that they were preparing for war with the Soviet Union. Outlines of the actual plan were revealed in January 1941 and regular contact between Finnish and German military leaders began in February.[63]

    In the late spring of 1941, the USSR made a number of goodwill gestures to prevent Finland from completely falling under German influence. Ambassador Ivan Stepanovich Zotov [ru] was replaced with the more flexible Pavel Dmitrievich Orlov [ru]. Furthermore, the Soviet government announced that it no longer opposed a rapprochement between Finland and Sweden. Those conciliatory measures, however, did not have any effect on Finnish policy.[64] Finland wished to re-enter the war mainly because of the Soviet invasion of Finland during the Winter War, which had taken place after Finnish intentions of relying on the League of Nations and Nordic neutrality to avoid conflicts had failed because of lack of outside support.[65] Finland primarily aimed to reverse its territorial losses from the March 1940 Moscow Peace Treaty and, depending on the success of the German invasion of the Soviet Union, to possibly expand its borders, especially into East Karelia. Some right-wing groups, such as the Academic Karelia Society, supported a Greater Finland ideology.[66]

    German and Finnish war plans

    The matter of when and why Finland prepared for war is still somewhat opaque. Historian William R. Trotter stated that "it has so far proven impossible to pinpoint the exact date on which Finland was taken into confidence about Operation Barbarossa" and that "neither the Finns nor the Germans were entirely candid with one another as to their national aims and methods. In any case, the step from contingency planning to actual operations, when it came, was little more than a formality".[67]

    The inner circle of Finnish leadership, led by Ryti and Mannerheim, actively planned joint operations with Germany under a veil of ambiguous neutrality and without formal agreements after an alliance with Sweden had proved fruitless, according to a meta-analysis by Finnish historian Olli Vehviläinen [fi]. He likewise refuted the so-called "driftwood theory" that Finland had been merely a piece of driftwood that was swept uncontrollably in the rapids of great power politics. Even then, most historians conclude that Finland had no realistic alternative to co-operating with Germany.[68] On 20 May, the Germans invited a number of Finnish officers to discuss the coordination of Operation Barbarossa. The participants met on 25–28 May in Salzburg and Berlin and continued their meeting in Helsinki from 3 to 6 June. They agreed upon the arrival of German troops, Finnish mobilisation and a general division of operations.[64] They also agreed that the Finnish Army would start mobilisation on 15 June, but the Germans did not reveal the actual date of the assault. The Finnish decisions were made by the inner circle of political and military leaders, without the knowledge of the rest of the government, which were not informed until 9 June that mobilisation of reservists, because of tensions between Germany and the Soviet Union, would be required.[62][69]

    Finland's relationship with Germany

    Finland never signed the Tripartite Pact, though it did sign the Anti-Comintern Pact, a less formal alliance, which the German leadership saw as a "litmus test of loyalty".[70] The Finnish leadership stated they would fight against the Soviets only to the extent needed to redress the balance of the 1940 treaty, though some historians consider that it had wider territorial goals under the slogan "shorter borders, longer peace". During the war, the Finnish leadership generally referred to the Germans as "brothers-in-arms" but also denied that they were allies of Germany – instead claiming to be "co-belligerents".[71] For Hitler, the distinction was irrelevant since he saw Finland as an ally.[72] The 1947 Paris Peace Treaty signed by Finland described Finland as having been "an ally of Hitlerite Germany" during the Continuation War.[28][29] In a 2008 poll of 28 Finnish historians carried out by Helsingin Sanomat, 16 said that Finland had been an ally of Nazi Germany, six said it had not been and six did not take a position.[73]

    Order of battle and operational planning

    Soviet

     
    Finnish, German and Soviet military formations at the start of the Continuation War in June and July 1941

    The Northern Front (Russian: Северный фронт) of the Leningrad Military District was commanded by Lieutenant General Markian Popov and numbered around 450,000 soldiers in 18 divisions and 40 independent battalions in the Finnish region.[11] During the Interim Peace, the Soviet Military had relaid operational plans to conquer Finland,[74] but with the German attack, Operation Barbarossa, begun on 22 June 1941, the Soviets required its best units and latest materiel to be deployed against the Germans and so abandoned plans for a renewed offensive against Finland.[17][75] The 23rd Army was deployed in the Karelian Isthmus, the 7th Army to Ladoga Karelia and the 14th Army to the MurmanskSalla area of Lapland. The Northern Front also commanded eight aviation divisions.[76] As the initial German strike against the Soviet Air Forces had not affected air units located near Finland, it could deploy around 700 aircraft supported by a number of Soviet Navy wings.[77] The Red Banner Baltic Fleet comprised 2 battleships, 2 light cruisers, 47 destroyers or large torpedo boats, 75 submarines, over 200 smaller craft as well as hundreds of aircraft—and outnumbered the Kriegsmarine.[78]

    Finnish and German

    The Finnish Army (Finnish: Maavoimat) mobilised between 475,000 and 500,000 soldiers in 14 divisions and 3 brigades for the invasion, commanded by Field Marshal (sotamarsalkka) Mannerheim. The army was organised as follows:[75][79][80]

    • II Corps (II Armeijakunta, II AK) and IV Corps: deployed to the Karelian Isthmus and comprised seven infantry divisions and one brigade.
    • Army of Karelia: deployed north of Lake Ladoga and commanded by General Erik Heinrichs. It comprised VI Corps, VII Corps and Group Oinonen; a total of seven divisions, including the German 163rd Infantry Division, and three brigades.
    • 14th Division: deployed in the Kainuu region, commanded directly by Finnish Headquarters (Päämaja).

    Although initially deployed for a static defence, the Finnish Army was to later launch an attack to the south, on both sides of Lake Ladoga, putting pressure on Leningrad and thus supporting the advance of the German Army Group North.[80] Finnish intelligence had overestimated the strength of the Red Army, when in fact it was numerically inferior to Finnish forces at various points along the border.[75] The army, especially its artillery, was stronger than it had been during the Winter War but included only one armoured battalion and had a general lack of motorised transportation.[81] The Finnish Air Force (Ilmavoimat) had 235 aircraft in July 1941 and 384 by September 1944, despite losses. Even with the increase in aircraft, the air force was constantly outnumbered by the Soviets.[82][83]

     
    A Bristol Blenheim bomber-aircraft belonging to the Finnish Air Force in March 1944.

    The Army of Norway, or AOK Norwegen, comprising four divisions totaling 67,000 German soldiers, held the arctic front, which stretched approximately 500 km (310 mi) through Finnish Lapland. This army would also be tasked with striking Murmansk and the Kirov (Murmansk) Railway during Operation Silver Fox. The Army of Norway was under the direct command of the Oberkommando des Heeres (OKH) and was organised into Mountain Corps Norway and XXXVI Mountain Corps with the Finnish Finnish III Corps and 14th Division attached to it.[84][80][81] The Oberkommando der Luftwaffe (OKL) assigned 60 aircraft from Luftflotte 5 (Air Fleet 5) to provide air support to the Army of Norway and the Finnish Army, in addition to its main responsibility of defending Norwegian air space.[85][86] In contrast to the front in Finland, a total of 149 divisions and 3,050,000 soldiers were deployed for the rest of Operation Barbarossa.[87]

    Finnish offensive phase in 1941

    Initial operations

     
    German map of Finland 1941. The solid green line marks the border between Finland and the USSR from March 1941, the dashed line the old border (before the "Winter War" 1939–1940).
     
    Finnish soldiers crossing the Murmansk railway in 1941

    In the evening of 21 June 1941, German mine-layers hiding in the Archipelago Sea deployed two large minefields across the Gulf of Finland. Later that night, German bombers flew along the gulf to Leningrad, mining the harbour and the river Neva, making a refueling stop at Utti, Finland, on the return leg. In the early hours of 22 June, Finnish forces launched Operation Kilpapurjehdus ("Regatta"), deploying troops in the demilitarised Åland. Although the 1921 Åland convention had clauses allowing Finland to defend the islands in the event of an attack, the coordination of this operation with the German invasion and the arrest of the Soviet consulate staff stationed on the islands, meant that the deployment was a deliberate violation of the treaty, according to Finnish historian Mauno Jokipii.[88]

    On the morning of 22 June Hitler's proclamation read: "Together with their Finnish comrades in arms the heroes from Narvik stand at the edge of the Arctic Ocean. German troops under command of the conqueror of Norway, and the Finnish freedom fighters under their Marshal's command, are protecting Finnish territory."[89]

     
    President Risto Ryti giving his famous radio speech about the Continuation War on 26 June 1941.[90]

    Following the launch of Operation Barbarossa at around 3:15 a.m. on 22 June 1941, the Soviet Union sent seven bombers on a retaliatory airstrike into Finland, hitting targets at 6:06 a.m. Helsinki time as reported by the Finnish coastal defence ship Väinämöinen.[91] On the morning of 25 June, the Soviet Union launched another air offensive, with 460 fighters and bombers targeting 19 airfields in Finland, however inaccurate intelligence and poor bombing accuracy resulted in several raids hitting Finnish cities, or municipalities, causing considerable damage. 23 Soviet bombers were lost in this strike while the Finnish forces lost no aircraft.[92][93][69] Although the USSR claimed that the airstrikes were directed against German targets, particularly airfields, in Finland,[94] the Finnish government used the attacks as justification for the approval of a "defensive war".[95] According to historian David Kirby, the message was intended more for public opinion in Finland than abroad, where the country was viewed as an ally of the Axis powers.[96][68]

    Finnish advance in Karelia

     
    Subphases of the Finnish invasion of Karelia during the 1941 general offensive. The old 1939 border is marked in grey.

    The Finnish plans for the offensive in Ladoga Karelia were finalised on 28 June 1941,[97] and the first stages of the operation began on 10 July.[97][98][69] By 16 July, the VI Corps had reached the northern shore of Lake Ladoga, dividing the Soviet 7th Army, which had been tasked with defending the area.[97] The USSR struggled to contain the German assault, and soon the Soviet high command, Stavka, pulled all available units stationed along the Finnish border into the beleaguered front line.[97] Additional reinforcements were drawn from the 237th Rifle Division and the Soviet 10th Mechanised Corps, excluding the 198th Motorised Division [ru], both of which were stationed in Ladoga Karelia, but this stripped much of the reserve strength of the Soviet units defending that area.[99]

    The Finnish II Corps started its offensive in the north of the Karelian Isthmus on 31 July.[100] Other Finnish forces reached the shores of Lake Ladoga on 9 August, encircling most of the three defending Soviet divisions on the northwestern coast of the lake in a pocket (motti in Finnish); these divisions were later evacuated across the lake. On 22 August, the Finnish IV Corps began its offensive south of II Corps and advanced towards Vyborg (Finnish: Viipuri).[100] By 23 August, II Corps had reached the Vuoksi River to the east and encircled the Soviet forces defending Vyborg.[100] Finnish forces captured Vyborg on 29 August.[101]

     
    A Finnish military parade next to the Round Tower in Viipuri (now Vyborg, Russia) on 31 August 1941, celebrating its recapture

    The Soviet order to withdraw came too late, resulting in significant losses in materiel, although most of the troops were later evacuated via the Koivisto Islands. After suffering severe losses, the Soviet 23rd Army was unable to halt the offensive, and by 2 September the Finnish Army had reached the old 1939 border. The advance by Finnish and German forces split the Soviet Northern Front into the Leningrad Front and the Karelian Front. On 31 August, Finnish Headquarters ordered II and IV Corps, which had advanced the furthest, to halt their advance along a line that ran from the Gulf of Finland via BeloostrovSestra River– Okhta RiverLembolovo to Ladoga. The line ran past the former 1939 border, and approximately 30–32 km (19–20 mi) from Leningrad. There, they were ordered to take up a defensive position.[Note 6] On 1 September, the IV Corps engaged and defeated the Soviet 23rd Army near the town of Porlampi. Sporadic fighting continued around Beloostrov until the Soviets evicted the Finns on 20 September. The front on the Isthmus stabilised and the siege of Leningrad began.[Note 7]

    The Finnish Army of Karelia started its attack in East Karelia towards Petrozavodsk, Lake Onega and the Svir River on 9 September. German Army Group North advanced from the south of Leningrad towards the Svir River and captured Tikhvin but were forced to retreat to the Volkhov River by Soviet counterattacks. Soviet forces repeatedly attempted to expel the Finns from their bridgehead south of the Svir during October and December but were repulsed; Soviet units attacked the German 163rd Infantry Division in October 1941, which was operating under Finnish command across the Svir, but failed to dislodge it.[107] Despite these failed attacks, the Finnish attack in East Karelia had been blunted and their advance had halted by 6 December. During the five-month campaign, the Finns suffered 75,000 casualties, of whom 26,355 had died, while the Soviets had 230,000 casualties, of whom 50,000 became prisoners of war.[108]

    Operation Silver Fox in Lapland and Lend-Lease to Murmansk

     
    Finnish Sámi soldier Rájá-Jovnna[109] with a reindeer in Lapland. Reindeer were used in many capacities, such as pulling supply sleighs in snowy conditions.

