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Invasion of Poland

The invasion of Poland (1 September – 6 October 1939) was a joint attack on the Republic of Poland by Nazi Germany, the Slovak Republic, and the Soviet Union; which marked the beginning of World War II.[13] The German invasion began on 1 September 1939, one week after the signing of the Molotov–Ribbentrop Pact between Germany and the Soviet Union, and one day after the Supreme Soviet of the Soviet Union had approved the pact.[14] The Soviets invaded Poland on 17 September. The campaign ended on 6 October with Germany and the Soviet Union dividing and annexing the whole of Poland under the terms of the German–Soviet Frontier Treaty. The invasion is also known in Poland as the September campaign (Polish: kampania wrześniowa) or 1939 defensive war (Polish: wojna obronna 1939 roku) and known in Germany as the Poland campaign (German: Überfall auf Polen, Polenfeldzug).

Invasion of Poland
Part of the European theatre of World War II

Left to right, top to bottom: Luftwaffe bombers over Poland; Schleswig-Holstein attacking the Westerplatte; Danzig Police destroying the Polish border post; German tank and armored car formation; German and Soviet troops shaking hands; bombing of Warsaw.
Date1 September 19396 October 1939 (35 days)
Location
Result German–Soviet–Slovak victory
Territorial
changes
Belligerents
 Nazi Germany
 Soviet Union

(from 17 September)
 Slovak Republic
(see details)
 Poland
Commanders and leaders
Units involved
Invading armies
Strength
  • Total: 2,000,000+

  • Nazi Germany:
  •        66 divisions
  •        6 brigades
  •        9,000 guns[1]
  •        2,750 tanks
  •        2,315 aircraft[2]

  • Soviet Union:
  •        33+ divisions
  •        11+ brigades
  •        4,959 guns
  •        4,736 tanks
  •        3,300 aircraft

  • Slovak Republic:
  •        3 divisions

  •        39 divisions[5]
  •        16 brigades[5]
  •        4,300 guns[5]
  •        210 tanks
  •        670 tankettes
  •        800 aircraft[1]
Casualties and losses
  • Total: 59,000

  • Nazi Germany:[Note 2]
  •        17,269 killed
  •        30,300 wounded
  •        3,500 missing
  •        236 tanks
  •        800 vehicles
  •        246 aircraft

  • Soviet Union:[Note 3]
  •        1,475 killed
  •        2,383 wounded[10]
  • or   5,327 casualties[11]
  •        43 tanks

  • Slovak Republic:
  •        37 killed
  •        11 missing
  •        114 wounded
  •        2 aircraft[12]

  •        66,000 killed
  •        133,700 wounded
  •        ~675,000 captured
  •        132 tanks and cars
  •        327 aircraft

German forces invaded Poland from the north, south, and west the morning after the Gleiwitz incident. Slovak military forces advanced alongside the Germans in northern Slovakia. As the Wehrmacht advanced, Polish forces withdrew from their forward bases of operation close to the Germany–Poland border to more established defense lines to the east. After the mid-September Polish defeat in the Battle of the Bzura, the Germans gained an undisputed advantage. Polish forces then withdrew to the southeast where they prepared for a long defence of the Romanian Bridgehead and awaited expected support and relief from France and the United Kingdom.[15] On 3 September, based on their alliance agreements with Poland, the United Kingdom and France declared war on Germany; in the end their aid to Poland was very limited. France invaded a small part of Germany in the Saar Offensive, and the Polish army was effectively defeated even before the British Expeditionary Force could be transported to Europe, with the bulk of the BEF in France by the end of September.

On 17 September, the Soviet Red Army invaded Eastern Poland, the territory beyond the Curzon Line that fell into the Soviet "sphere of influence" according to the secret protocol of the Molotov–Ribbentrop Pact; this rendered the Polish plan of defence obsolete.[16] Facing a second front, the Polish government concluded the defence of the Romanian Bridgehead was no longer feasible and ordered an emergency evacuation of all troops to neutral Romania.[17] On 6 October, following the Polish defeat at the Battle of Kock, German and Soviet forces gained full control over Poland. The success of the invasion marked the end of the Second Polish Republic, though Poland never formally surrendered.

On 8 October, after an initial period of military administration, Germany directly annexed western Poland and the former Free City of Danzig and placed the remaining block of territory under the administration of the newly established General Government. The Soviet Union incorporated its newly acquired areas into its constituent Byelorussian and Ukrainian republics, and immediately started a campaign of Sovietization. In the aftermath of the invasion, a collective of underground resistance organizations formed the Polish Underground State within the territory of the former Polish state. Many of the military exiles who escaped Poland joined the Polish Armed Forces in the West, an armed force loyal to the Polish government-in-exile.

Background

On 30 January 1933, the National Socialist German Workers' Party, under its leader Adolf Hitler, came to power in Germany.[18] While some dissident elements within the Weimar Republic had long sought to annex territories belonging to Poland, it was Hitler's own idea and not a realization of any pre-1933 Weimar plans to invade and partition Poland,[19] annex Bohemia and Austria, and create satellite or puppet states economically subordinate to Germany.[20] As part of this long-term policy, Hitler at first pursued a policy of rapprochement with Poland, trying to improve opinion in Germany, culminating in the German–Polish Non-Aggression Pact of 1934.[21] Earlier, Hitler's foreign policy worked to weaken ties between Poland and France and attempted to manoeuvre Poland into the Anti-Comintern Pact, forming a cooperative front against the Soviet Union.[21][22] Poland would be granted territory to its northeast in Ukraine and Belarus if it agreed to wage war against the Soviet Union, but the concessions the Poles were expected to make meant that their homeland would become largely dependent on Germany, functioning as little more than a client state. The Poles feared that their independence would eventually be threatened altogether;[22] historically Hitler had already denounced the right of Poland to independence in 1930, writing that Poles and Czechs were a "rabble not worth a penny more than the inhabitants of Sudan or India. How can they demand the rights of independent states?"[23]

The population of the Free City of Danzig was strongly in favour of annexation by Germany, as were many of the ethnic German inhabitants of the Polish territory that separated the German exclave of East Prussia from the rest of the Reich.[24] The Polish Corridor constituted land long disputed by Poland and Germany, and was inhabited by a Polish majority. The Corridor had become a part of Poland after the Treaty of Versailles. Many Germans also wanted the urban port city of Danzig and its environs (comprising the Free City of Danzig) to be reincorporated into Germany. Danzig city had a German majority,[25] and had been separated from Germany after Versailles and made into the nominally independent Free City. Hitler sought to use this as casus belli, a reason for war, reverse the post-1918 territorial losses, and on many occasions had appealed to German nationalism, promising to "liberate" the German minority still in the Corridor, as well as Danzig.[26]

Events leading to World War II
  1. Treaty of Versailles 1919
  2. Polish–Soviet War 1919
  3. Treaty of Saint-Germain-en-Laye 1919
  4. Treaty of Trianon 1920
  5. Treaty of Rapallo 1920
  6. Franco-Polish alliance 1921
  7. March on Rome 1922
  8. Corfu incident 1923
  9. Occupation of the Ruhr 1923–1925
  10. Mein Kampf 1925
  11. Second Italo-Senussi War 1923–1932
  12. Dawes Plan 1924
  13. Locarno Treaties 1925
  14. Young Plan 1929
  15. Great Depression 1929
  16. Japanese invasion of Manchuria 1931
  17. Pacification of Manchukuo 1931–1942
  18. January 28 incident 1932
  19. Geneva Conference 1932–1934
  20. Defense of the Great Wall 1933
  21. Battle of Rehe 1933
  22. Nazis' rise to power in Germany 1933
  23. Tanggu Truce 1933
  24. Italo-Soviet Pact 1933
  25. Inner Mongolian Campaign 1933–1936
  26. German–Polish declaration of non-aggression 1934
  27. Franco-Soviet Treaty of Mutual Assistance 1935
  28. Soviet–Czechoslovakia Treaty of Mutual Assistance 1935
  29. He–Umezu Agreement 1935
  30. Anglo-German Naval Agreement 1935
  31. December 9th Movement
  32. Second Italo-Ethiopian War 1935–1936
  33. Remilitarization of the Rhineland 1936
  34. Spanish Civil War 1936–1939
  35. Italo-German "Axis" protocol 1936
  36. Anti-Comintern Pact 1936
  37. Suiyuan campaign 1936
  38. Xi'an Incident 1936
  39. Second Sino-Japanese War 1937–1945
  40. USS Panay incident 1937
  41. Anschluss Mar. 1938
  42. May Crisis May 1938
  43. Battle of Lake Khasan July–Aug. 1938
  44. Bled Agreement Aug. 1938
  45. Undeclared German–Czechoslovak War Sep. 1938
  46. Munich Agreement Sep. 1938
  47. First Vienna Award Nov. 1938
  48. German occupation of Czechoslovakia Mar. 1939
  49. Hungarian invasion of Carpatho-Ukraine Mar. 1939
  50. German ultimatum to Lithuania Mar. 1939
  51. Slovak–Hungarian War Mar. 1939
  52. Final offensive of the Spanish Civil War Mar.–Apr. 1939
  53. Danzig Crisis Mar.–Aug. 1939
  54. British guarantee to Poland Mar. 1939
  55. Italian invasion of Albania Apr. 1939
  56. Soviet–British–French Moscow negotiations Apr.–Aug. 1939
  57. Pact of Steel May 1939
  58. Battles of Khalkhin Gol May–Sep. 1939
  59. Molotov–Ribbentrop Pact Aug. 1939
  60. Invasion of Poland Sep. 1939

The invasion was referred to by Germany as the 1939 Defensive War (Verteidigungskrieg) since Hitler proclaimed that Poland had attacked Germany and that "Germans in Poland are persecuted with a bloody terror and are driven from their homes. The series of border violations, which are unbearable to a great power, prove that the Poles no longer are willing to respect the German frontier."[27]

Poland participated with Germany in the partition of Czechoslovakia that followed the Munich Agreement, although they were not part of the agreement. It coerced Czechoslovakia to surrender the region of Český Těšín by issuing an ultimatum to that effect on 30 September 1938, which was accepted by Czechoslovakia on 1 October.[28] This region had a Polish majority and had been disputed between Czechoslovakia and Poland in the aftermath of World War I.[29][30] The Polish annexation of Slovak territory (several villages in the regions of Čadca, Orava and Spiš) later served as the justification for the Slovak state to join the German invasion.