    The German objective in Finnish Lapland was to take Murmansk and cut the Kirov (Murmansk) Railway running from Murmansk to Leningrad by capturing Salla and Kandalaksha. Murmansk was the only year-round ice-free port in the north and a threat to the nickel mine at Petsamo. The joint Finnish–German Operation Silver Fox (German: Unternehmen Silberfuchs; Finnish: operaatio Hopeakettu) was started on 29 June 1941 by the German Army of Norway, which had the Finnish 3rd and 6th Divisions under its command, against the defending Soviet 14th Army and 54th Rifle Division. By November, the operation had stalled 30 km (19 mi) from the Kirov Railway due to unacclimatised German troops, heavy Soviet resistance, poor terrain, arctic weather and diplomatic pressure by the United States on the Finns regarding the lend-lease deliveries to Murmansk. The offensive and its three sub-operations failed to achieve their objectives. Both sides dug in and the arctic theatre remained stable, excluding minor skirmishes, until the Soviet Petsamo–Kirkenes Offensive in October 1944.[110][111]

    The crucial arctic lend-lease convoys from the US and the UK via Murmansk and Kirov Railway to the bulk of the Soviet forces continued throughout World War II. The US supplied almost $11 billion in materials: 400,000 jeeps and trucks; 12,000 armored vehicles (including 7,000 tanks, which could equip some 20 US armoured divisions); 11,400 aircraft; and 1.59 million t (1.75 million short tons) of food.[112][113] As a similar example, British shipments of Matilda, Valentine and Tetrarch tanks accounted for only 6 percent of total Soviet tank production, but over 25 percent of medium and heavy tanks produced for the Red Army.[114]

    Aspirations, war effort and international relations

     
    Finnish soldiers crossing the 1940-agreed border (Moscow Peace Treaty) at Tohmajärvi on 12 July 1941, two days after the invasion started

    The Wehrmacht rapidly advanced deep into Soviet territory early in the Operation Barbarossa campaign, leading the Finnish government to believe that Germany would defeat the Soviet Union quickly.[69] President Ryti envisioned a Greater Finland, where Finland and other Finnic people would live inside a "natural defence borderline" by incorporating the Kola Peninsula, East Karelia and perhaps even northern Ingria. In public, the proposed frontier was introduced with the slogan "short border, long peace".[115][69][68] Some members of the Finnish Parliament, such as members of the Social Democratic Party and the Swedish People's Party, opposed the idea, arguing that maintaining the 1939 frontier would be enough.[115] Finnish Commander-in-Chief, Field Marshal C. G. E. Mannerheim, often called the war an anti-Communist crusade, hoping to defeat "Bolshevism once and for all".[69] On 10 July, Mannerheim drafted his order of the day, the Sword Scabbard Declaration, in which he pledged to liberate Karelia; in December 1941 in private letters, he made known his doubts of the need to push beyond the previous borders.[2] The Finnish government assured the United States that it was unaware of the order.[116]

    According to Vehviläinen, most Finns thought that the scope of the new offensive was only to regain what had been taken in the Winter War. He further stated that the term 'Continuation War' was created at the start of the conflict by the Finnish government to justify the invasion to the population as a continuation of the defensive Winter War. The government also wished to emphasise that it was not an official ally of Germany, but a 'co-belligerent' fighting against a common enemy and with purely Finnish aims. Vehviläinen wrote that the authenticity of the government's claim changed when the Finnish Army crossed the old frontier of 1939 and began to annex Soviet territory.[117] British author Jonathan Clements asserted that by December 1941, Finnish soldiers had started questioning whether they were fighting a war of national defence or foreign conquest.[118]

    By the autumn of 1941, the Finnish military leadership started to doubt Germany's capability to finish the war quickly. The Finnish Defence Forces suffered relatively severe losses during their advance, and, overall, German victory became uncertain as German troops were halted near Moscow. German troops in northern Finland faced circumstances they were unprepared for and failed to reach their targets. As the front lines stabilised, Finland attempted to start peace negotiations with the USSR.[119] Mannerheim refused to assault Leningrad, which would inextricably tie Finland to Germany; he regarded his objectives for the war to be achieved, a decision that angered the Germans.[2]

     
    A Soviet prisoner-of-war and a puppy pictured in August 1941 at Lupasalmi (Russian: Лубосалма) in Karelia

    Due to the war effort, the Finnish economy suffered from a lack of labour, as well as food shortages and increased prices. To combat this, the Finnish government demobilised part of the army to prevent industrial and agricultural production from collapsing.[108] In October, Finland informed Germany that it would need 159,000 t (175,000 short tons) of grain to manage until next year's harvest. The German authorities would have rejected the request, but Hitler himself agreed. Annual grain deliveries of 180,000 t (200,000 short tons) equaled almost half of the Finnish domestic crop. In November, Finland joined the Anti-Comintern Pact.[120]

    Finland maintained good relations with a number of other Western powers. Foreign volunteers from Sweden and Estonia were among the foreigners who joined Finnish ranks. Infantry Regiment 200, called soomepoisid ("Finnish boys"), mostly comprised Estonians, and the Swedes mustered the Swedish Volunteer Battalion.[121] The Finnish government stressed that Finland was fighting as a co-belligerent with Germany against the USSR only to protect itself and that it was still the same democratic country as it had been in the Winter War.[108] For example, Finland maintained diplomatic relations with the exiled Norwegian government and more than once criticised German occupation policy in Norway.[122] Relations between Finland and the United States were more complex since the American public was sympathetic to the "brave little democracy" and had anticommunist sentiments. At first, the United States sympathised with the Finnish cause, but the situation became problematic after the Finnish Army had crossed the 1939 border.[123] Finnish and German troops were a threat to the Kirov Railway and the northern supply line between the Western Allies and the Soviet Union.[123] On 25 October 1941, the US demanded that Finland cease all hostilities against the USSR and to withdraw behind the 1939 border. In public, President Ryti rejected the demands, but in private, he wrote to Mannerheim on 5 November and asked him to halt the offensive. Mannerheim agreed and secretly instructed General Hjalmar Siilasvuo and his III Corps to end the assault on the Kirov Railway.[124] Nevertheless, the United States never declared war on Finland during the entire conflict.[125]

    British declaration of war and action in the Arctic Ocean

    On 12 July 1941, the United Kingdom signed an agreement of joint action with the Soviet Union. Under German pressure, Finland closed the British legation in Helsinki and cut diplomatic relations with Britain on 1 August.[126] The most sizable British action on Finnish soil was the Raid on Kirkenes and Petsamo, an aircraft-carrier strike on German and Finnish ships on 31 July 1941. The attack accomplished little except the loss of one Norwegian ship and three British aircraft, but it was intended to demonstrate British support for its Soviet ally.[3] From September to October in 1941, a total of 39 Hawker Hurricanes of No. 151 Wing RAF, based at Murmansk, reinforced and provided pilot-training to the Soviet Air Forces during Operation Benedict to protect arctic convoys.[4] On 28 November, the British government presented Finland with an ultimatum demanding for the Finns to cease military operations by 3 December.[124] Unofficially, Finland informed the Allies that Finnish troops would halt their advance in the next few days. The reply did not satisfy London, which declared war on Finland on 6 December.[69][Note 8] The Commonwealth nations of Canada, Australia, India and New Zealand soon followed suit.[128] In private, British Prime Minister Winston Churchill had sent a letter to Mannerheim on 29 November in which Churchill was "deeply grieved" that the British would have to declare war on Finland because of the British alliance with the Soviets. Mannerheim repatriated British volunteers under his command to the United Kingdom via Sweden. According to Clements, the declaration of war was mostly for appearance's sake.[129]

    Trench warfare from 1942 to 1944

    Unconventional warfare and military operations

     
    Finnish soldiers searching for remains of eventual victims at a burned-down house after a Soviet partisan attack on the village of Viianki, in Suomussalmi. The burnt bodies of over ten civilians, including women and children, were found.
     
    The Soviets conducted four attacks in the first half of 1942, all of which were repelled by Finnish and German troops.

    Unconventional warfare was fought in both the Finnish and Soviet wildernesses. Finnish long-range reconnaissance patrols, organised both by the Intelligence Division's Detached Battalion 4 and by local units, patrolled behind Soviet lines. Soviet partisans, both resistance fighters and regular long-range patrol detachments, conducted a number of operations in Finland and in Eastern Karelia from 1941 to 1944. In summer 1942, the USSR formed the 1st Partisan Brigade. The unit was 'partisan' in name only, as it was essentially 600 men and women on long-range patrol intended to disrupt Finnish operations. The 1st Partisan Brigade was able to infiltrate beyond Finnish patrol lines, but was intercepted, and rendered ineffective, in August 1942 at Lake Segozero.[130] Irregular partisans distributed propaganda newspapers, such as Finnish translations of the official Communist Party paper Pravda (Russian: Правда). Notable Soviet politician, Yuri Andropov, took part in these partisan guerrilla actions.[131] Finnish sources state that, although Soviet partisan activity in East Karelia disrupted Finnish military supply and communication assets, almost two thirds of the attacks targeted civilians, killing 200 and injuring 50, including children and elderly.[132][133][134][135]

    Between 1942 and 1943, military operations were limited, although the front did see some action. In January 1942, the Soviet Karelian Front attempted to retake Medvezhyegorsk (Finnish: Karhumäki), which had been lost to the Finns in late 1941. With the arrival of spring in April, Soviet forces went on the offensive on the Svir River front, in the Kestenga (Kiestinki) region further north in Lapland as well as in the far north at Petsamo with the 14th Rifle Division's amphibious landings supported by the Northern Fleet. All Soviet offensives started promisingly, but due either to the Soviets overextending their lines or stubborn defensive resistance, the offensives were repulsed. After Finnish and German counterattacks in Kestenga, the front lines were generally stalemated. In September 1942, the USSR attacked again at Medvezhyegorsk, but despite five days of fighting, the Soviets only managed to push the Finnish lines back 500 m (550 yd) on a roughly 1 km (0.62 mi)-long stretch of the front. Later that month, a Soviet landing with two battalions in Petsamo was defeated by a German counterattack.[136][137] In November 1941, Hitler decided to separate the German forces fighting in Lapland from the Army of Norway and create the Army of Lapland, commanded by Generaloberst Eduard Dietl through AOK Lappland. In June 1942, the Army of Lapland was redesignated the 20th Mountain Army.[138]

    Siege of Leningrad and naval warfare

    In the early stages of the war, the Finnish Army overran the former 1939 border, but ceased their advance 30–32 km (19–20 mi) from the center of Leningrad. Multiple authors have stated that Finland participated in the siege of Leningrad (Russian: Блокада Ленинграда), but the full extent and nature of their participation is debated and a clear consensus has yet to emerge.[Note 9] American historian David Glantz, writes that the Finnish Army generally maintained their lines and contributed little to the siege from 1941 to 1944,[139] whereas Russian historian Nikolai Baryshnikov [ru] stated in 2002 that Finland tacitly supported Hitler's starvation policy for the city.[23] However, in 2009 British historian Michael Jones disputed Baryshnikov's claim and asserted that the Finnish Army cut off the city's northern supply routes but did not take further military action.[21] In 2006, American author Lisa Kirschenbaum wrote that the siege started "when German and Finnish troops severed all land routes in and out of Leningrad."[140]

     
    Keitel (left), Hitler, Mannerheim and Ryti meeting at Immola Airfield on 4 June 1942. Hitler made a surprise visit in honour of Mannerheim's 75th birthday and to discuss plans.[141]

    According to Clements, Mannerheim personally refused Hitler's request of assaulting Leningrad during their meeting on 4 June 1942. Mannerheim explained to Hitler that "Finland had every reason to wish to stay out of any further provocation of the Soviet Union."[142] In 2014, author Jeff Rutherford described the city as being "ensnared" between the German and Finnish armies.[26] British historian John Barber described it as a "siege by the German and Finnish armies from 8 September 1941 to 27 January 1944 [...]" in his foreword in 2017.[27] Likewise, in 2017, Alexis Peri wrote that the city was "completely cut off, save a heavily patrolled water passage over Lake Ladoga" by "Hitler's Army Group North and his Finnish allies."[143]

     
    The Finnish minelayer Ruotsinsalmi lays naval mines in the Gulf of Finland in May 1942

    The 150 speedboats, two minelayers and four steamships of the Finnish Ladoga Naval Detachment, as well as numerous shore batteries, had been stationed on Lake Ladoga since August 1941. Finnish Lieutenant General Paavo Talvela proposed on 17 May 1942 to create a joint Finnish–German–Italian unit on the lake to disrupt Soviet supply convoys to Leningrad. The unit was named Naval Detachment K and comprised four Italian MAS torpedo motorboats of the XII Squadriglia MAS, four German KM-type minelayers and the Finnish torpedo-motorboat Sisu. The detachment began operations in August 1942 and sank numerous smaller Soviet watercraft and flatboats and assaulted enemy bases and beach fronts until it was dissolved in the winter of 1942–43.[1] Twenty-three Siebel ferries and nine infantry transports of the German Einsatzstab Fähre Ost were also deployed to Lake Ladoga and unsuccessfully assaulted the island of Sukho, which protected the main supply route to Leningrad, in October 1942.[144]

    Despite the siege of the city, the Soviet Baltic Fleet was still able to operate from Leningrad. The Finnish Navy's flagship Ilmarinen had been sunk in September 1941 in the gulf by mines during the failed diversionary Operation Nordwind (1941).[145] In early 1942, Soviet forces recaptured the island of Gogland, but lost it and the Bolshoy Tyuters islands to Finnish forces later in spring 1942. During the winter between 1941 and 1942, the Soviet Baltic Fleet decided to use their large submarine fleet in offensive operations. Though initial submarine operations in the summer of 1942 were successful, the Kriegsmarine and Finnish Navy soon intensified their anti-submarine efforts, making Soviet submarine operations later in 1942 costly. The underwater offensive carried out by the Soviets convinced the Germans to lay anti-submarine nets as well as supporting minefields between Porkkala Peninsula and Naissaar, which proved to be an insurmountable obstacle for Soviet submarines.[146] On the Arctic Ocean, Finnish radio intelligence intercepted Allied messages on supply convoys to Murmansk, such as PQ 17 and PQ 18, and relayed the information to the Abwehr, German intelligence.[147]

    Finnish military administration and concentration camps

     
    Soviet women having breakfast next to burning trash at a Finnish concentration camp in Petrozavodsk

    On 19 July 1941, the Finns created a military administration in occupied East Karelia with the goal of preparing the region for eventual incorporation into Finland. The Finns aimed to expel the Russian portion of the local population (constituting to about a half), who were deemed "non-national",[148] from the area once the war was over,[149] and replace them with the local Finnic peoples, such as Karelians, Finns, Ingrians and Vepsians. Most of the East Karelian population had already been evacuated before the Finnish forces arrived, but about 85,000 people — mostly elderly, women and children — were left behind, less than half of whom were Karelians. A significant number of civilians, almost 30 percent of the remaining Russians, were interned in concentration camps.[148]

     
    Administrative map of Finland and occupied territories 1942–1944

    The winter between 1941 and 1942 was particularly harsh for the Finnish urban population due to poor harvests and a shortage of agricultural labourers.[148] However, conditions were much worse for Russians in Finnish concentration camps. More than 3,500 people died, mostly from starvation, amounting to 13.8 per cent of those detained, while the corresponding figure for the free population of the occupied territories was 2.6 per cent, and 1.4 per cent for Finland.[150] Conditions gradually improved, ethnic discrimination in wage levels and food rations was terminated, and new schools were established for the Russian-speaking population the following year, after Commander-in-Chief Mannerheim called for the International Committee of the Red Cross from Geneva to inspect the camps.[151][152] By the end of the occupation, mortality rates had dropped to the same levels as in Finland.[150]

    Jews in Finland

     
    Finnish soldiers in front of a field synagogue

    Finland had a small Jewish population of approximately 2,300 people, of whom 300 were refugees. They had full civil rights and fought with other Finns in the ranks of the Finnish Army. The field synagogue in East Karelia was one of the very few functioning synagogues on the Axis side during the war. There were several cases of Jewish officers of the Finnish Army being awarded the German Iron Cross, which they declined. German soldiers were treated by Jewish medical officers—who sometimes saved the soldiers' lives.[153][154][155] German command mentioned Finnish Jews at the Wannsee Conference in January 1942, wishing to transport them to the Majdanek concentration camp in occupied Poland. SS leader Heinrich Himmler also raised the topic of Finnish Jews during his visit in Finland in the summer of 1942; Finnish Prime Minister Jukka Rangell replied that Finland did not have a Jewish question.[72] In November 1942, the Minister of the Interior Toivo Horelli and the head of State Police Arno Anthoni secretly deported eight Jewish refugees to the Gestapo, raising protests among Finnish Social Democrat Party ministers. Only one of the deportees survived. After the incident, the Finnish government refused to transfer any more Jews to German detainment.[156][157]

    Soviet offensive in 1944

    Air raids and the Leningrad–Novgorod Offensive

    Finland began to seek an exit from the war after the German defeat at the Battle of Stalingrad in February 1943. Finnish Prime Minister Edwin Linkomies formed a new cabinet in March 1943 with peace as the top priority. Similarly, the Finns were distressed by the Allied invasion of Sicily in July and the German defeat in the Battle of Kursk in August. Negotiations were conducted intermittently in 1943 and 1944 between Finland, the Western Allies and the Soviets, but no agreement was reached.[158] Stalin decided to force Finland to surrender with a bombing campaign on Helsinki. Starting in February 1944, it included three major air attacks totaling over 6,000 sorties. Finnish anti-aircraft defence repelled the raids, and only 5% of the dropped bombs hit their planned targets. In Helsinki, decoy searchlights and fires were placed outside the city to deceive Soviet bombers into dropping their payloads on unpopulated areas. Major air attacks also hit Oulu and Kotka, but pre-emptive radio intelligence and effective defence kept the number of casualties low.[159]

     
    Bombing destruction in Helsinki, the night of 6–7 February 1944.

    The Soviet Leningrad–Novgorod Offensive finally lifted the siege of Leningrad on 26–27 January 1944[27] and pushed Army Group North to Ida-Viru County on the Estonian border. Stiff German and Estonian defence in Narva from February to August prevented the use of occupied Estonia as a favourable base for Soviet amphibious and air assaults against Helsinki and other Finnish coastal cities in support of a land offensive.[160][161][162] Field Marshal Mannerheim had reminded the German command on numerous occasions that if the German troops withdrew from Estonia, Finland would be forced to make peace, even on extremely unfavourable terms.[163] Finland abandoned peace negotiations in April 1944 because of the unfavourable terms the USSR demanded.[164][165]

    Vyborg–Petrozavodsk Offensive and breakthrough

    On 9 June 1944, the Soviet Leningrad Front launched an offensive against Finnish positions on the Karelian Isthmus and in the area of Lake Ladoga, timed to coincide with Operation Overlord in Normandy as agreed during the Tehran Conference.[119] Along the 21.7 km (13.5 mi)-wide breakthrough, the Red Army concentrated 3,000 guns and mortars. In some places, the concentration of artillery pieces exceeded 200 guns for every kilometre of front or one for every 5 m (5.5 yd). Soviet artillery fired over 80,000 rounds along the front on the Karelian Isthmus. On the second day of the offensive, the artillery barrages and superior number of Soviet forces crushed the main Finnish defence line. The Red Army penetrated the second line of defence, the Vammelsuu–Taipale line (VT line), by the sixth day and recaptured Viipuri with insignificant resistance on 20 June. The Soviet breakthrough on the Karelian Isthmus forced the Finns to reinforce the area, thus allowing the concurrent Soviet offensive in East Karelia to meet less resistance and to recapture Petrozavodsk by 28 June 1944.[166][167][168]

     
    Finnish soldiers carrying Panzerfäuste on their shoulders pass by the remains of a destroyed Soviet T-34 tank at the Battle of Tali-Ihantala

    On 25 June, the Red Army reached the third line of defence, the Viipuri–Kuparsaari–Taipale line (VKT line), and the decisive Battle of Tali-Ihantala began, which has been described as the largest battle in Nordic military history.[169] By then, the Finnish Army had retreated around 100 km (62 mi) to approximately the same line of defence they had held at the end of the Winter War. Finland especially lacked modern anti-tank weaponry that could stop Soviet heavy armour, such as the KV-1 or IS-2. Thus, German Foreign Minister Joachim von Ribbentrop offered German hand-held Panzerfaust and Panzerschreck antitank weapons in exchange for a guarantee that Finland would not seek a separate peace with the Soviets. On 26 June, President Risto Ryti gave the guarantee as a personal undertaking that he, Field Marshal Mannerheim and Prime Minister Edwin Linkomies intended to last legally only for the remainder of Ryti's presidency. In addition to delivering thousands of anti-tank weapons, Hitler sent the 122nd Infantry Division and the half-strength 303rd Assault Gun Brigade armed with Sturmgeschütz III tank destroyers as well as the Luftwaffe's Detachment Kuhlmey to provide temporary support in the most vulnerable sectors.[170] With the new supplies and assistance from Germany, the Finnish Army halted the numerically and materially superior Soviet advance at Tali-Ihantala on 9 July 1944 and stabilised the front.[171][172][173]

    More battles were fought toward the end of the war, the last of which was the Battle of Ilomantsi, fought between 26 July and 13 August 1944 and resulting in a Finnish victory with the destruction of two Soviet divisions.[165][174][175] Resisting the Soviet offensive had exhausted Finnish resources. Despite German support under the Ryti-Ribbentrop Agreement, Finland asserted that it was unable to blunt another major offensive.[176] Soviet victories against German Army Groups Center and North during Operation Bagration made the situation even more dire for Finland.[176] With no imminent further Soviet offensives, Finland sought to leave the war.[176][177][178] On 1 August, Ryti resigned, and on 4 August, Field Marshal Mannerheim was sworn in as the new president. He annulled the agreement between Ryti and Ribbentrop on 17 August to allow Finland to sue for peace with the Soviets again, and peace terms from Moscow arrived on 29 August.[167][177][179][180]

    Ceasefire and peace

     
    The front lines on 4 September 1944, when the ceasefire came into effect and two weeks before the war concluded

    Finland was required to return to the borders agreed to in the 1940 Moscow Peace Treaty, demobilise its armed forces, fulfill war reparations and cede the municipality of Petsamo. The Finns were also required to end any diplomatic relations with Germany immediately and to expel the Wehrmacht from Finnish territory by 15 September 1944; any troops remaining were to be disarmed, arrested and turned over to the Allies. The Finnish Parliament accepted those terms in a secret meeting on 2 September and requested for official negotiations for an armistice to begin. The Finnish Army implemented a ceasefire at 8:00 a.m. Helsinki time on 4 September. The Red Army followed suit a day later. On 14 September, a delegation led by Finnish Prime Minister Antti Hackzell and Foreign Minister Carl Enckell began negotiating, with the Soviet Union and the United Kingdom, the final terms of the Moscow Armistice, which eventually included additional stipulations from the Soviets. They were presented by Molotov on 18 September and accepted by the Finnish Parliament a day later.[181][180]

     
    A Soviet (left) and a Finnish officer compare their watches on 4 September 1944 at Vyborg.

    The motivations for the Soviet peace agreement with Finland are debated. Several Western historians stated that the original Soviet designs for Finland were no different from those for the Baltic countries. American political scientist Dan Reiter asserted that for Moscow, the control of Finland was necessary. Reiter and the British historian Victor Rothwell quoted Molotov as telling his Lithuanian counterpart in 1940, when the Soviets effectively annexed Lithuania, that minor states such as Finland, "will be included within the honourable family of Soviet peoples".[182][183] Reiter stated that concern over severe losses pushed Stalin into accepting a limited outcome in the war rather than pursuing annexation, although some Soviet documents called for military occupation of Finland. He also wrote that Stalin had described territorial concessions, reparations and military bases as his objective with Finland to representatives from the UK, in December 1941, and the US, in March 1943, as well as the Tehran Conference. He believed that in the end, "Stalin's desire to crush Hitler quickly and decisively without distraction from the Finnish sideshow" concluded the war.[184] Red Army officers captured as prisoners of war during the Battle of Tali-Ihantala revealed that their intention was to reach Helsinki, and that they were to be strengthened with reinforcements for this task.[185] This was confirmed by intercepted Soviet radio messages.[185]

    Russian historian Nikolai Baryshnikov disputed the view that the Soviet Union sought to deprive Finland of its independence. He argued that there is no documentary evidence for such claims and that the Soviet government was always open for negotiations. Baryshnikov cited sources like the public information chief of Finnish Headquarters, Major Kalle Lehmus [fi], to show that Finnish leadership had learned of the limited Soviet plans for Finland by at least July 1944 after intelligence revealed that some Soviet divisions were to be transferred to reserve in Leningrad.[186] Finnish historian Heikki Ylikangas [fi] stated similar findings in 2009. According to him, the Soviets refocused their efforts in the summer of 1944 from the Finnish Front to defeating Germany, and Mannerheim received intelligence from Colonel Aladár Paasonen in June 1944 that the Soviet Union was aiming for peace, not occupation.[187]

    Evidence of the Soviet leadership's intentions for the occupation of Finland has later been uncovered. In 2018, it was revealed that the Soviets' designed and printed (in Goznak) new banknotes for Finland during the closing phases of the war, which were to be put into use after the planned occupation of the country.[188]

    Aftermath and casualties

    Finland and Germany

     
    Areas ceded by Finland to the Soviet Union following the Moscow Armistice displayed in red

    According to Finnish historians, the casualties of the Finnish Defence Forces amounted to 63,204 dead or missing and around 158,000 wounded.[13][14][Note 10] Officially, the Soviets captured 2,377 Finnish prisoners-of-war, but Finnish researchers estimated the number to be around 3,500 prisoners.[15] A total of 939 Finnish civilians died in air raids and 190 civilians were killed by Soviet partisans.[133][135][189][14] Germany suffered approximately 84,000 casualties in the Finnish front: 16,400 killed, 60,400 wounded and 6,800 missing.[14] In addition to the original peace terms of restoring the 1940 border, Finland was required to pay war reparations to the USSR, conduct domestic war-responsibility trials, cede the municipality of Petsamo and lease the Porkkala Peninsula to the Soviets, as well as ban fascist elements and allow left-wing groups, such as the Communist Party of Finland.[181] A Soviet-led Allied Control Commission was installed to enforce and monitor the peace agreement in Finland.[5] The requirement to disarm or expel any German troops left on Finnish soil by 15 September 1944 eventually escalated into the Lapland War between Finland and Germany and the evacuation of the 200,000-strong 20th Mountain Army to Norway.[190]

    The Soviet demand for $600 million in war indemnities was reduced to $300 million (equivalent to $5.8 billion in 2021), most likely because of pressure from the US and the UK. After the ceasefire, the Soviets insisted for the payments to be based on 1938 prices, which doubled the de facto amount.[191][181] The temporary Moscow Armistice was finalised without changes later in the Paris Peace Treaties, 1947.[192] Henrik Lunde noted that Finland survived the war without losing its independence, unlike many of Germany's allies.[193] Likewise, Helsinki, along with Moscow, was the only capital of a combatant nation that was not occupied in Continental Europe.[14] In the longer term, Peter Provis analysed that by following self-censorship and limited appeasement policies as well as by fulfilling the Soviet demands, Finland avoided the fate of other nations that were annexed by the Soviets.[194] Because of Soviet pressure, Finland was also forced to refuse any economic aid from the Marshall Plan.

    Many civilians who had been displaced after the Winter War had moved back into Karelia during the Continuation War and so had to be evacuated from Karelia again. Of the 260,000 civilians who had returned Karelia, only 19 chose to remain and become Soviet citizens.[195] Most of the Ingrian Finns, together with Votes and Izhorians living in German-occupied Ingria, had been evacuated to Finland in 1943–1944. After the armistice, Finland was forced to return the evacuees.[196] Soviet authorities did not allow the 55,733 returnees to resettle in Ingria and deported the Ingrian Finns to central regions of the Soviet Union.[196][197]

    Soviet Union

    The war is considered a Soviet victory.[5][6][7] According to Finnish historians, Soviet casualties in the Continuation War were not accurately recorded and various approximations have arisen.[13][14] Russian historian Grigori Krivosheev estimated in 1997 that around 250,000 were killed or missing in action while 575,000 were medical casualties (385,000 wounded and 190,000 sick).[11][13] Finnish author Nenye and others stated in 2016 that at least 305,000 were confirmed dead, or missing, according to the latest research and the number of wounded certainly exceeded 500,000.[14] The number of Soviet prisoners of war in Finland was estimated by Finnish historians to be around 64,000, 56,000 of whom were captured in 1941.[16] Around 2,600 to 2,800 Soviet prisoners of war were rendered to Germany in exchange for roughly 2,200 Finnic prisoners of war.[198] Of the Soviet prisoners, at least 18,318 were documented to have died in Finnish prisoner of war camps.[199] The extent of Finland's participation in the siege of Leningrad, and whether Soviet civilian casualties during the siege should be attributed to the Continuation War, is debated and lacks a consensus (estimates of civilian deaths during the siege range from 632,253[200] to 1,042,000).[139][27] Of material losses, authors Jowett and Snodgrass state that 697 Soviet tanks were destroyed,[172] 842 field artillery pieces captured,[201][Note 11] and 1,600 airplanes destroyed by Finnish fighter planes (1030 by anti-aircraft fire and 75 by the Navy).[202]

    In popular culture

    Several literary and cinematic arrangements have been made on the basis of the Continuation War. The best-known story about the Continuation War is Väinö Linna's novel The Unknown Soldier, which was the basis for three films: in 1955, 1985, and 2017.[203][204] There is also a 1999 film Ambush, based on a novel by Antti Tuuri on the events in Rukajärvi, Karelia,[205] and a 2007 film 1944: The Final Defence, based on the Battle of Tali-Ihantala.[206]

    See also

    Notes

    1. ^ Italian participation was limited to the four motor torpedo boats of the XII Squadriglia MAS serving in the international Naval Detachment K on Lake Ladoga during the summer and autumn of 1942.[1]
    2. ^ The United Kingdom formally declared war on Finland on 6 December 1941 along with four Commonwealth states largely for appearances' sake.[2] Before that, the British conducted a carrier raid at Petsamo on 31 July 1941,[3] and commenced Operation Benedict to support air raids in the Murmansk area and train Soviet crews for roughly a month from September to October in 1941.[4]
    3. ^ Finnish: jatkosota; Swedish: fortsättningskriget; German: Fortsetzungskrieg. According to Finnish historian Olli Vehviläinen, the term 'Continuation War' was created at the start of the conflict by the Finnish government, to justify the invasion to the population as a continuation of the defensive Winter War and separate from the German war effort. He titled the chapter addressing the issue in his book as "Finland's War of Retaliation". Vehviläinen asserted that the reality of that claim changed when the Finnish forces crossed the 1939 frontier and started annexation operations.[17] The US Library of Congress catalogue also lists the variants War of Retribution and War of Continuation (see authority control).
    4. ^ Russian: Советско-финский фронт Великой Отечественной войны. Alternatively the Soviet–Finnish War 1941–1944 (Russian: Советско–финская война 1941–1944).[18]
    5. ^ See the relevant section and the following sources:[20][21][22][23][24][25][26][27]
    6. ^ See the following sources: [102][21][103][25][104]
    7. ^ See the following sources:[20][22][105][24][106][21][27]
    8. ^ Secondary sources contradict each other and state either 5 or 6 December as the day war was declared. According to a news piece on 8 December 1941 by The Examiner, an Australian newspaper, Britain notified the Finnish Government on 6 December "that she considered herself at war with [Finland] as from 1 a.m. (G.M.T.) to-morrow."[127]
    9. ^ See the following sources: [102][21][103][21][25][104]
    10. ^ A detailed list of Finnish dead is as follows:[189]
      • Dead, buried 33,565;
      • Wounded, died of wounds 12,820;
      • Dead, not buried, declared as dead 4,251;
      • Missing, declared as dead 3,552;
      • Died as prisoners-of-war 473;
      • Other reasons (diseases, accidents, suicides) 7,932;
      • Unknown 611.
    11. ^ This number includes only those field artillery pieces which were captured in full condition or were later repaired to full condition and used by Finnish artillery. It doesn’t include anti tank guns, anti aircraft guns or coastal guns captured. Armies do not usually leave undestroyed guns behind and we can assume that Soviet army was no exception. So the number of guns left behind and lost by Soviet army is something much higher.