By 1937, Germany began to increase its demands for Danzig, while proposing that an extraterritorial roadway, part of the Reichsautobahn system, be built in order to connect East Prussia with Germany proper, running through the Polish Corridor.[31] Poland rejected this proposal, fearing that after accepting these demands, it would become increasingly subject to the will of Germany and eventually lose its independence as the Czechs had.[32] Polish leaders also distrusted Hitler.[32] The British were also wary of Germany's increasing strength and assertiveness threatening its balance of power strategy.[33] On 31 March 1939, Poland formed a military alliance with the United Kingdom and with France, believing that Polish independence and territorial integrity would be defended with their support if it were to be threatened by Germany.[34] On the other hand, British Prime Minister Neville Chamberlain and his Foreign Secretary, Lord Halifax, still hoped to strike a deal with Hitler regarding Danzig (and possibly the Polish Corridor). Chamberlain and his supporters believed war could be avoided and hoped Germany would agree to leave the rest of Poland alone. German hegemony over Central Europe was also at stake. In private, Hitler said in May that Danzig was not the important issue to him, but pursuit of Lebensraum for Germany.[35]

Breakdown of talks

With tensions mounting, Germany turned to aggressive diplomacy. On 28 April 1939, Hitler unilaterally withdrew from both the German-Polish Non-Aggression Pact of 1934 and the Anglo-German Naval Agreement of 1935. Talks over Danzig and the Corridor broke down and months passed without diplomatic interaction between Germany and Poland. During this interim period, the Germans learned that France and Britain had failed to secure an alliance with the Soviet Union against Germany, and that the Soviet Union was interested in an alliance with Germany against Poland. Hitler had already issued orders to prepare for a possible "solution of the Polish problem by military means" through the Case White scenario.

In May, in a statement to his generals while they were in the midst of planning the invasion of Poland, Hitler made it clear that the invasion would not come without resistance as it had in Czechoslovakia:[36]

With minor exceptions German national unification has been achieved. Further successes cannot be achieved without bloodshed. Poland will always be on the side of our adversaries... Danzig is not the objective. It is a matter of expanding our living space in the east, of making our food supply secure, and solving the problem of the Baltic states. To provide sufficient food you must have sparsely settled areas. There is therefore no question of sparing Poland, and the decision remains to attack Poland at the first opportunity. We cannot expect a repetition of Czechoslovakia. There will be fighting.[36]

 
Vyacheslav Molotov signs the Molotov–Ribbentrop Pact, a German–Soviet non-aggression pact.

On 22 August, just over a week before the onset of war, Hitler delivered a speech to his military commanders at the Obersalzberg:

The object of the war is … physically to destroy the enemy. That is why I have prepared, for the moment only in the East, my 'Death's Head' formations with orders to kill without pity or mercy all men, women, and children of Polish descent or language. Only in this way can we obtain the living space we need. [37]

With the surprise signing of the Molotov–Ribbentrop Pact on 23 August, the result of secret Nazi–Soviet talks held in Moscow, Germany neutralized the possibility of Soviet opposition to a campaign against Poland and war became imminent. In fact, the Soviets agreed not to aid France or the UK in the event of their going to war with Germany over Poland and, in a secret protocol of the pact, the Germans and the Soviets agreed to divide Eastern Europe, including Poland, into two spheres of influence; the western one-third of the country was to go to Germany and the eastern two-thirds to the Soviet Union.

The German assault was originally scheduled to begin at 4:00 a.m. on 26 August. However, on 25 August, the Polish-British Common Defence Pact was signed as an annex to the Franco-Polish alliance (1921). In this accord, Britain committed itself to the defence of Poland, guaranteeing to preserve Polish independence. At the same time, the British and the Poles were hinting to Berlin that they were willing to resume discussions—not at all how Hitler hoped to frame the conflict. Thus, he wavered and postponed his attack until 1 September, managing to in effect halt the entire invasion "in mid-leap".

 
Planned and actual divisions of Poland, according to the Molotov–Ribbentrop Pact, with later adjustments

However, there was one exception: on the night of 25–26 August, a German sabotage group which had not heard anything about a delay of the invasion made an attack on the Jablunkov Pass and Mosty railway station in Silesia. On the morning of 26 August, this group was repelled by Polish troops. The German side described all this as an incident "caused by an insane individual" (see Jabłonków incident).

On 26 August, Hitler tried to dissuade the British and the French from interfering in the upcoming conflict, even pledging that the Wehrmacht forces would be made available to Britain's empire in the future. The negotiations convinced Hitler that there was little chance the Western Allies would declare war on Germany, and even if they did, because of the lack of "territorial guarantees" to Poland, they would be willing to negotiate a compromise favourable to Germany after its conquest of Poland. Meanwhile, the increased number of overflights by high-altitude reconnaissance aircraft and cross-border troop movements signaled that war was imminent.

 
The map shows the beginning of the European part of World War II in September 1939.

On 29 August, prompted by the British, Germany issued one last diplomatic offer, with Fall Weiss yet to be rescheduled. That evening, the German government responded in a communication that it aimed not only for the restoration of Danzig but also the Polish Corridor (which had not previously been part of Hitler's demands) in addition to the safeguarding of the German minority in Poland. It said that they were willing to commence negotiations, but indicated that a Polish representative with the power to sign an agreement had to arrive in Berlin the next day while in the meantime it would draw up a set of proposals.[38] The British Cabinet was pleased that negotiations had been agreed to but, mindful of how Emil Hácha had been forced to sign his country away under similar circumstances just months earlier, regarded the requirement for an immediate arrival of a Polish representative with full signing powers as an unacceptable ultimatum.[39][40] On the night of 30/31 August, German Foreign Minister Joachim von Ribbentrop read a 16-point German proposal to ambassador Nevile Henderson. When the ambassador requested a copy of the proposals for transmission to the Polish government, Ribbentrop refused, on the grounds that the requested Polish representative had failed to arrive by midnight.[41] When Polish Ambassador Lipski went to see Ribbentrop later on 31 August to indicate that Poland was favorably disposed to negotiations, he announced that he did not have the full power to sign, and Ribbentrop dismissed him. It was then broadcast that Poland had rejected Germany's offer, and negotiations with Poland came to an end. Hitler issued orders for the invasion to commence soon afterwards.

On 29 August, Polish Minister of Foreign Affairs, Józef Beck ordered military mobilization, but under the pressure from Great Britain and France, the mobilization was cancelled. When the final mobilization started, it added to the confusion.[42]

On 30 August, the Polish Navy sent its destroyer flotilla to Britain, executing the Peking Plan. On the same day, Marshal of Poland Edward Rydz-Śmigły announced the mobilization of Polish troops. However, he was pressured into revoking the order by the French, who apparently still hoped for a diplomatic settlement, failing to realize that the Germans were fully mobilized and concentrated at the Polish border.[43] During the night of 31 August, the Gleiwitz incident, a false flag attack on the radio station, was staged near the border city of Gleiwitz in Upper Silesia by German units posing as Polish troops, as part of the wider Operation Himmler.[44] On 31 August, Hitler ordered hostilities against Poland to start at 4:45 the next morning. However, partly because of the earlier stoppage, Poland finally managed to mobilize only about 70% of its planned forces (only about 900,000 of 1,350,000 soldiers planned to mobilize in first order), and because of that many units were still forming or moving to their designated frontline positions. The late mobilization reduced combat capability of the Polish Army by about 1/3.