    References

    Citations

    1. ^ a b Zapotoczny, Walter S. Jr. (2017). Decima Flottiglia MAS: The Best Commandos of the Second World War. Fonthill Media. p. 123. ISBN 9781625451132. from the original on 21 February 2018.
    2. ^ a b c Clements 2012, p. 210.
    3. ^ a b Sturtivant, Ray (1990). British Naval Aviation: The Fleet Air Arm 1917–1990. London: Arms & Armour Press Ltd. p. 86. ISBN 0-85368-938-5.
    4. ^ a b Carter, Eric; Loveless, Anthony (2014). Force Benedict. Hodder & Stoughton. ISBN 9781444785135. from the original on 21 February 2018.
    5. ^ a b c Mouritzen, Hans (1997). External Danger and Democracy: Old Nordic Lessons and New European Challenges. Dartmouth. p. 35. ISBN 1855218852. from the original on 22 February 2018..
    6. ^ a b Nordstrom, Byron J. (2000). Scandinavia Since 1500. Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press. p. 316. ISBN 978-0816620982..
    7. ^ a b Morgan, Kevin; Cohen, Gidon; Flinn, Andrew (2005). Agents of the Revolution: New Biographical Approaches to the History of International Communism in the Age of Lenin and Stalin. Peter Lang. p. 246. ISBN 978-3-03910-075-0. from the original on 2 March 2018.
    8. ^ a b Kinnunen & Kivimäki 2011, p. 173.
    9. ^ a b Ziemke 2002, pp. 9, 391–393.
    10. ^ Manninen, Ohto, Molotovin cocktail- Hitlerin sateenvarjo, 1994, Painatuskeskus, ISBN 951-37-1495-0
    11. ^ a b c d e Krivosheev, Grigori F. (1997). Soviet Casualties and Combat Losses in the Twentieth Century. Greenhill Books. pp. 79, 269–271. ISBN 9781853672804. from the original on 22 February 2018.
    12. ^ Manninen 1994, p. 277–282.
    13. ^ a b c d e f g Kinnunen & Kivimäki 2011, p. 172.
    14. ^ a b c d e f g h i Nenye et al. 2016, p. 320.
    15. ^ a b Malmi, Timo (2005). "Jatkosodan suomalaiset sotavangit". In Leskinen, Jari; Juutilainen, Antti (eds.). Jatkosodan pikkujättiläinen (in Finnish) (1st ed.). Werner Söderström Osakeyhtiö. pp. 1022–1032. ISBN 9510286907.
    16. ^ a b Leskinen & Juutilainen 2005, p. 1036.
    17. ^ a b Vehviläinen 2002, p. 91.
    18. ^ "Finland". Great Soviet Encyclopedia. MacMillan Publishing Company. 1974. ISBN 0028800109.
    19. ^ "RG 84: Finland". National Archives. 15 August 2016. from the original on 21 October 2020. Retrieved 2 August 2020.
    20. ^ a b Wykes, Alan (1968). The Siege of Leningrad: Epic of Survival. Ballantine Books. pp. 9–21. ISBN 9780356029580. from the original on 25 April 2023. Retrieved 2 October 2020.
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    • Weeks, Albert L. (2004). Russia's Life-Saver: Lend-Lease Aid to the U.S.S.R. in World War II. Lexington Books. ISBN 978-0-7391-0736-2..
    • Werth, Alexander (1999). Russia at War, 1941–1945 (2 ed.). New York: Basic Books. ISBN 978-0786707225.
    • Zeiler, Thomas W.; DuBois, Daniel M., eds. (2012). "Scandinavian Campaigns". A Companion to World War II. Wiley Blackwell Companions to World History. Vol. 11. Wiley-Blackwell. ISBN 978-1-4051-9681-9. from the original on 25 April 2023. Retrieved 2 October 2020.
    • Ziemke, Earl F. (2002). Stalingrad to Berlin: The German Defeat in the East (PDF). Center of Military History, United States Army. ISBN 1780392877. (PDF) from the original on 20 September 2015.
    • Ziemke, Earl F. (2015). German Northern Theater of Operations 1940–1945 (Illustrated ed.). Pickle Partners Publishing. ISBN 9781782899778. from the original on 25 April 2023. Retrieved 2 October 2020.

    Finnish and Russian

    • Baryshnikov, Nikolai I. (2002). Блокада Ленинграда и Финляндия 1941–1944 [Finland and the Siege of Leningrad 1941–1944] (in Russian). St. Petersburg: Johan Beckman Institute. ISBN 9525412105. from the original on 1 February 2014. Retrieved 10 May 2011.
    • Baryshnikov, Nikolai I. (2006). Феномен фальши: 'Победа в противостоянии' [The Phenomenon of Lies: 'The Victory in the Confrontation']. St. Petersburg and the Countries of Northern Europe (in Russian). St. Petersburg: Russian Christian Humanitarian Academy. from the original on 2 November 2013. Retrieved 1 November 2013.
    • Baryshnikov, Vladimir N. (2002v). "Проблема обеспечения безопасности Ленинграда с севера в свете осуществления советского военного планирования 1932–1941 гг" [The problem of ensuring the security of Leningrad from the north in the light of the implementation of the Soviet military planning of 1932–1941]. St. Petersburg and the Countries of Northern Europe (in Russian). St. Petersburg: Russian Christian Humanitarian Academy. from the original on 9 December 2007.
    • Enkenberg, Ilkka (2021). Jatkosota Päivä Päivältä (in Finnish). Readme.fi. ISBN 978-952-373-249-0.
    • Haavikko, Paavo (1999). Päämaja – Suomen hovi (in Finnish). Art House. ISBN 951-884-265-5.
    • Jokipii, Mauno (1999). Финляндия на пути к войне: Исследование о военном сотрудничестве Германии и Финляндии в 1940–1941 гг [Birth of the Continuation War: Research of German–Finnish Military Collaboration 1940–1941] (in Russian). Petrozavodsk: Karelia. ISBN 5754507356.
    • Juutilainen, Antti (1994). Ilomantsi – lopultakin voitto (in Finnish). Rauma: Kirjapaino Oy West Point. ISBN 9519521852.
    • Kiljanen, Kalervo (1968). Suomen Laivasto 1918–1968, II [Finnish Navy 1918–1968, II] (in Finnish). Helsinki: Meriupseeriyhdistys/Otava.
    • Koskimaa, Matti (1993). Veitsen terällä : vetäytyminen Länsi-Kannakselta ja Talin-Ihantalan suurtaistelu kesällä 1944 (in Finnish). Porvoo: WSOY. ISBN 9510188115.
    • Manninen, Ohto (1994). Molotovin cocktail – Hitlerin sateenvarjo [Molotov's cocktail – Hitler's umbrella] (in Finnish). Helsinki: Painatuskeskus. ISBN 9513714950.
    • Moisala, U. E.; Alanen, Pertti (1988). Kun hyökkääjän tie pysäytettiin (in Finnish). Keuruu: Otava. ISBN 9511103865.
    • Leskinen, Jari; Juutilainen, Antti, eds. (2005). Jatkosodan pikkujättiläinen (in Finnish) (1st ed.). WSOY. ISBN 9510286907.
    • Luknitsky, Pavel (1988). Сквозь всю блокаду [Through the Siege] (in Russian). Leningrad: Lenizdat.
    • Suprun, Mikhail (1997). Ленд-лиз и северные конвои: 1941–1945 гг [Lend-Lease and Northern Convoys: 1941–1945]. Андреевский флаг. ISBN 5-85608-081-5.
    • Raunio, Ari; Kilin, Juri (2007). Jatkosodan hyökkäystaisteluja 1941 [Offensive Battles of the Continuation War 1941] (in Finnish). Keuruu: Otavan Kirjapaino Oy. ISBN 978-9515930699.
    • Raunio, Ari; Kilin, Juri (2008). Jatkosodan torjuntataisteluja 1942–44 [Defensive Battles of the Continuation War 1942–44] (in Finnish). Keuruu: Otavan Kirjapaino Oy. ISBN 978-9515930705.
    • Nikunen, Heikki; Talvitie, Jyrki K.; Keskinen, Kalevi (2011). Suomen ilmasodan pikkujättiläinen (in Finnish). Helsinki: WSOY. ISBN 978-9510368718.
    • Paulaharju, Jyri; Sinerma, Matti; Koskimaa, Matti (1994). Suomen kenttätykistön historia II Osa (in Finnish). Helsinki: Suomen Kenttätykistön säätiö. ISBN 952-9055110.
    • Virkkunen, Sakari (1985). Myrskyajan presidentti Ryti (in Finnish). Otava. ISBN 951-1-08557-3.

    Further reading

    • Jokipii, Mauno (1987). Jatkosodan synty: tutkimuksia Saksan ja Suomen sotilaallisesta yhteistyöstä 1940–1941 [Birth of the Continuation War: Research of German–Finnish Military Collaboration 1940–1941] (in Finnish). Helsinki: Otava. ISBN 951-1087991.
    • Krosby, Hans Peter (1966). Nikkelidiplomatiaa Petsamossa 1940–1941 (in Finnish). Kirjayhtyma.
    • Krosby, Hans Peter (1967). Suomen valinta 1941 (in Finnish). Kirjayhtyma.
    • Krosby, Hans Peter (1968). Finland, Germany, and the Soviet Union, 1940–1941: The Petsamo Dispute. University of Wisconsin Press. ISBN 9780299051402.
    • National Defence University (Finland) (1994). Raunio, Ari (ed.). Jatkosodan historia 1–6 [History of the Continuation War 1–6] (in Finnish). WSOY.
    • Polvinen, Tuomo I. (1979–1981). Suomi kansainvälisessä politiikassa 1941–1947, osa 1–3 (in Finnish). WSOY.
    • Sana, Elina (1994). Luovutetut: Suomen ihmisluovutukset Gestapolle [The Extradited: Finland's Extraditions to Gestapo] (in Finnish). WSOY. ISBN 9510279757.
    • Schwartz, Andrew J. (1960). America and the Russo–Finnish War. Public Affairs Press. ISBN 0837179645.
    • Seppinen, Ilkka (1983). Suomen ulkomaankaupan ehdot 1939–1944 [Finnish Foreign Trade Conditions, 1939–44] (in Finnish). Suomen Historiallinen Seura. ISBN 9789519254494.
    • Taylor, Alan (23 May 2013). "Finland in World War II". The Atlantic.
    • Wuorinen, John H., ed. (1948). Finland and World War II 1939–1944. The Ronald Press Company. ISBN 0313241333.

    External links

    • Военный альбом (photographs of World War II and the Great Patriotic War 1939–1945 (in Russian))
    • Finna (search service for information from Finnish archives, libraries and museums)
    • Finnish Wartime Photograph Archive (under CC BY 4.0)
    • National Archives of the United Kingdom

    continuation, part, eastern, front, world, iifinnish, soldiers, line, fortifications, during, soviet, vyborg, petrozavodsk, offensive, june, 1944date25, june, 1941, september, 1944, years, months, weeks, days, locationfinland, karelia, murmansk, arearesultsovi. Continuation WarPart of the Eastern Front of World War IIFinnish soldiers at the VT line of fortifications during the Soviet Vyborg Petrozavodsk Offensive in June 1944Date25 June 1941 19 September 1944 3 years 2 months 3 weeks and 4 days LocationFinland Karelia and Murmansk areaResultSoviet victory 5 6 7 Moscow ArmisticeTerritorialchangesPetsamo ceded to the USSR Porkkala Peninsula leased for 12 yearsBelligerents Finland GermanyNaval support Italy Note 1 Soviet UnionAir support United Kingdom Note 2 Commanders and leadersRisto Ryti C G E Mannerheim Aksel Airo Erik Heinrichs Lennart Oesch N von Falkenhorst Eduard Dietl Lothar RendulicJoseph Stalin Markian Popov Valerian Frolov Kirill Meretskov Mikhail Khozin Leonid GovorovStrengthAverage 450 000 Finns 8 Peak 700 000 Finns 8 1941 67 000 Germans 9 1944 214 000 Germans 9 2 000 Estonian volunteers1 000 Swedish volunteers99 Italian navy personnelTotal 900 000 1 500 000 10 June 1941 450 000 11 June 1944 650 000 12 Casualties and lossesFinnish 63 200 dead or missing 13 14 158 000 wounded 13 2 370 3 500 captured 15 225 000 total casualties Not including civilian casualties German 23 200 dead or missing 60 400 wounded 84 000 total casualties 14 Not including civilian casualtiesSoviet 250 000 305 000 dead or missing 11 13 14 575 000 medical casualties including 385 000 wounded and 190 000 sick 11 13 64 000 captured 16 890 000 944 000 total casualties Not including civilian casualties such as siege of Leningrad The Continuation War also known as the Second Soviet Finnish War was a conflict fought by Finland and Nazi Germany against the Soviet Union USSR from 1941 to 1944 as part of World War II Note 3 In Soviet historiography the war was called the Finnish Front of the Great Patriotic War Note 4 Germany regarded its operations in the region as part of its overall war efforts on the Eastern Front and provided Finland with critical materiel support and military assistance including economic aid 19 The Continuation War began 15 months after the end of the Winter War also fought between Finland and the USSR Numerous reasons have been proposed for the Finnish decision to invade with regaining territory lost during the Winter War being regarded as the most common Other justifications for the conflict included Finnish President Risto Ryti s vision of a Greater Finland and Commander in Chief Carl Gustaf Emil Mannerheim s desire to annex East Karelia Plans for the attack were developed jointly between the Wehrmacht and a faction of Finnish political and military leaders with the rest of the government remaining ignorant Despite the co operation in the conflict Finland never formally signed the Tripartite Pact though it did sign the Anti Comintern Pact Finnish leadership justified its alliance with Germany as self defence On 22 June 1941 Germany launched an invasion of the Soviet Union Three days later the Soviet Union conducted an air raid on Finnish cities prompting Finland to declare war and allow German troops stationed in Finland to begin offensive warfare By September 1941 Finland had regained its post Winter War concessions to the Soviet Union the Karelian Isthmus and Ladoga Karelia However the Finnish Army continued the offensive past the 1939 border during the conquest of East Karelia including Petrozavodsk and halted only around 30 32 km 19 20 mi from the centre of Leningrad It participated in besieging the city by cutting the northern supply routes and by digging in until 1944 Note 5 In Lapland joint German Finnish forces failed to capture Murmansk or to cut the Kirov Murmansk Railway a transit route for Soviet lend lease equipment The conflict stabilised with only minor skirmishes until the tide of the war turned against the Germans The Soviet Vyborg Petrozavodsk Offensive of June August 1944 drove the Finns from most of the territories that they had gained during the war but the Finnish Army halted the offensive in August 1944 Hostilities between Finland and the USSR ended with a ceasefire on 5 September 1944 formalised by the signing of the Moscow Armistice on 19 September 1944 One of the conditions of this agreement was the expulsion or disarming of German troops in Finnish territory leading to the Lapland War between Finland and Germany World War II was concluded formally for Finland and the minor Axis powers with the signing of the Paris Peace Treaties in 1947 This confirmed the territorial provisions of the 1944 armistice the restoration of borders per the 1940 Moscow Peace Treaty the ceding of the municipality of Petsamo Russian Pe chengskij rajo n Pechengsky raion and the leasing of Porkkala Peninsula to the Soviets Furthermore Finland was required to pay US 300 million equivalent to US 5 8 billion in 2021 in war reparations to the Soviet Union accept partial responsibility for the war and to acknowledge that it had been a German ally 28 29 Because of Soviet pressure Finland was also forced to refuse Marshall Plan aid Casualties were 63 200 Finns and 23 200 Germans dead or missing during the war and 158 000 Finns and 60 400 Germans wounded Estimates of dead or missing Soviets range from 250 000 to 305 000 and 575 000 have been estimated to have been wounded or fallen sick Contents 1 Background 1 1 Winter War 1 2 German and Soviet expansion in Europe 1 3 Relations between Finland Germany and Soviet Union 1 4 German and Finnish war plans 1 5 Finland s relationship with Germany 2 Order of battle and operational planning 2 1 Soviet 2 2 Finnish and German 3 Finnish offensive phase in 1941 3 1 Initial operations 3 2 Finnish advance in Karelia 3 3 Operation Silver Fox in Lapland and Lend Lease to Murmansk 3 4 Aspirations war effort and international relations 3 5 British declaration of war and action in the Arctic Ocean 4 Trench warfare from 1942 to 1944 4 1 Unconventional warfare and military operations 4 2 Siege of Leningrad and naval warfare 4 3 Finnish military administration and concentration camps 4 4 Jews in Finland 5 Soviet offensive in 1944 5 1 Air raids and the Leningrad Novgorod Offensive 5 2 Vyborg Petrozavodsk Offensive and breakthrough 5 3 Ceasefire and peace 6 Aftermath and casualties 6 1 Finland and Germany 6 2 Soviet Union 7 In popular culture 8 See also 9 Notes 10 References 10 1 Citations 11 Bibliography 11 1 English 11 2 Finnish and Russian 12 Further reading 13 External linksBackground EditWinter War Edit Main articles Winter War and Interim Peace On 23 August 1939 the Soviet Union and Germany signed the Molotov Ribbentrop Pact in which both parties agreed to divide the independent countries of Finland Estonia Latvia Lithuania Poland and Romania into spheres of interest with Finland falling within the Soviet sphere 30 One week later Germany invaded Poland leading to the United Kingdom and France declaring war on Germany The Soviet Union invaded eastern Poland on 17 September 31 Moscow turned its attention to the Baltic states demanding that they allow Soviet military bases to be established and troops stationed on their soil The Baltic governments acquiesced to these demands and signed agreements in September and October 32 Finnish flags at half mast in Helsinki on 13 March 1940 after the Moscow Peace Treaty became public In October 1939 the Soviet Union attempted to negotiate with Finland to cede Finnish territory on the Karelian Isthmus and the islands of the Gulf of Finland and to establish a Soviet military base near the Finnish capital of Helsinki 33 The Finnish government refused and the Red Army invaded Finland on 30 November 1939 34 The USSR was expelled from the League of Nations and was condemned by the international community for the illegal attack 35 Foreign support for Finland was promised but very little actual help materialised except from Sweden 36 The Moscow Peace Treaty concluded the 105 day Winter War on 13 March 1940 and started the Interim Peace 37 By the terms of the treaty Finland ceded 9 of its national territory and 13 of its economic capacity to the Soviet Union 38 Some 420 000 evacuees were resettled from the ceded territories 39 Finland avoided total conquest of the country by the Soviet Union and retained its sovereignty 40 Prior to the war Finnish foreign policy had been based on multilateral guarantees of support from the League of Nations and Nordic countries but this policy was considered a failure 41 After the war Finnish public opinion favored the reconquest of Finnish Karelia The government declared national defence to be its first priority and military expenditure rose to nearly half of public spending Finland purchased and received donations of war materiel during and immediately after the Winter War 39 Likewise Finnish leadership wanted to preserve the spirit of unanimity that was felt throughout the country during the Winter War The divisive White Guard tradition of the Finnish Civil War s 16 May victory day celebration was therefore discontinued 42 The Soviet Union had received the Hanko Naval Base on Finland s southern coast near the capital Helsinki where it deployed over 30 000 Soviet military personnel 39 Relations between Finland and the Soviet Union remained strained after the signing of the one sided peace treaty and there were disputes regarding the implementation of the treaty Finland sought security against further territorial depredations by the USSR and proposed mutual defence agreements with Norway and Sweden but these initiatives were quashed by Moscow 43 44 German and Soviet expansion in Europe Edit See also Germany Soviet Union relations before 1941 Vasilievsky Island in Saint Petersburg pictured in 2017 During the Winter and Continuation Wars Leningrad as it was then known was of strategic importance to both sides After the Winter War Germany was viewed with distrust by the Finnish as it was considered an ally of the Soviet Union Nonetheless the Finnish government sought to restore diplomatic relations with Germany but also continued its Western orientated policy and negotiated a war trade agreement with the United Kingdom 43 The agreement was renounced after the German invasion of Denmark and Norway on 9 April 1940 resulted in the UK cutting all trade and traffic communications with the Nordic countries With the fall of France a Western orientation was no longer considered a viable option in Finnish foreign policy 45 On 15 and 16 June the Soviet Union occupied three Baltic countries almost without any resistance and Soviet puppet regimes were installed Within two months Estonia Latvia and Lithuania were incorporated into the USSR and by mid 1940 the two remaining northern democracies Finland and Sweden were encircled by the hostile states of Germany and the Soviet Union 46 On 23 June shortly after the Soviet occupation of the Baltic states began Soviet Foreign Minister Vyacheslav Molotov contacted the Finnish government to demand that a mining licence be issued to the Soviet Union for the nickel mines in Pechengsky District Russian Pechengsky raion or alternatively permission for the establishment of a joint Soviet Finnish company to operate there A licence to mine the deposit had already been granted to a British Canadian company and so the demand was rejected by Finland The following month the Soviets demanded that Finland destroy the fortifications on the Aland Islands and to grant the Soviets the right to use Finnish railways to transport Soviet troops to the newly acquired Soviet base at Hanko The Finns very reluctantly agreed to those demands 47 On 24 July Molotov accused the Finnish government of persecuting the communist Finland Soviet Union Peace and Friendship Society and soon afterward publicly declared support for the group The society organised demonstrations in Finland some of which turned into riots 48 49 Russian language sources such as the book Stalin s Missed Chance maintain that Soviet policies leading up to the Continuation War were best explained as defensive measures by offensive means The Soviet division of occupied Poland with Germany the Soviet annexation of Lithuania Latvia and Estonia and the Soviet invasion of Finland during the Winter War are described as elements in the Soviet construction of a security zone or buffer region from the perceived threat from the capitalist powers of Western Europe Postwar Russian language sources consider establishment of Soviet satellite states in the Warsaw Pact countries and the Finno Soviet Treaty of 1948 as the culmination of the Soviet defence plan 50 51 52 Western historians such as Norman Davies and John Lukacs dispute this view and describe pre war Soviet policy as an attempt to stay out of the war and regain land lost after the fall of the Russian Empire 53 54 Relations between Finland Germany and Soviet Union Edit Main article Operation Barbarossa The geopolitical status in Europe in May 1941 The United Kingdom and occupied areas Germany its allies and occupied areas The Soviet Union and occupied areas Note how Finland is marked as a German ally On 31 July 1940 German Chancellor Adolf Hitler gave the order to plan an assault on the Soviet Union meaning Germany had to reassess its position regarding both Finland and Romania Until then Germany had rejected Finnish appeals to purchase arms but with the prospect of an invasion of Russia that policy was reversed and in August the secret sale of weapons to Finland was permitted 55 Military authorities signed an agreement on 12 September and an official exchange of diplomatic notes was sent on 22 September Meanwhile German troops were allowed to transit through Sweden and Finland 56 That change in policy meant Germany had effectively redrawn the border of the German and Soviet spheres of influence in violation of the Molotov Ribbentrop Pact 57 In response to that new situation Molotov visited Berlin on 12 13 November 1940 58 He requested for Germany to withdraw its troops from Finland 59 and to stop enabling Finnish anti Soviet sentiments He also reminded the Germans of the 1939 pact Hitler inquired how the Soviets planned to settle the Finnish question to which Molotov responded that it would mirror the events in Bessarabia and the Baltic states Hitler rejected that course of action 60 In December the Soviet Union Germany and the United Kingdom all voiced opinions concerning suitable Finnish presidential candidates Risto Ryti was the sole candidate not objected to by any of the three powers and was elected on 19 December 61 Joachim von Ribbentrop right bidding farewell to Vyacheslav Molotov in Berlin on 14 November 1940 after discussing Finland s coming fate In January 1941 Moscow demanded Finland relinquish control of the Petsamo mining area to the Soviets but Finland emboldened by a rebuilt defence force and German support rejected the proposition 61 On 18 December 1940 Hitler officially approved Operation Barbarossa paving the way for the German invasion of the Soviet Union 62 in which he expected both Finland and Romania to participate 63 Meanwhile Finnish Major General Paavo Talvela met with German Generaloberst Franz Halder and Reichsmarschall Hermann Goring in Berlin the first time that the Germans had advised the Finnish government in carefully couched diplomatic terms that they were preparing for war with the Soviet Union Outlines of the actual plan were revealed in January 1941 and regular contact between Finnish and German military leaders began in February 63 In the late spring of 1941 the USSR made a number of goodwill gestures to prevent Finland from completely falling under German influence Ambassador Ivan Stepanovich Zotov ru was replaced with the more flexible Pavel Dmitrievich Orlov ru Furthermore the Soviet government announced that it no longer opposed a rapprochement between Finland and Sweden Those conciliatory measures however did not have any effect on Finnish policy 64 Finland wished to re enter the war mainly because of the Soviet invasion of Finland during the Winter War which had taken place after Finnish intentions of relying on the League of Nations and Nordic neutrality to avoid conflicts had failed because of lack of outside support 65 Finland primarily aimed to reverse its territorial losses from the March 1940 Moscow Peace Treaty and depending on the success of the German invasion of the Soviet Union to possibly expand its borders especially into East Karelia Some right wing groups such as the Academic Karelia Society supported a Greater Finland ideology 66 German and Finnish war plans Edit The matter of when and why Finland prepared for war is still somewhat opaque Historian William R Trotter stated that it has so far proven impossible to pinpoint the exact date on which Finland was taken into confidence about Operation Barbarossa and that neither the Finns nor the Germans were entirely candid with one another as to their national aims and methods In any case the step from contingency planning to actual operations when it came was little more than a formality 67 The inner circle of Finnish leadership led by Ryti and Mannerheim actively planned joint operations with Germany under a veil of ambiguous neutrality and without formal agreements after an alliance with Sweden had proved fruitless according to a meta analysis by Finnish historian Olli Vehvilainen fi He likewise refuted the so called driftwood theory that Finland had been merely a piece of driftwood that was swept uncontrollably in the rapids of great power politics Even then most historians conclude that Finland had no realistic alternative to co operating with Germany 68 On 20 May the Germans invited a number of Finnish officers to discuss the coordination of Operation Barbarossa The participants met on 25 28 May in Salzburg and Berlin and continued their meeting in Helsinki from 3 to 6 June They agreed upon the arrival of German troops Finnish mobilisation and a general division of operations 64 They also agreed that the Finnish