Opposing forces

Germany

Germany had a substantial numeric advantage over Poland and had developed a significant military before the conflict. The Heer (army) had 3,472 tanks in its inventory, of which 2,859 were with the Field Army and 408 with the Replacement Army.[45] 453 tanks were assigned into four light divisions, while another 225 tanks were in detached regiments and companies.[46] Most notably, the Germans had seven Panzer divisions, with 2,009 tanks between them, using a new operational doctrine.[47] It held that these divisions should act in coordination with other elements of the military, punching holes in the enemy line and isolating selected units, which would be encircled and destroyed. This would be followed up by less-mobile mechanized infantry and foot soldiers. The Luftwaffe (air force) provided both tactical and strategic air power, particularly dive bombers that disrupted lines of supply and communications. Together, the new methods were nicknamed "Blitzkrieg" (lightning war). While historian Basil Liddell Hart claimed "Poland was a full demonstration of the Blitzkrieg theory",[48] some other historians disagree.[49]

Aircraft played a major role in the campaign. Bombers also attacked cities, causing huge losses amongst the civilian population through terror bombing and strafing. The Luftwaffe forces consisted of 1,180 fighters, 290 Ju 87 Stuka dive bombers, 1,100 conventional bombers (mainly Heinkel He 111s and Dornier Do 17s), and an assortment of 550 transport and 350 reconnaissance aircraft.[50][51] In total, Germany had close to 4,000 aircraft, most of them modern. A force of 2,315 aircraft was assigned to Weiss.[52] Due to its earlier participation in the Spanish Civil War, the Luftwaffe was probably the most experienced, best-trained and best-equipped air force in the world in 1939.[53]

Poland

 
Polish Infantry

Emerging in 1918 as an independent country after 123 years after the Partitions of Poland, the Second Polish Republic, when compared with countries such as United Kingdom or Germany, was a relatively indigent and mostly agricultural country. The partitioning powers did not invest in the development of industry, especially in the armaments industry in ethnically Polish areas. Moreover, Poland had to deal with damage caused by World War I. This resulted in the need to build a defense industry from scratch. Between 1936 and 1939, Poland invested heavily in the newly created Central Industrial Region. Preparations for a defensive war with Germany were ongoing for many years, but most plans assumed fighting would not begin before 1942. To raise funds for industrial development, Poland sold much of the modern equipment it produced.[54] In 1936, a National Defence Fund was set up to collect funds necessary for strengthening the Polish Armed forces. The Polish Army had approximately a million soldiers, but not all were mobilized by 1 September. Latecomers sustained significant casualties when public transport became targets of the Luftwaffe. The Polish military had fewer armored forces than the Germans, and these units, dispersed within the infantry, were unable to effectively engage the Germans.[55]

Experiences in the Polish–Soviet War shaped Polish Army organizational and operational doctrine. Unlike the trench warfare of World War I, the Polish–Soviet War was a conflict in which the cavalry's mobility played a decisive role.[56] Poland acknowledged the benefits of mobility but was unable to invest heavily in many of the expensive, unproven inventions since then. In spite of this, Polish cavalry brigades were used as mobile mounted infantry and had some successes against both German infantry and cavalry.[57]

 
Bofors 37 mm anti-tank gun on the fire post during exercises

An average Polish infantry division consisted of 16,492 soldiers and was equipped with 326 light and medium machine guns, 132 heavy machine guns, 92 anti-tank rifles and several dozen light, medium, heavy, anti-tank and anti-airplane field artillery. Contrary to the 1,009 cars and trucks and 4,842 horses in the average German infantry division, the average Polish infantry division had 76 cars and trucks and 6,939 horses.[58]

The Polish Air Force (Lotnictwo Wojskowe) was at a severe disadvantage against the German Luftwaffe due to inferiority in numbers and the obsolescence of its fighter planes. However, contrary to German propaganda, it was not destroyed on the ground—in fact it was successfully dispersed before the conflict started and not a single one of its combat planes was destroyed on the ground in the first days of the conflict.[59] In the era of fast progress in aviation the Polish Air Force lacked modern fighters, vastly due to the cancellation of many advanced projects, such as the PZL.38 Wilk and a delay in the introduction of a completely new modern Polish fighter PZL.50 Jastrząb. However, its pilots were among the world's best trained, as proven a year later in the Battle of Britain, in which the Poles played a notable part.[60]

 
Polish PZL P.11 fighter aircraft
 
Polish PZL.37 Łoś medium bombers with crews

Overall, the Germans enjoyed numerical and qualitative aircraft superiority. Poland had only about 600 aircraft, of which only PZL.37 Łoś heavy bombers were modern and comparable to their German counterparts. The Polish Air Force had roughly 185 PZL P.11 and some 95 PZL P.7 fighters, 175 PZL.23 Karaś Bs, 35 Karaś as light bombers.[Note 5] However, for the September Campaign, not all of those aircraft were mobilized. By 1 September, out of about 120 heavy bombers PZL.37s produced, only 36 PZL.37s were deployed, the rest being mostly in training units. All those aircraft were of indigenous Polish design, with the bombers being more modern than the fighters, according to the Ludomił Rayski air force expansion plan, which relied on a strong bomber force. The Polish Air Force consisted of a 'Bomber Brigade', 'Pursuit Brigade' and aircraft assigned to the various ground armies.[62] The Polish fighters were older than their German counterparts; the PZL P.11 fighter—produced in the early 1930s—had a top speed of only 365 km/h (227 mph), far less than German bombers. To compensate, the pilots relied on its maneuverability and high diving speed.[53] The Polish Air Force's decisions to strengthen its resources came too late, mostly due to budget limitations. As a "last minute" order in the summer of 1939, Poland bought 160 French Morane-Saulnier M.S.406 fighters and 111 English airplanes (100 light bombers Fairey Battle, 10 Hurricanes and 1 Supermarine Spitfire; the sale of 150 Spitfires asked by the Polish government was rejected by the Air Ministry).[63] Despite the fact that some of the airplanes had been shipped to Poland (the first transport of purchased aircraft on the ship "Lassel" sailed from Liverpool on 28 August[64]), none of them would take part in combat. In late 1938, the Polish Air Force also ordered 300 advanced PZL.46 Sum light bombers, but due to a delay in starting mass production, none of them were delivered before 1 September.[65] When in the spring of 1939 it turned out that there were problems with the implementation of the new PZL.50 Jastrząb fighter, it was decided to temporarily implement the production of the fighter PZL P 11.G Kobuz. Nevertheless, due to the outbreak of the war, not one of the ordered 90 aircraft of this type were delivered to the army.[66]

 
Polish 7TP light tanks in formation during maneuvers

The tank force consisted of two armored brigades, four independent tank battalions and some 30 companies of TKS tankettes attached to infantry divisions and cavalry brigades.[67] A standard tank of the Polish Army during the invasion of 1939 was the 7TP light tank. It was the first tank in the world to be equipped with a diesel engine and 360° Gundlach periscope.[68] The 7TP was significantly better armed than its most common opponents, the German Panzer I and II, but only 140 tanks were produced between 1935 and the outbreak of the war. Poland had also a few relatively modern imported designs, such as 50 Renault R35 tanks and 38 Vickers E tanks.

The Polish Navy was a small fleet of destroyers, submarines and smaller support vessels. Most Polish surface units followed Operation Peking, leaving Polish ports on 20 August and escaping by way of the North Sea to join with the British Royal Navy. Submarine forces participated in Operation Worek, with the goal of engaging and damaging German shipping in the Baltic Sea, but they had much less success. In addition, many merchant marine ships joined the British merchant fleet and took part in wartime convoys.

Details

German plan

 
Dispositions of the opposing forces on 31 August 1939, with the German order of battle overlaid in pink.

The September Campaign was devised by General Franz Halder, the chief of the general staff, and directed by General Walther von Brauchitsch, the commander in chief of the upcoming campaign. It called for the start of hostilities before a declaration of war, and pursued a doctrine of mass encirclement and destruction of enemy forces. The infantry, far from completely mechanized but fitted with fast-moving artillery and logistic support, was to be supported by Panzers and small numbers of truck-mounted infantry (the Schützen regiments, forerunners of the panzergrenadiers) to assist the rapid movement of troops and concentrate on localized parts of the enemy front, eventually isolating segments of the enemy, surrounding, and destroying them. The prewar "armoured idea", which an American journalist in 1939 dubbed Blitzkrieg, which was advocated by some generals, including Heinz Guderian, would have had the armour punching holes in the enemy's front and ranging deep into rear areas, but the campaign in Poland would be fought along more traditional lines. That stemmed from conservatism on the part of the German High Command, which mainly restricted the role of armour and mechanized forces to supporting the conventional infantry divisions.[69]

Poland's terrain was well suited for mobile operations when the weather co-operated; the country had flat plains, with long frontiers totalling almost 5,600 km (3,500 mi), Poland's long border with Germany on the west and north, facing East Prussia, extended 2,000 km (1,200 mi). They had been lengthened by another 300 km (190 mi) on the southern side in the aftermath of the 1938 Munich Agreement. The German incorporation of Bohemia and Moravia and creation of the German puppet state of Slovakia meant that Poland's southern flank was also exposed.[70]

Hitler demanded that Poland be conquered in six weeks, but German planners thought that it would require three months.[71] They intended to exploit their long border fully with the great enveloping manoeuver of Fall Weiss. German units were to invade Poland from three directions:

  • A main attack over the western Polish border, which was to be carried out by Army Group South, commanded by Colonel General Gerd von Rundstedt, attacking from German Silesia and from the Moravian and Slovak border. General Johannes Blaskowitz's 8th Army was to drive eastward against Łódź. General Wilhelm List's 14th Army was to push on toward Kraków and to turn the Poles' Carpathian flank. General Walter von Reichenau's 10th Army, in the centre with Army Group South's armour, was to deliver the decisive blow with a northeastward thrust into the heart of Poland.
  • A second route of attack from northern Prussia. Colonel General Fedor von Bock commanded Army Group North, comprising General Georg von Küchler's 3rd Army, which was to strike southward from East Prussia, and General Günther von Kluge's 4th Army, which was to attack eastward across the base of the Polish Corridor.
  • A tertiary attack by part of Army Group South's allied Slovak units from Slovakia.
  • From within Poland, the German minority would assist by engaging in diversion and sabotage operations by Volksdeutscher Selbstschutz units that had been prepared before the war.[69]

All three assaults were to converge on Warsaw, and the main Polish army was to be encircled and destroyed west of the Vistula. Fall Weiss was initiated on 1 September 1939 and was the first operation of Second World War in Europe.