Army would start mobilisation on 15 June but the Germans did not reveal the actual date of the assault The Finnish decisions were made by the inner circle of political and military leaders without the knowledge of the rest of the government which were not informed until 9 June that mobilisation of reservists because of tensions between Germany and the Soviet Union would be required 62 69 Finland s relationship with Germany Edit Finland never signed the Tripartite Pact though it did sign the Anti Comintern Pact a less formal alliance which the German leadership saw as a litmus test of loyalty 70 The Finnish leadership stated they would fight against the Soviets only to the extent needed to redress the balance of the 1940 treaty though some historians consider that it had wider territorial goals under the slogan shorter borders longer peace During the war the Finnish leadership generally referred to the Germans as brothers in arms but also denied that they were allies of Germany instead claiming to be co belligerents 71 For Hitler the distinction was irrelevant since he saw Finland as an ally 72 The 1947 Paris Peace Treaty signed by Finland described Finland as having been an ally of Hitlerite Germany during the Continuation War 28 29 In a 2008 poll of 28 Finnish historians carried out by Helsingin Sanomat 16 said that Finland had been an ally of Nazi Germany six said it had not been and six did not take a position 73 Order of battle and operational planning EditSoviet Edit Finnish German and Soviet military formations at the start of the Continuation War in June and July 1941 The Northern Front Russian Severnyj front of the Leningrad Military District was commanded by Lieutenant General Markian Popov and numbered around 450 000 soldiers in 18 divisions and 40 independent battalions in the Finnish region 11 During the Interim Peace the Soviet Military had relaid operational plans to conquer Finland 74 but with the German attack Operation Barbarossa begun on 22 June 1941 the Soviets required its best units and latest materiel to be deployed against the Germans and so abandoned plans for a renewed offensive against Finland 17 75 The 23rd Army was deployed in the Karelian Isthmus the 7th Army to Ladoga Karelia and the 14th Army to the Murmansk Salla area of Lapland The Northern Front also commanded eight aviation divisions 76 As the initial German strike against the Soviet Air Forces had not affected air units located near Finland it could deploy around 700 aircraft supported by a number of Soviet Navy wings 77 The Red Banner Baltic Fleet comprised 2 battleships 2 light cruisers 47 destroyers or large torpedo boats 75 submarines over 200 smaller craft as well as hundreds of aircraft and outnumbered the Kriegsmarine 78 Finnish and German Edit Main articles Finnish Army and German Army 1935 1945 The Finnish Army Finnish Maavoimat mobilised between 475 000 and 500 000 soldiers in 14 divisions and 3 brigades for the invasion commanded by Field Marshal sotamarsalkka Mannerheim The army was organised as follows 75 79 80 II Corps II Armeijakunta II AK and IV Corps deployed to the Karelian Isthmus and comprised seven infantry divisions and one brigade Army of Karelia deployed north of Lake Ladoga and commanded by General Erik Heinrichs It comprised VI Corps VII Corps and Group Oinonen a total of seven divisions including the German 163rd Infantry Division and three brigades 14th Division deployed in the Kainuu region commanded directly by Finnish Headquarters Paamaja Although initially deployed for a static defence the Finnish Army was to later launch an attack to the south on both sides of Lake Ladoga putting pressure on Leningrad and thus supporting the advance of the German Army Group North 80 Finnish intelligence had overestimated the strength of the Red Army when in fact it was numerically inferior to Finnish forces at various points along the border 75 The army especially its artillery was stronger than it had been during the Winter War but included only one armoured battalion and had a general lack of motorised transportation 81 The Finnish Air Force Ilmavoimat had 235 aircraft in July 1941 and 384 by September 1944 despite losses Even with the increase in aircraft the air force was constantly outnumbered by the Soviets 82 83 A Bristol Blenheim bomber aircraft belonging to the Finnish Air Force in March 1944 The Army of Norway or AOK Norwegen comprising four divisions totaling 67 000 German soldiers held the arctic front which stretched approximately 500 km 310 mi through Finnish Lapland This army would also be tasked with striking Murmansk and the Kirov Murmansk Railway during Operation Silver Fox The Army of Norway was under the direct command of the Oberkommando des Heeres OKH and was organised into Mountain Corps Norway and XXXVI Mountain Corps with the Finnish Finnish III Corps and 14th Division attached to it 84 80 81 The Oberkommando der Luftwaffe OKL assigned 60 aircraft from Luftflotte 5 Air Fleet 5 to provide air support to the Army of Norway and the Finnish Army in addition to its main responsibility of defending Norwegian air space 85 86 In contrast to the front in Finland a total of 149 divisions and 3 050 000 soldiers were deployed for the rest of Operation Barbarossa 87 Finnish offensive phase in 1941 EditInitial operations Edit German map of Finland 1941 The solid green line marks the border between Finland and the USSR from March 1941 the dashed line the old border before the Winter War 1939 1940 Finnish soldiers crossing the Murmansk railway in 1941 In the evening of 21 June 1941 German mine layers hiding in the Archipelago Sea deployed two large minefields across the Gulf of Finland Later that night German bombers flew along the gulf to Leningrad mining the harbour and the river Neva making a refueling stop at Utti Finland on the return leg In the early hours of 22 June Finnish forces launched Operation Kilpapurjehdus Regatta deploying troops in the demilitarised Aland Although the 1921 Aland convention had clauses allowing Finland to defend the islands in the event of an attack the coordination of this operation with the German invasion and the arrest of the Soviet consulate staff stationed on the islands meant that the deployment was a deliberate violation of the treaty according to Finnish historian Mauno Jokipii 88 On the morning of 22 June Hitler s proclamation read Together with their Finnish comrades in arms the heroes from Narvik stand at the edge of the Arctic Ocean German troops under command of the conqueror of Norway and the Finnish freedom fighters under their Marshal s command are protecting Finnish territory 89 President Risto Ryti giving his famous radio speech about the Continuation War on 26 June 1941 90 Following the launch of Operation Barbarossa at around 3 15 a m on 22 June 1941 the Soviet Union sent seven bombers on a retaliatory airstrike into Finland hitting targets at 6 06 a m Helsinki time as reported by the Finnish coastal defence ship Vainamoinen 91 On the morning of 25 June the Soviet Union launched another air offensive with 460 fighters and bombers targeting 19 airfields in Finland however inaccurate intelligence and poor bombing accuracy resulted in several raids hitting Finnish cities or municipalities causing considerable damage 23 Soviet bombers were lost in this strike while the Finnish forces lost no aircraft 92 93 69 Although the USSR claimed that the airstrikes were directed against German targets particularly airfields in Finland 94 the Finnish government used the attacks as justification for the approval of a defensive war 95 According to historian David Kirby the message was intended more for public opinion in Finland than abroad where the country was viewed as an ally of the Axis powers 96 68 Finnish advance in Karelia Edit Main articles Finnish invasion of Ladoga Karelia Finnish invasion of the Karelian Isthmus and Finnish invasion of East Karelia Subphases of the Finnish invasion of Karelia during the 1941 general offensive The old 1939 border is marked in grey The Finnish plans for the offensive in Ladoga Karelia were finalised on 28 June 1941 97 and the first stages of the operation began on 10 July 97 98 69 By 16 July the VI Corps had reached the northern shore of Lake Ladoga dividing the Soviet 7th Army which had been tasked with defending the area 97 The USSR struggled to contain the German assault and soon the Soviet high command Stavka pulled all available units stationed along the Finnish border into the beleaguered front line 97 Additional reinforcements were drawn from the 237th Rifle Division and the Soviet 10th Mechanised Corps excluding the 198th Motorised Division ru both of which were stationed in Ladoga Karelia but this stripped much of the reserve strength of the Soviet units defending that area 99 The Finnish II Corps started its offensive in the north of the Karelian Isthmus on 31 July 100 Other Finnish forces reached the shores of Lake Ladoga on 9 August encircling most of the three defending Soviet divisions on the northwestern coast of the lake in a pocket motti in Finnish these divisions were later evacuated across the lake On 22 August the Finnish IV Corps began its offensive south of II Corps and advanced towards Vyborg Finnish Viipuri 100 By 23 August II Corps had reached the Vuoksi River to the east and encircled the Soviet forces defending Vyborg 100 Finnish forces captured Vyborg on 29 August 101 A Finnish military parade next to the Round Tower in Viipuri now Vyborg Russia on 31 August 1941 celebrating its recapture The Soviet order to withdraw came too late resulting in significant losses in materiel although most of the troops were later evacuated via the Koivisto Islands After suffering severe losses the Soviet 23rd Army was unable to halt the offensive and by 2 September the Finnish Army had reached the old 1939 border The advance by Finnish and German forces split the Soviet Northern Front into the Leningrad Front and the Karelian Front On 31 August Finnish Headquarters ordered II and IV Corps which had advanced the furthest to halt their advance along a line that ran from the Gulf of Finland via Beloostrov Sestra River Okhta River Lembolovo to Ladoga The line ran past the former 1939 border and approximately 30 32 km 19 20 mi from Leningrad There they were ordered to take up a defensive position Note 6 On 1 September the IV Corps engaged and defeated the Soviet 23rd Army near the town of Porlampi Sporadic fighting continued around Beloostrov until the Soviets evicted the Finns on 20 September The front on the Isthmus stabilised and the siege of Leningrad began Note 7 The Finnish Army of Karelia started its attack in East Karelia towards Petrozavodsk Lake Onega and the Svir River on 9 September German Army Group North advanced from the south of Leningrad towards the Svir River and captured Tikhvin but were forced to retreat to the Volkhov River by Soviet counterattacks Soviet forces repeatedly attempted to expel the Finns from their bridgehead south of the Svir during October and December but were repulsed Soviet units attacked the German 163rd Infantry Division in October 1941 which was operating under Finnish command across the Svir but failed to dislodge it 107 Despite these failed attacks the Finnish attack in East Karelia had been blunted and their advance had halted by 6 December During the five month campaign the Finns suffered 75 000 casualties of whom 26 355 had died while the Soviets had 230 000 casualties of whom 50 000 became prisoners of war 108 Operation Silver Fox in Lapland and Lend Lease to Murmansk Edit See also Operation Silver Fox and Lend Lease Finnish Sami soldier Raja Jovnna 109 with a reindeer in Lapland Reindeer were used in many capacities such as pulling supply sleighs in snowy conditions The German objective in Finnish Lapland was to take Murmansk and cut the Kirov Murmansk Railway running from Murmansk to Leningrad by capturing Salla and Kandalaksha Murmansk was the only year round ice free port in the north and a threat to the nickel mine at Petsamo The joint Finnish German Operation Silver Fox German Unternehmen Silberfuchs Finnish operaatio Hopeakettu was started on 29 June 1941 by the German Army of Norway which had the Finnish 3rd and 6th Divisions under its command against the defending Soviet 14th Army and 54th Rifle Division By November the operation had stalled 30 km 19 mi from the Kirov Railway due to unacclimatised German troops heavy Soviet resistance poor terrain arctic weather and diplomatic pressure by the United States on the Finns regarding the lend lease deliveries to Murmansk The offensive and its three sub operations failed to achieve their objectives Both sides dug in and the arctic theatre remained stable excluding minor skirmishes until the Soviet Petsamo Kirkenes Offensive in October 1944 110 111 The crucial arctic lend lease convoys from the US and the UK via Murmansk and Kirov Railway to the bulk of the Soviet forces continued throughout World War II The US supplied almost 11 billion in materials 400 000 jeeps and trucks 12 000 armored vehicles including 7 000 tanks which could equip some 20 US armoured divisions 11 400 aircraft and 1 59 million t 1 75 million short tons of food 112 113 As a similar example British shipments of Matilda Valentine and Tetrarch tanks accounted for only 6 percent of total Soviet tank production but over 25 percent of medium and heavy tanks produced for the Red Army 114 Aspirations war effort and international relations Edit See also Greater Finland and Finnlands Lebensraum Finnish soldiers crossing the 1940 agreed border Moscow Peace Treaty at Tohmajarvi on 12 July 1941 two days after the invasion started The Wehrmacht rapidly advanced deep into Soviet territory early in the Operation Barbarossa campaign leading the Finnish government to believe that Germany would defeat the Soviet Union quickly 69 President Ryti envisioned a Greater Finland where Finland and other Finnic people would live inside a natural defence borderline by incorporating the Kola Peninsula East Karelia and perhaps even northern Ingria In public the proposed frontier was introduced with the slogan short border long peace 115 69 68 Some members of the Finnish Parliament such as members of the Social Democratic Party and the Swedish People s Party opposed the idea arguing that maintaining the 1939 frontier would be enough 115 Finnish Commander in Chief Field Marshal C G E Mannerheim often called the war an anti Communist crusade hoping to defeat Bolshevism once and for all 69 On 10 July Mannerheim drafted his order of the day the Sword Scabbard Declaration in which he pledged to liberate Karelia in December 1941 in private letters he made known his doubts of the need to push beyond the previous borders 2 The Finnish government assured the United States that it was unaware of the order 116 According to Vehvilainen most Finns thought that the scope of the new offensive was only to regain what had been taken in the Winter War He further stated that the term Continuation War was created at the start of the conflict by the Finnish government to justify the invasion to the population as a continuation of the defensive Winter War The government also wished to emphasise that it was not an official ally of Germany but a co belligerent fighting against a common enemy and with purely Finnish aims Vehvilainen wrote that the authenticity of the government s claim changed when the Finnish Army crossed the old frontier of 1939 and began to annex Soviet territory 117 British author Jonathan Clements asserted that by December 1941 Finnish soldiers had started questioning whether they were fighting a war of national defence or foreign conquest 118 By the autumn of 1941 the Finnish military leadership started to doubt Germany s capability to finish the war quickly The Finnish Defence Forces suffered relatively severe losses during their advance and overall German victory became uncertain as German troops were halted near Moscow German troops in northern Finland faced circumstances they were unprepared for and failed to reach their targets As the front lines stabilised Finland attempted to start peace negotiations with the USSR 119 Mannerheim refused to assault Leningrad which would inextricably tie Finland to Germany he regarded his objectives for the war to be achieved a decision that angered the Germans 2 A Soviet prisoner of war and a puppy pictured in August 1941 at Lupasalmi Russian Lubosalma in Karelia Due to the war effort the Finnish economy suffered from a lack of labour as well as food shortages and increased prices To combat this the Finnish government demobilised part of the army to prevent industrial and agricultural production from collapsing 108 In October Finland informed Germany that it would need 159 000 t 175 000 short tons of grain to manage until next year s harvest The German authorities would have rejected the request but Hitler himself agreed Annual grain deliveries of 180 000 t 200 000 short tons equaled almost half of the Finnish domestic crop In November Finland joined the Anti Comintern Pact 120 Finland maintained good relations with a number of other Western powers Foreign volunteers from Sweden and Estonia were among the foreigners who joined Finnish ranks Infantry Regiment 200 called soomepoisid Finnish boys mostly comprised Estonians and the Swedes mustered the Swedish Volunteer Battalion 121 The Finnish government stressed that Finland was fighting as a co belligerent with Germany against the USSR only to protect itself and that it was still the same democratic country as it had been in the Winter War 108 For example Finland maintained diplomatic relations with the exiled Norwegian government and more than once criticised German occupation policy in Norway 122 Relations between Finland and the United States were more complex since the American public was sympathetic to the brave little democracy and had anticommunist sentiments At first the United States sympathised with the Finnish cause but the situation became problematic after the Finnish Army had crossed the 1939 border 123 Finnish and German troops were a threat to the Kirov Railway and the northern supply line between the Western Allies and the Soviet Union 123 On 25 October 1941 the US demanded that Finland cease all hostilities against the USSR and to withdraw behind the 1939 border In public President Ryti rejected the demands but in private he wrote to Mannerheim on 5 November and asked him to halt the offensive Mannerheim agreed and secretly instructed General Hjalmar Siilasvuo and his III Corps to end the assault on the Kirov Railway 124 Nevertheless the United States never declared war on Finland during the entire conflict 125 British declaration of war and action in the Arctic Ocean Edit See also Arctic convoys of World War II On 12 July 1941 the United Kingdom signed an agreement of joint action with the Soviet Union Under German pressure Finland closed the British legation in Helsinki and cut diplomatic relations with Britain on 1 August 126 The most sizable British action on Finnish soil was the Raid on Kirkenes and Petsamo an aircraft carrier strike on German and Finnish ships on 31 July 1941 The attack accomplished little except the loss of one Norwegian ship and three British aircraft but it was intended to demonstrate British support for its Soviet ally 3 From September to October in 1941 a total of 39 Hawker Hurricanes of No 151 Wing RAF based at Murmansk reinforced and provided pilot training to the Soviet Air Forces during Operation Benedict to protect arctic convoys 4 On 28 November the British government presented Finland with an ultimatum demanding for the Finns to cease military operations by 3 December 124 Unofficially Finland informed the Allies that Finnish troops would halt their advance in the next few days The reply did not satisfy London which declared war on Finland on 6 December 69 Note 8 The Commonwealth nations of Canada Australia India and New Zealand soon followed suit 128 In private British Prime Minister Winston Churchill had sent a letter to Mannerheim on 29 November in which Churchill was deeply grieved that the British would have to declare war on Finland because of the British alliance with the Soviets Mannerheim repatriated British volunteers under his command to the United Kingdom via Sweden According to Clements the declaration of war was mostly for appearance s sake 129 Trench warfare from 1942 to 1944 EditUnconventional warfare and military operations Edit Main article Soviet partisans in Finland Finnish soldiers searching for remains of eventual victims at a burned down house after a Soviet partisan attack on the village of Viianki in Suomussalmi The burnt bodies of over ten civilians including women and children were found The Soviets conducted four attacks in the first half of 1942 all of which were repelled by Finnish and German troops Unconventional warfare was fought in both the Finnish and Soviet wildernesses Finnish long range reconnaissance patrols organised both by the Intelligence Division s Detached Battalion 4 and by local units patrolled behind Soviet lines Soviet partisans both resistance fighters and regular long range patrol detachments conducted a number of operations in Finland and in Eastern Karelia from 1941 to 1944 In summer 1942 the USSR formed the 1st Partisan Brigade The unit was partisan in name only as it was essentially 600 men and women on long range patrol intended to disrupt Finnish operations The 1st Partisan Brigade was able to infiltrate beyond Finnish patrol lines but was intercepted and rendered ineffective in August 1942 at Lake Segozero 130 Irregular partisans distributed propaganda newspapers such as Finnish translations of the official Communist Party paper Pravda Russian Pravda Notable Soviet politician Yuri Andropov took part in these partisan guerrilla actions 131 Finnish sources state that although Soviet partisan activity in East Karelia disrupted Finnish military supply and communication assets almost two thirds of the attacks targeted civilians killing 200 and injuring 50 including children and elderly 132 133 134 135 Between 1942 and 1943 military operations were limited although the front did see some action In January 1942 the Soviet Karelian Front attempted to retake Medvezhyegorsk Finnish Karhumaki which had been lost to the Finns in late 1941 With the arrival of spring in April Soviet forces went on the offensive on the Svir River front in the Kestenga Kiestinki region further north in Lapland as well as in the far north at Petsamo with the 14th Rifle Division s amphibious landings supported by the Northern Fleet All Soviet offensives started promisingly but due either to the Soviets overextending their lines or stubborn defensive resistance the offensives were repulsed After Finnish and German counterattacks in Kestenga the front lines were generally stalemated In September 1942 the USSR attacked again at Medvezhyegorsk but despite five days of fighting the Soviets only managed to push the Finnish lines back 500 m 550 yd on a roughly 1 km 0 62 mi long stretch of the front Later that month a Soviet landing with two battalions in Petsamo was defeated by a German counterattack 136 137 In November 1941 Hitler decided to separate the German forces fighting in Lapland from the Army of Norway and create the Army of Lapland commanded by Generaloberst Eduard Dietl through AOK Lappland In June 1942 the Army of Lapland was redesignated the 20th Mountain Army 138 Siege of Leningrad and naval warfare Edit Main articles Siege of Leningrad Baltic Sea campaigns 1939 45 and Arctic naval operations of World War II In the early stages of the war the Finnish Army overran the former 1939 border but ceased their advance 30 32 km 19 20 mi from the center of Leningrad Multiple authors have stated that Finland participated in the siege of Leningrad Russian Blokada Leningrada but the full extent and nature of their participation is debated and a clear consensus has yet to emerge Note 9 American historian David Glantz writes that the Finnish Army generally maintained their lines and contributed little to the siege from 1941 to 1944 139 whereas Russian historian Nikolai Baryshnikov ru stated in 2002 that Finland tacitly supported Hitler s starvation policy for the city 23 However in 2009 British historian Michael Jones disputed Baryshnikov s claim and asserted that the Finnish Army cut off the city s northern supply routes but did not take further military action 21 In 2006 American author Lisa Kirschenbaum wrote that the siege started when German and Finnish troops severed all land routes in and out of Leningrad 140 Keitel left Hitler Mannerheim and Ryti meeting at Immola Airfield on 4 June 1942 Hitler made a surprise visit in honour of Mannerheim s 75th birthday and to discuss plans 141 According to Clements Mannerheim personally refused Hitler s request of assaulting Leningrad during their meeting on 4 June 1942 Mannerheim explained to Hitler that Finland had every reason to wish to stay out of any further provocation of the Soviet Union 142 In 2014 author Jeff Rutherford described the city as being ensnared between the German and Finnish armies 26 British historian John Barber described it as a siege by the German and Finnish armies from 8 September 1941 to 27 January 1944 in his foreword in 2017 27 Likewise in 2017 Alexis Peri wrote that the city was completely cut off save a heavily patrolled water passage over Lake Ladoga by Hitler s Army Group North and his Finnish allies 143 The Finnish minelayer Ruotsinsalmi lays naval mines in the Gulf of Finland in May 1942 The 150 speedboats two minelayers and four steamships of the Finnish Ladoga Naval Detachment as well as numerous shore batteries had been stationed on Lake Ladoga since August 1941 Finnish Lieutenant General Paavo Talvela proposed on 17 May 1942 to create a joint Finnish German Italian unit on the lake to disrupt Soviet supply convoys to Leningrad The unit was named Naval Detachment K and comprised four Italian MAS torpedo motorboats of the XII Squadriglia MAS four German KM type minelayers and the Finnish torpedo motorboat Sisu The detachment began operations in August 1942 and sank numerous smaller Soviet watercraft and flatboats and assaulted enemy bases and beach fronts until it was dissolved in the winter of 1942 43 1 Twenty three Siebel ferries and nine infantry transports of the German Einsatzstab Fahre Ost were also deployed to Lake Ladoga and unsuccessfully assaulted the island of Sukho which protected the main supply route to Leningrad in October 1942 144 Despite the siege of the city the Soviet Baltic Fleet was still able to operate from Leningrad The Finnish Navy s flagship Ilmarinen had been sunk in September 1941 in the gulf by mines during the failed diversionary Operation Nordwind 1941 145 In early 1942 Soviet forces recaptured the island of Gogland but lost it and the Bolshoy Tyuters islands to Finnish forces later in spring 1942 During the winter between 1941 and 1942 the Soviet Baltic Fleet decided to use their large submarine fleet in offensive operations Though initial submarine operations in the summer of 1942 were successful the Kriegsmarine and Finnish Navy soon intensified their anti submarine efforts making Soviet submarine operations later in 1942 costly The underwater offensive carried out by the Soviets convinced the Germans to lay anti submarine nets as well as supporting minefields between Porkkala Peninsula and Naissaar which proved to be an insurmountable obstacle for Soviet submarines 146 On the Arctic Ocean Finnish radio intelligence intercepted Allied messages on supply convoys to Murmansk such as PQ 17 and PQ 18 and relayed the information to the Abwehr German intelligence 147 Finnish military administration and concentration camps Edit Main articles Finnish military administration in Eastern Karelia and East Karelian concentration camps Soviet women having breakfast next to burning trash at a Finnish concentration camp in Petrozavodsk On 19 July 1941 the Finns created a military administration in occupied East Karelia with the goal of preparing the region for eventual incorporation into Finland The Finns aimed to expel the Russian portion of the local population constituting to about a half who were deemed non national 148 from the area once the war was over 149 and replace them with the local Finnic peoples such as Karelians Finns Ingrians and Vepsians Most of the East Karelian population had already been evacuated before the Finnish forces arrived but about 85 000 people mostly elderly women and children were left behind less than half of whom were Karelians A significant number of civilians almost 30 percent of the remaining Russians were interned in concentration camps 148 Administrative map of Finland and occupied territories 1942 1944 The winter between 1941 and 1942 was particularly harsh for the Finnish urban population due to poor harvests and a shortage of agricultural labourers 148 However conditions were much worse for Russians in Finnish concentration camps More than 3 500 people died mostly from starvation amounting to 13 8 per cent of those detained while the corresponding figure for the free population of the occupied territories was 2 6 per cent and 1 4 per cent for Finland 150 Conditions gradually improved ethnic discrimination in wage levels and food rations was terminated and new schools were established for the Russian speaking population the following year after Commander in Chief Mannerheim called for the International Committee of the Red Cross from Geneva to inspect the camps 151 152 By the end of the occupation mortality rates had dropped to the same levels as in Finland 150 Jews in Finland Edit Main article Jews in Finland Finnish soldiers in front of a field synagogue Finland had a small Jewish population of approximately 2 300 people of whom 300 were refugees They had full civil rights and fought with other Finns in the ranks of the Finnish Army The field synagogue in East Karelia was one of the very few functioning synagogues on the Axis side during the war There were several cases of Jewish officers of the Finnish Army being awarded the German Iron Cross which they declined German soldiers were treated by Jewish medical officers who sometimes saved the soldiers lives 153 154 155 German command mentioned Finnish Jews at the Wannsee Conference in January 1942 wishing to transport them to the Majdanek concentration camp in occupied Poland SS leader Heinrich Himmler also raised the topic of Finnish Jews during his visit in Finland in the summer of 1942 Finnish Prime Minister Jukka Rangell replied that Finland did not have a Jewish question 72 In November 1942 the Minister of the Interior Toivo Horelli and the head of State Police Arno Anthoni secretly deported eight Jewish refugees to the Gestapo raising protests among Finnish Social Democrat Party ministers Only one of the deportees survived After the incident the Finnish government refused to transfer any more Jews to German detainment 156 157 Soviet offensive in 1944 EditAir raids and the Leningrad Novgorod Offensive Edit Finland began to seek an exit from the war after the German defeat at the Battle of Stalingrad in February 1943 Finnish Prime Minister Edwin Linkomies formed a new cabinet in March 1943 with peace as the top priority Similarly the Finns were distressed by the Allied invasion of Sicily in July and the German defeat in the Battle of Kursk in August Negotiations were conducted intermittently in 1943 and 1944 between Finland the Western Allies and the Soviets but no agreement was reached 158 Stalin decided to force Finland to surrender with a bombing campaign on Helsinki Starting in February 1944 it included three major air attacks totaling over 6 000 sorties Finnish anti aircraft defence repelled the raids and only 5 of the dropped bombs hit their planned targets In Helsinki decoy searchlights and fires were placed outside the city to deceive Soviet bombers into dropping their payloads on unpopulated areas Major air attacks also hit Oulu and Kotka but pre emptive radio intelligence and effective defence kept the number of casualties low 159 Bombing destruction in Helsinki the night of 6 7 February 1944 The Soviet Leningrad Novgorod Offensive finally lifted the siege of Leningrad on 26 27 January 1944 27 and pushed Army Group North to Ida Viru County on the Estonian border Stiff German and Estonian defence in Narva from February to August prevented the use of occupied Estonia as a favourable base for Soviet amphibious and air assaults against Helsinki and other Finnish coastal cities in support of a land offensive 160 161 162 Field Marshal Mannerheim had reminded the German command on numerous occasions that if the German troops withdrew from Estonia Finland would be forced to make peace even on extremely unfavourable terms 163 Finland abandoned peace negotiations in April 1944 because of the unfavourable terms the USSR demanded 164 165 Vyborg Petrozavodsk Offensive and breakthrough Edit Main article Vyborg Petrozavodsk Offensive On 9 June 1944 the Soviet Leningrad Front launched an offensive against Finnish positions on the Karelian Isthmus and in the area of Lake Ladoga timed to coincide with Operation Overlord in Normandy as agreed during the Tehran Conference 119 Along the 21 7 km 13 5 mi wide breakthrough the Red Army concentrated 3 000 guns and mortars In some places the concentration of artillery pieces exceeded 200 guns for every kilometre of front or one for every 5 m 5 5 yd Soviet artillery fired over 80 000 rounds along the front on the Karelian Isthmus On the second day of the offensive the artillery barrages and superior number of Soviet forces crushed the main Finnish defence line The Red Army penetrated the second line of defence the Vammelsuu Taipale line VT line by the sixth day and recaptured Viipuri with insignificant resistance on 20 June The Soviet breakthrough on the Karelian Isthmus forced the Finns to reinforce the area thus allowing the concurrent Soviet offensive in East Karelia to meet less resistance and to recapture Petrozavodsk by 28 June 1944 166 167 168 Finnish soldiers carrying Panzerfauste on their shoulders pass by the remains of a destroyed Soviet T 34 tank at the Battle of Tali Ihantala On 25 June the Red Army reached the third line of defence the Viipuri Kuparsaari Taipale line VKT line and the decisive Battle of Tali Ihantala began which has been described as the largest battle in Nordic military history 169 By then the Finnish Army had retreated around 100 km 62 mi to approximately the same line of defence they had held at the end of the Winter War Finland especially lacked modern anti tank weaponry that could stop Soviet heavy armour such as the KV 1 or IS 2 Thus German Foreign Minister Joachim von Ribbentrop offered German hand held Panzerfaust and Panzerschreck antitank weapons in exchange for a guarantee that Finland would not seek a separate peace with the Soviets On 26 June President Risto Ryti gave the guarantee as a personal undertaking that he Field Marshal Mannerheim and Prime Minister Edwin Linkomies intended to last legally only for the remainder of Ryti s presidency In addition to delivering thousands of anti tank weapons Hitler sent the 122nd Infantry Division and the half strength 303rd Assault Gun Brigade armed with Sturmgeschutz III tank destroyers as well as the Luftwaffe s Detachment Kuhlmey to provide temporary support in the most vulnerable sectors 170 With the new supplies and assistance from Germany the Finnish Army halted the numerically and materially superior Soviet advance at Tali Ihantala on 9 July 1944 and stabilised the front 171 172 173 More battles were fought toward the end of the war the last of which was the Battle of Ilomantsi fought between 26 July and 13 August 1944 and resulting in a Finnish victory with the destruction of two Soviet divisions 165 174 175 Resisting the Soviet offensive had exhausted Finnish resources Despite German support under the Ryti Ribbentrop Agreement Finland asserted that it was unable to blunt another major offensive 176 Soviet victories