Polish defence plan

 
Deployment of German, Polish and Slovak divisions immediately before the German invasion.

The Polish determination to deploy forces directly at the German-Polish border, prompted by the Polish-British Common Defence Pact, shaped the country's defence plan, "Plan West". Poland's most valuable natural resources, industry and population were along the western border in Eastern Upper Silesia. Polish policy centred on their protection, especially since many politicians feared that if Poland retreated from the regions disputed by Germany, Britain and France would sign a separate peace treaty with Germany like the 1938 Munich Agreement and allow Germany to stay in those regions.[72] The fact that none of Poland's allies had specifically guaranteed Polish borders or territorial integrity was another Polish concern. These reasons made the Polish government disregarded French advice to deploy the bulk of its forces behind natural barriers, such as the Vistula and San Rivers, despite some Polish generals supported the idea to be a better strategy. The West Plan allowed the Polish armies to retreat inside the country, but that was supposed to be a slow retreat behind prepared positions intended to give the armed forces time to complete its mobilization and execute a general counteroffensive with the support of the Western Allies.[67]

In case of a failure to defend most of the territory, the army was to retreat to the south-east of the country, where the rough terrain, the Stryj and Dniestr rivers, valleys, hills and swamps would provide natural lines of defence against the German advance, and the Romanian Bridgehead could be created.

 
A camouflaged Polish P-11 fighter at a combat airfield

The Polish General Staff had not begun elaborating the "West" defence plan until 4 March 1939. It was assumed that the Polish Army, fighting in the initial phase of the war alone, would have to defend the western regions of the country. The plan of operations took into account the numerical and material superiority of the enemy and, also assumed the defensive character of Polish operations. The Polish intentions were defending the western regions that were judged as indispensable for waging the war, taking advantage of the propitious conditions for counterattacks by reserve units and avoiding it from being smashed before the beginning of Franco-British operations in Western Europe. The operation plan had not been elaborated in detail and concerned only the first stage of operations.[73]

The British and the French estimated that Poland would be able to defend itself for two to three months, and Poland estimated it could do so for at least six months. While Poland drafted its estimates based upon the expectation that the Western Allies would honor their treaty obligations and quickly start an offensive of their own, the French and the British expected the war to develop into trench warfare, much like World War I. The Polish government was not notified of the strategy and based all of its defence plans on promises of quick relief by the Western Allies.[74][75]

Polish forces were stretched thinly along the Polish-German border and lacked compact defence lines and good defence positions along disadvantageous terrain. That strategy also left supply lines poorly protected. One-third of Poland's forces were massed in or near the Polish Corridor, making them vulnerable to a double envelopment from East Prussia and the west. Another third was concentrated in the north-central part of the country, between the major cities of Łódź and Warsaw.[76] The forward positioning of Polish forces vastly increased the difficulty of carrying out strategic maneuvres, compounded by inadequate mobility, as Polish units often lacked the ability to retreat from their defensive positions, as they were being overrun by more mobile German mechanized formations.[77]

 
Peking Plan: Polish destroyers evacuate the Baltic Sea en route to the United Kingdom.

As the prospect of conflict increased, the British government pressed Marshal Edward Śmigły-Rydz to evacuate the most modern elements of the Polish Navy from the Baltic Sea.[78] In the event of war, the Polish military leaders realized that the ships that remained in the Baltic were likely to be quickly sunk by the Germans. Furthermore, since the Danish Straits were well within operating range of the German Kriegsmarine and Luftwaffe, there was little chance of an evacuation plan succeeding if it were implemented after hostilities began. Four days after the signing of the Polish-British Common Defence Pact, three destroyers of the Polish Navy executed the Peking Plan and so evacuated to Great Britain.[78]

Although the Polish military had prepared for conflict, the civilian population remained largely unprepared. Polish prewar propaganda emphasized that any German invasion would be easily repelled. That made Polish defeats during the German invasion come as a shock to the civilian population.[77] Lacking training for such a disaster, the civilian population panicked and retreated east, spreading chaos, lowering the troops' morale and making road transportation for Polish troops very difficult.[77] The propaganda also had some negative consequences for the Polish troops themselves, whose communications, disrupted by German mobile units operating in the rear and civilians blocking roads, were further thrown into chaos by bizarre reports from Polish radio stations and newspapers, which often reported imaginary victories and other military operations. That led to some Polish troops being encircled or taking a stand against overwhelming odds when they thought they were actually counterattacking or would soon receive reinforcements from other victorious areas.[77]

German invasion

 
Map showing the advances made by the Germans, and the disposition of all troops from 1 to 14 September
 
Wieluń was destroyed by Luftwaffe bombing.

Following several German-staged incidents, such as the Gleiwitz incident, part of Operation Himmler, which German propaganda used as a pretext to claim that German forces were acting in self-defence, one of the first acts of war took place on 1 September 1939. At 04:45, the old German pre-dreadnought battleship Schleswig-Holstein opened fire on the Polish military transit depot at Westerplatte, in the Free City of Danzig, on the Baltic Sea. However, in many places, German units crossed the Polish border even before that time. Around then, the Luftwaffe attacked a number of military and civilian targets, including Wieluń, the first large-scale city bombing of the war. At 08:00, German troops, still without a formal declaration of war issued, attacked near the Polish village of Mokra. The Battle of the Border had begun. Later that day, the Germans attacked Poland's western, southern and northern borders, and German aircraft began raids on Polish cities. The main axis of attack led eastwards from Germany through the western Polish border. Supporting attacks came from East Prussia, in the north, and a joint German-Slovak tertiary attack by units (Field Army "Bernolák") from the German-allied Slovak Republic, in the south. All three assaults converged on the Polish capital, Warsaw.[79]

 
Front page of French newspaper Paris-Soir, France Declares War on Germany, 3 September 1939

France and Britain declared war on Germany on 3 September, but failed to provide any meaningful support. The German-French border saw only a few minor skirmishes, and most German forces, including 85% of armoured forces, were engaged in Poland. Despite some Polish successes in minor border battles, the German technical, operational and numerical superiority forced the Polish armies to retreat from the borders towards Warsaw and Lwów. The Luftwaffe gained air superiority early in the campaign. By destroying communications, the Luftwaffe increased the pace of the advance which overran Polish airstrips and early warning sites, causing logistical problems for the Poles. Many Polish Air Force units ran low on supplies, and 98 of their number withdrew into neutral Romania.[80] The Polish initial strength of 400 was reduced to 54 by 14 September and air opposition virtually ceased,[80] with the main Polish air bases destroyed during the first 48 hours of the war.[81]

 
Hitler watching German soldiers march into Poland in September 1939.

Germany attacked from three directions on land. Günther von Kluge led 20 divisions that entered the Polish Corridor and met a second force heading to Warsaw from East Prussia. Gerd von Rundstedt's 35 divisions attacked southern Poland.[81] By 3 September, when von Kluge in the north had reached the Vistula River, then some 10 km (6.2 mi) from the German border, and Georg von Küchler was approaching the Narew River, Walther von Reichenau's armour was already beyond the Warta river. Two days later, his left wing was well to the rear of Łódź and his right wing at the town of Kielce. On 7 September, the defenders of Warsaw had fallen back to a 48 km (30 mi) line paralleling the Vistula River, where they rallied against German tank thrusts. The defensive line ran between Płońsk and Pułtusk, respectively north-west and north-east of Warsaw. The right wing of the Poles had been hammered back from Ciechanów, about 40 km (25 mi) north-west of Pułtusk, and was pivoting on Płońsk. At one stage, the Poles were driven from Pułtusk, and the Germans threatened to turn the Polish flank and thrust on to the Vistula and Warsaw. Pułtusk, however, was regained in the face of withering German fire. Many German tanks were captured after a German attack had pierced the line, but the Polish defenders outflanked them.[82] By 8 September, one of Reichenau's armoured corps, having advanced 225 km (140 mi) during the first week of the campaign, reached the outskirts of Warsaw. Light divisions on Reichenau's right were on the Vistula between Warsaw and the town of Sandomierz by 9 September, and List, in the south, was on the San River north and south of the town of Przemyśl. At the same time, Guderian led his 3rd Army tanks across the Narew, attacking the line of the Bug River that had already encircled Warsaw. All of the German armies made progress in fulfilling their parts of the plan. The Polish armies split up into uncoordinated fragments, some of which were retreating while others were launching disjointed attacks on the nearest German columns.

 
Cheerful German and Slovak soldiers posing with a group of local Lemkos in Komańcza, September 1939.
 
Polish infantry in attack

Polish forces abandoned the regions of Pomerelia (the Polish Corridor), Greater Poland and Polish Upper Silesia in the first week. The Polish plan for border defence was a dismal failure. The German advance, as a whole, was not slowed. On 10 September, the Polish commander-in-chief, Marshal Edward Rydz-Śmigły, ordered a general retreat to the south-east, towards the Romanian Bridgehead.[83] Meanwhile, the Germans were tightening their encirclement of the Polish forces west of the Vistula (in the Łódź area and, still farther west, around Poznań) and penetrating deeply into eastern Poland. Warsaw, which had undergone heavy aerial bombardment since the first hours of the war, was attacked on 9 September and was put under siege on 13 September. Around then, advanced German forces also reached Lwów, a major city in eastern Poland, and 1,150 German aircraft bombed Warsaw on 24 September.

The Polish defensive plan called for a strategy of encirclement. It would allow the Germans to advance in between two Polish Army groups in the line between Berlin and Warsaw-Lodz, and Armia Prusy would then move in and repulse the German spearhead, trapping it. For that to happen, Armia Prusy needed to be fully mobilized by 3 September. However, Polish military planners failed to foresee the speed of the German advance and assumed that Armia Prusy would need to be fully mobilized by 16 September.[84]

 
Bombed Polish Army column during the Battle of the Bzura
 
German troops during the fighting in the streets of Warsaw

The largest battle during this campaign, the Battle of Bzura, took place near the Bzura River, west of Warsaw, and lasted from 9 to 19 September. The Polish armies Poznań and Pomorze, retreating from the border area of the Polish Corridor, attacked the flank of the advancing German 8th Army, but the counterattack failed despite initial success. After the defeat, Poland lost its ability to take the initiative and counterattack on a large scale. The German air power was instrumental during the battle. The offensive of the Luftwaffe broke what remained of the Polish resistance in an "awesome demonstration of air power".[85] The Luftwaffe quickly destroyed the bridges across the Bzura River. Then, the Polish forces were trapped out in the open and were attacked by wave after wave of Stukas, dropping 50 kg (110 lb) light bombs, which caused huge numbers of casualties. The Polish anti-aircraft batteries ran out of ammunition and retreated to the forests but were then smoked out by the Heinkel He 111 and Dornier Do 17s dropping 100 kg (220 lb) incendiaries. The Luftwaffe left the army with the task of mopping up survivors. The Stukageschwaders alone dropped 388 t (428 short tons) of bombs during the battle.[85]

By 12 September, all of Poland west of the Vistula had been conquered except for the isolated Warsaw.[81] The Polish government, led by President Ignacy Mościcki, and the high command, led by Marshal Edward Rydz-Śmigły, left Warsaw in the first days of the campaign and headed southeast, reaching Lublin on 6 September. From there, it moved on 9 September to Kremenez and, on 13 September to Zaleshiki, on the Romanian border.[86] Rydz-Śmigły ordered the Polish forces to retreat in the same direction, behind the Vistula and San Rivers, beginning the preparations for the defence of the Romanian Bridgehead area.[83]

Soviet invasion

 
Disposition of all troops following the Soviet invasion.

From the beginning, the German government repeatedly asked Molotov whether the Soviet Union would keep to its side of the partition bargain.[87][88] The Soviet forces were holding fast along their designated invasion points pending finalization of the five-month-long undeclared war with Japan in the Far East, successful end of the conflict for the Soviet Union, which occurred in the Battles of Khalkhin Gol. On 15 September 1939, Molotov and Shigenori Tōgō completed their agreement that ended the conflict, and the Nomonhan ceasefire went into effect on 16 September 1939. Now cleared of any "second front" threat from the Japanese, Soviet Premier Joseph Stalin ordered his forces into Poland on 17 September.[89] It was agreed that the Soviets would relinquish its interest in the territories between the new border and Warsaw in exchange for inclusion of Lithuania in the Soviet "zone of interest".

By 17 September, the Polish defence had already been broken and the only hope was to retreat and reorganize along the Romanian Bridgehead. However, the plans were rendered obsolete nearly overnight when the over 800,000-strong Soviet Red Army entered and created the Belarusian and Ukrainian fronts after they had invaded the eastern regions of Poland, in violation of the Riga Peace Treaty, the Soviet–Polish Non-Aggression Pact, and other international treaties, both bilateral and multilateral.[Note 6] Soviet diplomacy had lied that they were "protecting the Ukrainian and Belarusian minorities of eastern Poland since the Polish government had abandoned the country and the Polish state ceased to exist".[91]

 
Polish antiaircraft artillery in Lwów, 1939

The Polish border defence forces in the east, known as the Korpus Ochrony Pogranicza, had about 25 battalions. Rydz-Śmigły ordered them to fall back and not to engage the Soviets.[83] That, however, did not prevent some clashes and small battles, such as the Battle of Grodno, as soldiers and locals attempted to defend the city. The Soviets executed numerous Polish officers, including prisoners of war like General Józef Olszyna-Wilczyński.[92][93] The Organization of Ukrainian Nationalists rose against the Poles, and communist partisans organized local revolts, robbing and killing civilians.[94] Those movements were quickly disciplined by the NKVD. The Soviet invasion was one of the decisive factors that convinced the Polish government that the war in Poland was lost.[95] Before the Soviet attack from the east, the Polish military's plan had called for long-term defence against Germany in south-eastern Poland and to await relief from an attack by the Western Allies on Germany's western border.[95] However, the Polish government refused to surrender or to negotiate peace with Germany. Instead, it ordered all units to evacuate Poland and to reorganize in France.

 
Red Army enters the provincial capital of Wilno during the Soviet invasion, 19 September 1939

Meanwhile, Polish forces tried to move towards the Romanian Bridgehead area, still actively resisting the German invasion. From 17 to 20 September, Polish armies Kraków and Lublin were crippled at the Battle of Tomaszów Lubelski, the second-largest battle of the campaign. Lwów capitulated on 22 September because of the Soviet intervention; the city had been attacked by the Germans over a week earlier, and in the middle of the siege, the German troops handed operations over to their Soviet allies.[96] Despite a series of intensifying German attacks, Warsaw, defended by quickly-reorganized retreating units, civilian volunteers and militias, held out until 28 September. The Modlin Fortress north of Warsaw capitulated on 29 September, after an intense 16-day battle. Some isolated Polish garrisons managed to hold their positions long after they had been surrounded by German forces. The enclave of Westerplatte's tiny garrison capitulated on 7 September and the Oksywie garrison held until 19 September; the Hel Fortified Area was defended until 2 October.[97] In the last week of September, Hitler made a speech in Danzig and said:

Meantime, Russia felt moved, on its part, to march in for the protection of the interests of the White Russian and Ukrainian people in Poland. We realize now that in England and France this German and Russian co-operation is considered a terrible crime. An Englishman even wrote that it is perfidious—well, the English ought to know. I believe England thinks this co-operation perfidious because the co-operation of democratic England with bolshevist Russia failed, while National Socialist Germany's attempt with Soviet Russia succeeded. Poland never will rise again in the form of the Versailles treaty. That is guaranteed not only by Germany, but also guaranteed by Russia. – Adolf Hitler, 19 September 1939[98]

Despite a Polish victory at the Battle of Szack (the Soviets later executed all the officers and NCOs they had captured), the Red Army reached the line of rivers Narew, Bug, Vistula and San by 28 September, in many cases meeting German units advancing from the other direction. Polish defenders on the Hel Peninsula on the shore of the Baltic Sea held out until 2 October. The last operational unit of the Polish Army, General Franciszek Kleeberg's Samodzielna Grupa Operacyjna "Polesie", surrendered after the four-day Battle of Kock near Lublin on 6 October, marking the end of the September Campaign.[99]

Civilian deaths

 
Nurses care for infants in a makeshift maternity ward at Saint Sophia Hospital in besieged Warsaw. During bombardment.

The Polish Campaign was the first action by Hitler in his attempt to create Lebensraum (living space) for Germans. Nazi propaganda was one of the factors behind the German brutality directed at civilians that had worked relentlessly to convince the Germans into believing that Jews and Slavs were Untermenschen (subhumans).[100][101]

 
A girl cries over the body of her 14-year-old sister who was strafed by the Luftwaffe

From the first day of invasion, the German air force (the Luftwaffe) attacked civilian targets and columns of refugees along the roads to terrorize the Polish people, disrupt communications and target Polish morale. The Luftwaffe killed 6,000 to 7,000 Polish civilians during the bombing of Warsaw.[102]

The German invasion saw atrocities committed against Polish men, women and children.[103] The German forces (both SS and the regular Wehrmacht) murdered tens of thousands of Polish civilians (such as the Leibstandarte SS Adolf Hitler was notorious throughout the campaign for burning villages[104] and committing atrocities in numerous Polish towns, including massacres in Błonie, Złoczew, Bolesławiec, Torzeniec, Goworowo, Mława and Włocławek).[105]

During Operation Tannenberg, a campaign of ethnic cleansing organized by multiple elements of the German government, tens of thousands of Polish civilians were shot at 760 mass execution sites by the Einsatzgruppen.