against German Army Groups Center and North during Operation Bagration made the situation even more dire for Finland 176 With no imminent further Soviet offensives Finland sought to leave the war 176 177 178 On 1 August Ryti resigned and on 4 August Field Marshal Mannerheim was sworn in as the new president He annulled the agreement between Ryti and Ribbentrop on 17 August to allow Finland to sue for peace with the Soviets again and peace terms from Moscow arrived on 29 August 167 177 179 180 Ceasefire and peace Edit Main article Moscow Armistice The front lines on 4 September 1944 when the ceasefire came into effect and two weeks before the war concluded Finland was required to return to the borders agreed to in the 1940 Moscow Peace Treaty demobilise its armed forces fulfill war reparations and cede the municipality of Petsamo The Finns were also required to end any diplomatic relations with Germany immediately and to expel the Wehrmacht from Finnish territory by 15 September 1944 any troops remaining were to be disarmed arrested and turned over to the Allies The Finnish Parliament accepted those terms in a secret meeting on 2 September and requested for official negotiations for an armistice to begin The Finnish Army implemented a ceasefire at 8 00 a m Helsinki time on 4 September The Red Army followed suit a day later On 14 September a delegation led by Finnish Prime Minister Antti Hackzell and Foreign Minister Carl Enckell began negotiating with the Soviet Union and the United Kingdom the final terms of the Moscow Armistice which eventually included additional stipulations from the Soviets They were presented by Molotov on 18 September and accepted by the Finnish Parliament a day later 181 180 A Soviet left and a Finnish officer compare their watches on 4 September 1944 at Vyborg The motivations for the Soviet peace agreement with Finland are debated Several Western historians stated that the original Soviet designs for Finland were no different from those for the Baltic countries American political scientist Dan Reiter asserted that for Moscow the control of Finland was necessary Reiter and the British historian Victor Rothwell quoted Molotov as telling his Lithuanian counterpart in 1940 when the Soviets effectively annexed Lithuania that minor states such as Finland will be included within the honourable family of Soviet peoples 182 183 Reiter stated that concern over severe losses pushed Stalin into accepting a limited outcome in the war rather than pursuing annexation although some Soviet documents called for military occupation of Finland He also wrote that Stalin had described territorial concessions reparations and military bases as his objective with Finland to representatives from the UK in December 1941 and the US in March 1943 as well as the Tehran Conference He believed that in the end Stalin s desire to crush Hitler quickly and decisively without distraction from the Finnish sideshow concluded the war 184 Red Army officers captured as prisoners of war during the Battle of Tali Ihantala revealed that their intention was to reach Helsinki and that they were to be strengthened with reinforcements for this task 185 This was confirmed by intercepted Soviet radio messages 185 Russian historian Nikolai Baryshnikov disputed the view that the Soviet Union sought to deprive Finland of its independence He argued that there is no documentary evidence for such claims and that the Soviet government was always open for negotiations Baryshnikov cited sources like the public information chief of Finnish Headquarters Major Kalle Lehmus fi to show that Finnish leadership had learned of the limited Soviet plans for Finland by at least July 1944 after intelligence revealed that some Soviet divisions were to be transferred to reserve in Leningrad 186 Finnish historian Heikki Ylikangas fi stated similar findings in 2009 According to him the Soviets refocused their efforts in the summer of 1944 from the Finnish Front to defeating Germany and Mannerheim received intelligence from Colonel Aladar Paasonen in June 1944 that the Soviet Union was aiming for peace not occupation 187 Evidence of the Soviet leadership s intentions for the occupation of Finland has later been uncovered In 2018 it was revealed that the Soviets designed and printed in Goznak new banknotes for Finland during the closing phases of the war which were to be put into use after the planned occupation of the country 188 Aftermath and casualties EditSee also Aftermath of World War II and Cold War Finland and Germany Edit See also Finlandization Paasikivi Kekkonen doctrine Karelian question and History of Germany 1945 90 Areas ceded by Finland to the Soviet Union following the Moscow Armistice displayed in red According to Finnish historians the casualties of the Finnish Defence Forces amounted to 63 204 dead or missing and around 158 000 wounded 13 14 Note 10 Officially the Soviets captured 2 377 Finnish prisoners of war but Finnish researchers estimated the number to be around 3 500 prisoners 15 A total of 939 Finnish civilians died in air raids and 190 civilians were killed by Soviet partisans 133 135 189 14 Germany suffered approximately 84 000 casualties in the Finnish front 16 400 killed 60 400 wounded and 6 800 missing 14 In addition to the original peace terms of restoring the 1940 border Finland was required to pay war reparations to the USSR conduct domestic war responsibility trials cede the municipality of Petsamo and lease the Porkkala Peninsula to the Soviets as well as ban fascist elements and allow left wing groups such as the Communist Party of Finland 181 A Soviet led Allied Control Commission was installed to enforce and monitor the peace agreement in Finland 5 The requirement to disarm or expel any German troops left on Finnish soil by 15 September 1944 eventually escalated into the Lapland War between Finland and Germany and the evacuation of the 200 000 strong 20th Mountain Army to Norway 190 The Soviet demand for 600 million in war indemnities was reduced to 300 million equivalent to 5 8 billion in 2021 most likely because of pressure from the US and the UK After the ceasefire the Soviets insisted for the payments to be based on 1938 prices which doubled the de facto amount 191 181 The temporary Moscow Armistice was finalised without changes later in the Paris Peace Treaties 1947 192 Henrik Lunde noted that Finland survived the war without losing its independence unlike many of Germany s allies 193 Likewise Helsinki along with Moscow was the only capital of a combatant nation that was not occupied in Continental Europe 14 In the longer term Peter Provis analysed that by following self censorship and limited appeasement policies as well as by fulfilling the Soviet demands Finland avoided the fate of other nations that were annexed by the Soviets 194 Because of Soviet pressure Finland was also forced to refuse any economic aid from the Marshall Plan Many civilians who had been displaced after the Winter War had moved back into Karelia during the Continuation War and so had to be evacuated from Karelia again Of the 260 000 civilians who had returned Karelia only 19 chose to remain and become Soviet citizens 195 Most of the Ingrian Finns together with Votes and Izhorians living in German occupied Ingria had been evacuated to Finland in 1943 1944 After the armistice Finland was forced to return the evacuees 196 Soviet authorities did not allow the 55 733 returnees to resettle in Ingria and deported the Ingrian Finns to central regions of the Soviet Union 196 197 Soviet Union Edit See also History of the Soviet Union 1927 1953 The war is considered a Soviet victory 5 6 7 According to Finnish historians Soviet casualties in the Continuation War were not accurately recorded and various approximations have arisen 13 14 Russian historian Grigori Krivosheev estimated in 1997 that around 250 000 were killed or missing in action while 575 000 were medical casualties 385 000 wounded and 190 000 sick 11 13 Finnish author Nenye and others stated in 2016 that at least 305 000 were confirmed dead or missing according to the latest research and the number of wounded certainly exceeded 500 000 14 The number of Soviet prisoners of war in Finland was estimated by Finnish historians to be around 64 000 56 000 of whom were captured in 1941 16 Around 2 600 to 2 800 Soviet prisoners of war were rendered to Germany in exchange for roughly 2 200 Finnic prisoners of war 198 Of the Soviet prisoners at least 18 318 were documented to have died in Finnish prisoner of war camps 199 The extent of Finland s participation in the siege of Leningrad and whether Soviet civilian casualties during the siege should be attributed to the Continuation War is debated and lacks a consensus estimates of civilian deaths during the siege range from 632 253 200 to 1 042 000 139 27 Of material losses authors Jowett and Snodgrass state that 697 Soviet tanks were destroyed 172 842 field artillery pieces captured 201 Note 11 and 1 600 airplanes destroyed by Finnish fighter planes 1030 by anti aircraft fire and 75 by the Navy 202 In popular culture EditSeveral literary and cinematic arrangements have been made on the basis of the Continuation War The best known story about the Continuation War is Vaino Linna s novel The Unknown Soldier which was the basis for three films in 1955 1985 and 2017 203 204 There is also a 1999 film Ambush based on a novel by Antti Tuuri on the events in Rukajarvi Karelia 205 and a 2007 film 1944 The Final Defence based on the Battle of Tali Ihantala 206 See also Edit Finland portal Germany portal Soviet Union portal World War II portal History portalBrezhnev Doctrine Cold weather warfare Einsatzkommando Finnland Lotta Svard List of wars between democracies List of wars involving Finland Finland Russia relations Finnish war children Salpa Line Stalin Line Operation Silver Fox The Unknown Soldier novel Volkhov Front Hitler and Mannerheim recordingNotes Edit Italian participation was limited to the four motor torpedo boats of the XII Squadriglia MAS serving in the international Naval Detachment K on Lake Ladoga during the summer and autumn of 1942 1 The United Kingdom formally declared war on Finland on 6 December 1941 along with four Commonwealth states largely for appearances sake 2 Before that the British conducted a carrier raid at Petsamo on 31 July 1941 3 and commenced Operation Benedict to support air raids in the Murmansk area and train Soviet crews for roughly a month from September to October in 1941 4 Finnish jatkosota Swedish fortsattningskriget German Fortsetzungskrieg According to Finnish historian Olli Vehvilainen the term Continuation War was created at the start of the conflict by the Finnish government to justify the invasion to the population as a continuation of the defensive Winter War and separate from the German war effort He titled the chapter addressing the issue in his book as Finland s War of Retaliation Vehvilainen asserted that the reality of that claim changed when the Finnish forces crossed the 1939 frontier and started annexation operations 17 The US Library of Congress catalogue also lists the variants War of Retribution and War of Continuation see authority control Russian Sovetsko finskij front Velikoj Otechestvennoj vojny Alternatively the Soviet Finnish War 1941 1944 Russian Sovetsko finskaya vojna 1941 1944 18 See the relevant section and the following sources 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 See the following sources 102 21 103 25 104 See the following sources 20 22 105 24 106 21 27 Secondary sources contradict each other and state either 5 or 6 December as the day war was declared According to a news piece on 8 December 1941 by The Examiner an Australian newspaper Britain notified the Finnish Government on 6 December that she considered herself at war with Finland as from 1 a m G M T to morrow 127 See the following sources 102 21 103 21 25 104 A detailed list of Finnish dead is as follows 189 Dead buried 33 565 Wounded died of wounds 12 820 Dead not buried declared as dead 4 251 Missing declared as dead 3 552 Died as prisoners of war 473 Other reasons diseases accidents suicides 7 932 Unknown 611 This number includes only those field artillery pieces which were captured in full condition or were later repaired to full condition and used by Finnish artillery It doesn t include anti tank guns anti aircraft guns or coastal guns captured Armies do not usually leave undestroyed guns behind and we can assume that Soviet army was no exception So the number of guns left behind and lost by Soviet army is something much higher References EditCitations Edit a b Zapotoczny Walter S Jr 2017 Decima Flottiglia MAS The Best Commandos of the Second World War Fonthill Media p 123 ISBN 9781625451132 Archived from the original on 21 February 2018 a b c Clements 2012 p 210 a b Sturtivant Ray 1990 British Naval Aviation The Fleet Air Arm 1917 1990 London Arms amp Armour Press Ltd p 86 ISBN 0 85368 938 5 a b Carter Eric Loveless Anthony 2014 Force Benedict Hodder amp Stoughton ISBN 9781444785135 Archived from the original on 21 February 2018 a b c Mouritzen Hans 1997 External Danger and Democracy Old Nordic Lessons and New European Challenges Dartmouth p 35 ISBN 1855218852 Archived from the original on 22 February 2018 a b Nordstrom Byron J 2000 Scandinavia Since 1500 Minneapolis University of Minnesota Press p 316 ISBN 978 0816620982 a b Morgan Kevin Cohen Gidon Flinn Andrew 2005 Agents of the Revolution New Biographical Approaches to the History of International Communism in the Age of Lenin and Stalin Peter Lang p 246 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obespecheniya bezopasnosti Leningrada s severa v svete osushestvleniya sovetskogo voennogo planirovaniya 1932 1941 gg The problem of ensuring the security of Leningrad from the north in the light of the implementation of the Soviet military planning of 1932 1941 St Petersburg and the Countries of Northern Europe in Russian St Petersburg Russian Christian Humanitarian Academy Archived from the original on 9 December 2007 Enkenberg Ilkka 2021 Jatkosota Paiva Paivalta in Finnish Readme fi ISBN 978 952 373 249 0 Haavikko Paavo 1999 Paamaja Suomen hovi in Finnish Art House ISBN 951 884 265 5 Jokipii Mauno 1999 Finlyandiya na puti k vojne Issledovanie o voennom sotrudnichestve Germanii i Finlyandii v 1940 1941 gg Birth of the Continuation War Research of German Finnish Military Collaboration 1940 1941 in Russian Petrozavodsk Karelia ISBN 5754507356 Juutilainen Antti 1994 Ilomantsi lopultakin voitto in Finnish Rauma Kirjapaino Oy West Point ISBN 9519521852 Kiljanen Kalervo 1968 Suomen Laivasto 1918 1968 II Finnish Navy 1918 1968 II in Finnish Helsinki Meriupseeriyhdistys Otava Koskimaa Matti 1993 Veitsen teralla vetaytyminen Lansi Kannakselta ja Talin Ihantalan suurtaistelu kesalla 1944 in Finnish Porvoo WSOY ISBN 9510188115 Manninen Ohto 1994 Molotovin cocktail Hitlerin sateenvarjo Molotov s cocktail Hitler s umbrella in Finnish Helsinki Painatuskeskus ISBN 9513714950 Moisala U E Alanen Pertti 1988 Kun hyokkaajan tie pysaytettiin in Finnish Keuruu Otava ISBN 9511103865 Leskinen Jari Juutilainen Antti eds 2005 Jatkosodan pikkujattilainen in Finnish 1st ed WSOY ISBN 9510286907 Luknitsky Pavel 1988 Skvoz vsyu blokadu Through the Siege in Russian Leningrad Lenizdat Suprun Mikhail 1997 Lend liz i severnye konvoi 1941 1945 gg Lend Lease and Northern Convoys 1941 1945 Andreevskij flag ISBN 5 85608 081 5 Raunio Ari Kilin Juri 2007 Jatkosodan hyokkaystaisteluja 1941 Offensive Battles of the Continuation War 1941 in Finnish Keuruu Otavan Kirjapaino Oy ISBN 978 9515930699 Raunio Ari Kilin Juri 2008 Jatkosodan torjuntataisteluja 1942 44 Defensive Battles of the Continuation War 1942 44 in Finnish Keuruu Otavan Kirjapaino Oy ISBN 978 9515930705 Nikunen Heikki Talvitie Jyrki K Keskinen Kalevi 2011 Suomen ilmasodan pikkujattilainen in Finnish Helsinki WSOY ISBN 978 9510368718 Paulaharju Jyri Sinerma Matti Koskimaa Matti 1994 Suomen kenttatykiston historia II Osa in Finnish Helsinki Suomen Kenttatykiston saatio ISBN 952 9055110 Virkkunen Sakari 1985 Myrskyajan presidentti Ryti in Finnish Otava ISBN 951 1 08557 3 Further reading EditJokipii Mauno 1987 Jatkosodan synty tutkimuksia Saksan ja Suomen sotilaallisesta yhteistyosta 1940 1941 Birth of the Continuation War Research of German Finnish Military Collaboration 1940 1941 in Finnish Helsinki Otava ISBN 951 1087991 Krosby Hans Peter 1966 Nikkelidiplomatiaa Petsamossa 1940 1941 in Finnish Kirjayhtyma Krosby Hans Peter 1967 Suomen valinta 1941 in Finnish Kirjayhtyma Krosby Hans Peter 1968 Finland Germany and the Soviet Union 1940 1941 The Petsamo Dispute University of Wisconsin Press ISBN 9780299051402 National Defence University Finland 1994 Raunio Ari ed Jatkosodan historia 1 6 History of the Continuation War 1 6 in Finnish WSOY Polvinen Tuomo I 1979 1981 Suomi kansainvalisessa politiikassa 1941 1947 osa 1 3 in Finnish WSOY Sana Elina 1994 Luovutetut Suomen ihmisluovutukset Gestapolle The Extradited Finland s Extraditions to Gestapo in Finnish WSOY ISBN 9510279757 Schwartz Andrew J 1960 America and the Russo Finnish War Public Affairs Press ISBN 0837179645 Seppinen Ilkka 1983 Suomen ulkomaankaupan ehdot 1939 1944 Finnish Foreign Trade Conditions 1939 44 in Finnish Suomen Historiallinen Seura ISBN 9789519254494 Taylor Alan 23 May 2013 Finland in World War II The Atlantic Wuorinen John H ed 1948 Finland and World War II 1939 1944 The Ronald Press Company ISBN 0313241333 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Continuation War Look up motti in Wiktionary the free dictionary Voennyj albom photographs of World War II and the Great Patriotic War 1939 1945 in Russian Finna search service for information from Finnish archives libraries and museums Finnish Wartime Photograph Archive under CC BY 4 0 National Archives of the United Kingdom Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Continuation War amp oldid 1153057079, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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