Altogether, the civilian losses of Polish population amounted to about 150,000 to 200,000.[106] Roughly 1,250 German civilians were also killed during the invasion. (Also, 2,000 died fighting Polish troops as members of ethnic German militia forces such as the Volksdeutscher Selbstschutz, which was a fifth column during the invasion.)[107]

Aftermath

 
Hitler attends a Wehrmacht victory parade in Warsaw on 5 October 1939

John Gunther wrote in December 1939 that "the German campaign was a masterpiece. Nothing quite like it has been seen in military history".[81] The country was divided between Germany and the Soviet Union. Slovakia gained back those territories taken by Poland in autumn 1938. Lithuania received the city of Vilnius and its environs on 28 October 1939 from the Soviet Union. On 8 and 13 September 1939, the German military district in the area of Posen, commanded by general Alfred von Vollard-Bockelberg [de], and West Prussia, commanded by general Walter Heitz, were established in conquered Greater Poland and Pomerelia, respectively.[108] Based on laws of 21 May 1935 and 1 June 1938, the German military delegated civil administrative powers to Chiefs of Civil Administration (CdZ).[108] Hitler appointed Arthur Greiser to become the CdZ of the Posen military district, and Danzig's Gauleiter Albert Forster to become the CdZ of the West Prussian military district.[108] On 3 October 1939, the military districts centered on and named "Lodz" and "Krakau" were set up under command of major generals Gerd von Rundstedt and Wilhelm List, and Hitler appointed Hans Frank and Arthur Seyß-Inquart as civil heads, respectively.[108] Thus the entirety of occupied Poland was divided into four military districts (West Prussia, Posen, Lodz, and Krakau).[109] Frank was at the same time appointed "supreme chief administrator" for all occupied territories.[108] On 28 September, another secret German–Soviet protocol modified the arrangements of August: all of Lithuania was shifted to the Soviet sphere of influence; in exchange, the dividing line in Poland was moved in Germany's favour, eastwards towards the Bug River. On 8 October, Germany formally annexed the western parts of Poland with Greiser and Forster as Reichsstatthalter, while the south-central parts were administered as the General Government led by Frank.

 
German and Soviet troops shaking hands following the invasion

Even though water barriers separated most of the spheres of interest, the Soviet and German troops met on numerous occasions. The most remarkable event of this kind occurred at Brest-Litovsk on 22 September. The German 19th Panzer Corps—commanded by General Heinz Guderian—had occupied the city, which lay within the Soviet sphere of interest. When the Soviet 29th Tank Brigade (commanded by Semyon Krivoshein) approached, the commanders agreed that the German troops would withdraw and the Soviet troops would enter the city, saluting each other.[110] At Brest-Litovsk, Soviet and German commanders held a joint victory parade before German forces withdrew westward behind a new demarcation line.[16][111] Just three days earlier, however, the parties had a more hostile encounter near Lwów (Lviv, Lemberg), when the German 137th Gebirgsjägerregimenter (mountain infantry regiment) attacked a reconnaissance detachment of the Soviet 24th Tank Brigade; after a few casualties on both sides, the parties turned to negotiations. The German troops left the area, and the Red Army troops entered Lwów on 22 September.

The Molotov–Ribbentrop pact and the invasion of Poland marked the beginning of a period during which the government of the Soviet Union increasingly tried to convince itself that the actions of Germany were reasonable, and were not developments to be worried about, despite evidence to the contrary.[112] On 7 September 1939, just a few days after France and Britain joined the war against Germany, Stalin explained to a colleague that the war was to the advantage of the Soviet Union, as follows:[113]

A war is on between two groups of capitalist countries ... for the redivision of the world, for the domination of the world! We see nothing wrong in their having a good hard fight and weakening each other ... Hitler, without understanding it or desiring it, is shaking and undermining the capitalist system ... We can manoeuvre, pit one side against the other to set them fighting with each other as fiercely as possible ... The annihilation of Poland would mean one fewer bourgeois fascist state to contend with! What would be the harm if as a result of the rout of Poland we were to extend the socialist system onto new territories and populations?[113]

 
Polish troops withdrawn to Hungary in September 1939

About 65,000 Polish troops were killed in the fighting, with 420,000 others being captured by the Germans and 240,000 more by the Soviets (for a total of 660,000 prisoners). Up to 120,000 Polish troops escaped to neutral Romania (through the Romanian Bridgehead and Hungary), and another 20,000 to Latvia and Lithuania, with the majority eventually making their way to France or Britain. Most of the Polish Navy succeeded in evacuating to Britain as well. German personnel losses were less than their enemies (c. 16,000 killed).

 
German soldiers removing Polish government insignia

None of the parties to the conflict—Germany, the Western Allies or the Soviet Union—expected that the German invasion of Poland would lead to a war that would surpass World War I in its scale and cost.[citation needed] It would be months before Hitler would see the futility of his peace negotiation attempts with the United Kingdom and France, but the culmination of combined European and Pacific conflicts would result in what was truly a "world war". Thus, what was not seen by most politicians and generals in 1939 is clear from the historical perspective: The Polish September Campaign marked the beginning of a pan-European war, which combined with the Japanese invasion of China in 1937 and the Pacific War in 1941 to form the global conflict known as World War II.

The invasion of Poland led Britain and France to declare war on Germany on 3 September. However, they did little to affect the outcome of the September Campaign. No declaration of war was issued by Britain and France against the Soviet Union. This lack of direct help led many Poles to believe that they had been betrayed by their Western allies. British Foreign Secretary Lord Halifax said they were only obligated to declare war on Germany due to the first clause of the Anglo-Polish Agreement in 1939.[114]

The different attitude of the Anglo-French allies of Poland towards Nazi Germany and the USSR was argued at this time, for example, by the future head of the British government, Churchill:

Russians were guilty of gross treachery during the recent negotiations, but Marshal Voroshilov's demand that the Russian armies, if they were allies of Poland, should occupy Vilnius and Lvov was a perfectly reasonable military demand. It was rejected by Poland, whose arguments, despite their naturalness, cannot be considered satisfactory in the light of current events. As a result, Russia took up the same positions as an enemy of Poland that it might have taken as a very dubious and suspected friend. The difference is actually not as great as it might seem. The Russians mobilized a very large force and showed that they were able to move quickly and far from their pre-war positions. They now border on Germany, and the latter is completely unable to expose the Eastern front. A large German army will have to be left behind to monitor it. As far as I know, General Hamelin estimates its strength at least 20 divisions, but there may well be 25 or even more. Therefore, the Eastern front potentially exists.[115]

Russia is pursuing a cold policy of its own interests. We would prefer that the Russian armies stand in their present positions as friends and allies of Poland, rather than as invaders. But to protect Russia from the Nazi threat, it was clearly necessary that Russian armies should stand on this line. In any case, this line exists and, consequently, the Eastern front has been created, which Nazi Germany will not dare to attack...[115]

On 23 May 1939, Hitler explained to his officers that the object of the aggression was not Danzig, but the need to obtain German Lebensraum and details of this concept would be later formulated in the infamous Generalplan Ost.[116][117] The invasion decimated urban residential areas, civilians soon became indistinguishable from combatants, and the forthcoming German occupation (both on the annexed territories and in the General Government) was one of the most brutal episodes of World War II, resulting in between 5.47 million and 5.67 million Polish deaths[118] (about one-sixth of the country's total population, and over 90% of its Jewish minority)—including the mass murder of 3 million Polish citizens (mainly Jews as part of the final solution) in extermination camps like Auschwitz, in concentration camps, and in numerous ad hoc massacres, where civilians were rounded up, taken to a nearby forest, machine-gunned, and then buried, whether they were dead or not.[119] Among the 100,000 people murdered in the Intelligenzaktion operations in 1939–1940, approximately 61,000 were members of the Polish intelligentsia: scholars, clergy, former officers, and others, whom the Germans identified as political targets in the Special Prosecution Book-Poland, compiled before the war began in September 1939.[120]

According to the Polish Institute of National Remembrance, Soviet occupation between 1939 and 1941 resulted in the death of 150,000 and deportation of 320,000 of Polish citizens,[118][121] when all who were deemed dangerous to the Soviet regime were subject to Sovietization, forced resettlement, imprisonment in labor camps (the Gulags) or murdered, like the Polish officers in the Katyn massacre.[a]

 
1st Polish Corps on exercise in Scotland in 1941

Since October 1939, the Polish army that could escape imprisonment from the Soviets or Nazis were mainly heading for British and French territories. These places were considered safe, because of the pre-war alliance between Great-Britain, France and Poland. Not only did the government escape, but also the national gold supply was evacuated via Romania and brought to the West, notably London and Ottawa.[122][123] The approximately 75 tonnes (83 short tons) of gold was considered sufficient to field an army for the duration of the war.[124]

Eyewitness accounts

From Lemberg to Bordeaux ('Von Lemberg bis Bordeaux'), written by Leo Leixner, a journalist and war correspondent, is a first-hand account of the battles that led to the falls of Poland, the Low Countries, and France. It includes a rare eyewitness description of the Battle of Węgierska Górka. In August 1939, Leixner joined the Wehrmacht as a war reporter, was promoted to sergeant and, in 1941, published his recollections. The book was originally issued by Franz Eher Nachfolger, the central publishing house of the Nazi Party.[125]

The American journalist and filmmaker Julien Bryan came to besieged Warsaw on 7 September 1939 in the time of German bombardment. He photographed the beginning of the war by using one roll of colour film (Kodachrome) and much black-and-white film. He made one film about German crimes against civilians during the invasion. In colour, he photographed Polish soldiers, fleeing civilians, bombed houses, and a German bomber He 111 destroyed by the Polish Army in Warsaw. His photographs and film Siege are stored in the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum.[126]

Misconceptions

Combat between Polish cavalry and German tanks

 
Battlefield at Krojanty
 

Polish cavalry units did not engage German tanks with lances and swords. At the Battle of Tuchola Forest on 1 September 1939 the 18th Pomeranian Uhlan Regiment had been tasked to cover the retreat of Polish infantry. In the evening the Pomeranian Uhlans encountered contingents of the advancing German 20th Infantry Division of Heinz Guderian's XIX Army. Commander Kazimierz Mastalerz ordered an attack, forcing the 20th infantry to withdraw and disperse. The engagement proved to be successful as the German advance had been delayed. However, upon redeployment, the 18th Pomeranians came under sudden and intense machine gun fire of German armored reconnaissance vehicles. Despite their quick retreat, nearly a third of the Uhlans were killed or wounded.[127]

A group of German and Italian war correspondents, who visited the battlefield noticed the dead cavalry men and horses among the armored vehicles. Italian reporter Indro Montanelli promptly published an article in the Corriere della Sera, on the brave and heroic Polish cavalry men, who charged German tanks with sabres and lances.

Historian Steven Zaloga in Poland 1939: The Birth of Blitzkrieg (2004):

If a single image dominates the popular perception of the Polish campaign of 1939, it is the scene of Polish cavalry bravely charging the Panzers with their lances. Like many other details of the campaign, it is a myth that was created by German wartime propaganda and perpetuated by sloppy scholarship. Yet such myths have also been embraced by the Poles themselves as symbols of their wartime gallantry, achieving a cultural resonance in spite of their variance with the historical record.[128]

In 1939, only 10% of the Polish army was made up of cavalry units.[129]

Polish Air Force

The Polish Air Force was not destroyed on the ground in the first days of the war. Though numerically inferior, it had been redeployed from major air bases to small camouflaged airfields shortly before the war. Only some trainers and auxiliary aircraft were destroyed on the ground. The Polish Air Force, despite being significantly outnumbered and with its fighters outmatched by more advanced German fighters, remained active until the second week of the campaign, inflicting significant damage on the Luftwaffe.[130] The Luftwaffe lost 285 aircraft to all operational causes, with 279 more damaged, and the Poles lost 333 aircraft.[131]

Polish resistance to the invasion

Another question concerns whether Poland inflicted any significant losses on the German forces and whether it surrendered too quickly. While exact estimates vary, Poland cost the Germans about 45,000 casualties and 11,000 damaged or destroyed military vehicles, including 993 tanks and armored cars, 565 to 697 airplanes and 370 artillery pieces.[132][133][134] As for duration, the September Campaign lasted about a week and a half less than the Battle of France in 1940 even though the Anglo-French forces were much closer to parity with the Germans in numerical strength and equipment and were supported by the Maginot line.[Note 7] Furthermore, the Polish Army was preparing the Romanian Bridgehead, which would have prolonged Polish defence, but the plan was invalidated by the Soviet invasion of Poland on 17 September 1939.[135]

Poland also never officially surrendered to the Germans. Under German occupation, there was continued resistance by forces such as the Armia Krajowa, Henryk Dobrzański's guerillas, and the Leśni ("forest partisans").

 
Polish soldiers with anti-aircraft artillery near the Warsaw Central Station in the first days of September 1939.
 
American embassy in Warsaw during the German air raid in September 1939. Visible shattered window.

First use of Blitzkrieg strategy

It is often assumed that Blitzkrieg is the strategy that Germany first used in Poland. Many early post-war histories, such as Barrie Pitt's in The Second World War (BPC Publishing 1966), attribute German victory to "enormous development in military technique which occurred between 1918 and 1940", and cite that "Germany, who translated (British inter-war) theories into action... called the result Blitzkrieg". That idea has been repudiated by some authors. Matthew Cooper writes:

Throughout the Polish Campaign, the employment of the mechanized units revealed the idea that they were intended solely to ease the advance and to support the activities of the infantry.... Thus, any strategic exploitation of the armoured idea was still-born. The paralysis of command and the breakdown of morale were not made the ultimate aim of the ... German ground and air forces, and were only incidental by-products of the traditional manoeuvers of rapid encirclement and of the supporting activities of the flying artillery of the Luftwaffe, both of which had as their purpose the physical destruction of the enemy troops. Such was the Vernichtungsgedanke of the Polish campaign. – Cooper[136]

Vernichtungsgedanke was a strategy dating back to Frederick the Great, and it was applied in the Polish Campaign, little changed from the French campaigns in 1870 or 1914. The use of tanks

...left much to be desired... Fear of enemy action against the flanks of the advance, fear which was to prove so disastrous to German prospects in the west in 1940 and in the Soviet Union in 1941, was present from the beginning of the war. – Cooper[49]

John Ellis, writing in Brute Force, asserted that

...there is considerable justice in Matthew Cooper's assertion that the panzer divisions were not given the kind of strategic mission that was to characterize authentic armoured blitzkrieg, and were almost always closely subordinated to the various mass infantry armies. – Ellis[137] (emphasis in original)

Zaloga and Madej, in The Polish Campaign 1939, also address the subject of mythical interpretations of Blitzkrieg and the importance of other arms in the campaign. Western accounts of the September campaign have stressed the shock value of the panzers and Stuka attacks, they have

...tended to underestimate the punishing effect of German artillery on Polish units. Mobile and available in significant quantity, artillery shattered as many units as any other branch of the Wehrmacht. – Zaloga and Madej[138]

See also

Notes

  1. ^ Various sources contradict each other so the figures quoted above should only be taken as a rough indication of the strength estimate. The most common range differences and their brackets are: German personnel 1,490,900 (official figure of the Polish Ministry of Foreign Affairs)—or 1,800,000. Polish tanks: 100–880, 100 is the number of modern tanks, while the 880 number includes older tanks from the World War I era and tankettes.[3][4]
  2. ^ The discrepancy in German casualties can be attributed to the fact that some German statistics still listed soldiers as missing decades after the war. Today the most common and accepted numbers are: 8,082 to 16,343 KIA, 320 to 5,029 MIA, 27,280 to 34,136 WIA.[6] For comparison, in his 1939 speech following the Polish campaign, Adolf Hitler presented these German figures: 10,576 KIA, 30,222 WIA, and 3,400 MIA.[7] According to early Allied estimates, including those of the Polish government-in-exile, the number of German KIA casualties was 90,000 and WIA casualties was 200,000[7][8] Equipment losses are given as 832 German tanks[9] with approximately 236[9] to 341 as irrecoverable losses and approximately 319 other armored vehicles as irrecoverable losses (including 165 Panzerspähwagen – of them 101 as irrecoverable losses)[9] 522–561 German planes (including 246–285 destroyed and 276 damaged), 1 German minelayer (M-85) and 1 German torpedo ship ("Tiger")
  3. ^ Soviet official losses – figures provided by Krivosheev – are currently estimated at 1,475 KIA or MIA presumed dead (Ukrainian Front – 972, Belorussian Front – 503), and 2,383 WIA (Ukrainian Front – 1,741, Belorussian Front – 642). The Soviets lost approximately 150 tanks in combat of which 43 as irrecoverable losses, while hundreds more suffered technical failures.[10] However, Russian historian Igor Bunich estimates Soviet manpower losses at 5,327 KIA or MIA without a trace and WIA.[11]
  4. ^ Various sources contradict each other so the figures quoted above should only be taken as a rough indication of losses. The most common range brackets for casualties are: Poland: 63,000 to 66,300 KIA, 134,000 WIA.[6] The often cited figure of 420,000 Polish prisoners of war represents only those captured by the Germans, as Soviets captured about 250,000 Polish POWs themselves, making the total number of Polish POWs about 660,000–690,000. In terms of equipment the Polish Navy lost 1 destroyer (ORP Wicher), 1 minelayer (ORP Gryf) and several support craft. Equipment loses included 132 Polish tanks and armored cars 327 Polish planes (118 fighters)[9]
  5. ^ P-11c (+43 reserve), 30 P-7 (+85 reserve), 118 P-23 Karaś light bombers, 36 P-37 Łoś bombers (armed in line, additionally a few of the total number produced were used in combat), 84 reconnaissance RXIII Lublin, RWD14 Czapla (+115 reserve)[61]
  6. ^ Other treaties violated by the Soviet Union were the 1919 Covenant of the League of Nations (to which the Soviet Union adhered in 1934); the Briand-Kellogg Pact of 1928 and the 1933 London Convention on the Definition of Aggression.[90]
  7. ^ Polish to German forces in the September Campaign: 1,000,000 soldiers, 4,300 guns, 880 tanks, 435 aircraft (Poland) to 1,800,000 soldiers, 10,000 guns, 2,800 tanks, 3,000 aircraft (Germany). French and participating Allies to German forces in the Battle of France: 2,862,000 soldiers, 13,974 guns, 3,384 tanks, 3,099 aircraft 2 (Allies) to 3,350,000 soldiers, 7,378 guns, 2,445 tanks, 5,446 aircraft (Germany).

References

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  2. ^ ER Hooton, p. 85
  3. ^ Internetowa encyklopedia PWN, article on 'Kampania Wrześniowa 1939'
  4. ^ Website of the Polish Ministry of Foreign Affairs – the Poles on the Front Lines
  5. ^ a b c (in Russian) Переслегин. Вторая мировая: война между реальностями.– М.:Яуза, Эксмо, 2006, с.22; Р. Э. Дюпюи, Т. Н. Дюпюи. Всемирная история войн. – С-П,М: АСТ, кн.4, с.93.
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  9. ^ a b c d Kamil Cywinski, Waffen und Geheimwaffen des deutschen Heeres 1933–1945
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  38. ^ Reply of the German Chancellor to the Communication of 28 August 1939, from His Majesty's Government Cited in the British Blue Book
  39. ^ Viscount Halifax to Sir N. Henderson (Berlin) Cited in the British Blue book
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  68. ^ 7TP vol.II, Janusz Magnus#1, Militaria 317, Warszawa 2009.
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  71. ^ Knickerbocker, H.R. (1941). Is Tomorrow Hitler's? 200 Questions on the Battle of Mankind. Reynal & Hitchcock. pp. 29–30. ISBN 978-1417992775.
  72. ^ Seidner 1978, p. 68.
  73. ^ collective work (1979). Wojna Obronna Polski 1939 (in Polish). Warsaw: Wydawnictwo Ministerstwa Obrony Narodowej. p. 933.
  74. ^ Henryk Piątkowski (1943). (in Polish). Jerusalem: Sekcja Wydawnicza APW. p. 39. Archived from the original on 9 February 2008. Retrieved 2 November 2011.
  75. ^ Count Edward Raczyński (1948). The British-Polish Alliance; Its Origin and Meaning. London: Mellville Press.
  76. ^ Seidner 1978, p. 304.
  77. ^ a b c d Seidner, Marshal Edward Śmigły-Rydz Rydz and the defence of Poland, p. 312
  78. ^ a b Peszke, Michael Alfred (1999). Poland's Navy, 1918–1945. Hippocrene Books. p. 37. ISBN 978-0781806725.
  79. ^ Robert Forczyk (2019). Case White: The Invasion of Poland 1939. Bloomsbury Publishing. ISBN 978-1472834942.[page needed]
  80. ^ a b E.R. Hooton, p. 87
  81. ^ a b c d Gunther, John (1940). Inside Europe. New York: Harper & Brothers. pp. xvi–xvii.
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  87. ^ Roberts, Geoffrey (1 January 1992). "The Soviet Decision for a Pact with Nazi Germany". Soviet Studies. 44 (1): 57–78. doi:10.1080/09668139208411994. JSTOR 152247.
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  133. ^ Bekker, Cajus (1964) Angriffshohe 285 aircraft destroyed, 279 damaged of initial force
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Sources and further reading

  • Baliszewski, Dariusz (10 October 2004). "Wojna sukcesów". Wprost (in Polish) (1141). Retrieved 24 March 2005.
  • Baliszewski, Dariusz (19 September 2004). . Wprost (in Polish) (1138). Archived from the original on 14 May 2007. Retrieved 24 March 2005.
  • Cooper, Matthew (1978). The German Army 1939–1945: Its Political and Military Failure. New York: Stein and Day. ISBN 978-0812824681.
  • Corum, James S. (2013). "The Luftwaffe's Campaigns in Poland and the West 1939–1940: A Case Study of handling Innovation in Wartime". Security and Defence Quarterly. 1 (1): 158–189. doi:10.35467/sdq/103158.
  • Chodakiewicz, Marek Jan (2004). Between Nazis and Soviets: Occupation Politics in Poland, 1939–1947. Lexington Books. ISBN 978-0739104842.
  • Ellis, John (1999). Brute Force: Allied Strategy and Tactics in the Second World War (1st US ed.). Viking Adult. ISBN 978-0670807734.
  • Fischer, Benjamin B. . Studies in Intelligence. Archived from the original on 13 June 2007. Retrieved 10 December 2005.
  • Forczyk, Robert (2019). Case White: The Invasion of Poland 1939. Oxford: Osprey Publishing. ISBN 978-1472834959.
  • Goldman, Stuart D. (2012). Nomonhan, 1939; The Red Army's Victory That Shaped World War II. Naval Institute Press. ISBN 978-1591143291.
  • Hahn, Fritz (1986–1987). Waffen und Geheimwaffen des deutschen Heeres 1933–1945 [Weapons and Secret Weapons of the German Army, 1933–1945]. Koblenz: Bernard & Graefe. ISBN 978-3763758302.
  • Hooton, E.R. (2007). Luftwaffe at War: Gathering Storm 1933–1939. Vol. I. London: Chevron/Ian Allan. ISBN 978-1903223710.
  • Jentz, Thomas (1996). Panzertruppen: The Complete Guide to the Creation & Combat Employment of Germany's Tank Force 1933–1942 (v. 1). Atglen: Schiffer. ISBN 978-0887409158.
  • Kennedy, Robert M. (1980). The German Campaign in Poland (1939). Zenger. ISBN 978-0892010646.
  • Kushner, Tony; Knox, Katharine (1999). Refugees in an Age of Genocide. London; New York: Routledge. ISBN 978-0714647838. Retrieved 2 November 2011.
  • Lukas, Richard C. (2001). Forgotten Holocaust: The Poles Under German Occupation, 1939–1944. Hippocrene Books. ISBN 978-0781809016.
  • Majer, Diemut; et al. (2003). Non-Germans under the Third Reich: The Nazi Judicial and Administrative System in Germany and Occupied Eastern Europe, with Special Regard to Occupied Poland, 1939–1945. Johns Hopkins University Press. ISBN 978-0801864933.
  • Moorhouse, Roger. Poland 1939: The Outbreak of World War II (Basic Books, 2020) popular history online review
  • "Nazi Loss in Poland Placed at 290,000". The New York Times (Press release). 28 September 1941. Retrieved 17 January 2009.
  • Prazmowska, Anita J. (1995). Britain and Poland 1939–1943: The Betrayed Ally. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-0521483858.
  • Piotrowski, Tadeusz (1998). Poland's Holocaust: Ethnic Strife, Collaboration With Occupying Forces and Genocide in the Second Republic, 1918–1947. Jefferson, NC: McFarland & Company. ISBN 978-0786429134.
  • Sanford, George (2005). Katyn and the Soviet Massacre of 1940: Truth, Justice And Memory. London; New York: Routledge. ISBN 978-0415338738.
  • Seidner, Stanley S. (1978). Marshal Edward Śmigły-Rydz: Rydz and the Defence of Poland. New York.
  • Taylor, A.J.P.; Mayer, S.L., eds. (1974). A History of World War Two. London: Octopus Books. ISBN 978-0706403992.
  • Weinberg, Gerhard (1994). A World at Arms: A Global History of World War II. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-0521443173.
  • Zaloga, Steve; Gerrard, Howard (2002). Poland 1939: The Birth of Blitzkrieg. Oxford: Osprey Publishing. ISBN 978-1841764085.
  • Zaloga, Steve (1982). The Polish Army 1939–1945. Oxford: Osprey Publishing. ISBN 978-0850454178.
  • . Internetowa encyklopedia PWN (in Polish). Archived from the original on 27 September 2005. Retrieved 10 December 2005.

Further reading

  • Böhler, Jochen (2006). "Preface". Auftakt zum Vernichtungskrieg; Die Wehrmacht in Polen 1939 [War of Annihilation: The Wehrmacht in Poland 1939] (in German). Frankfurt: Fischer Taschenbuch Verlag. ISBN 978-3596163076.
  • Gross, Jan T. (2002). Revolution from Abroad: The Soviet Conquest of Poland's Western Ukraine and Western Belorussia. Princeton: Princeton University Press. ISBN 978-0691096032.
  • Moorhouse, Roger (2019). First to Fight: The Polish War 1939. The Bodley Head. ISBN 978-1847924605.

External links

  • The Conquest of Poland and the Beginnings of Jewish Persecution 8 November 2012 at the Wayback Machine on the Yad Vashem website
  • German invasion of Poland Original reports from The Times
  • Blitzkrieg Unleashed: The German Invasion of Poland, 1939 History of the invasion with focus on precise locations and events, as experienced by real people.
  • Detailed outline of campaign, mainly from German documents
  • The Campaign in Poland at WorldWar2 Database
  • The Campaign in Poland at Achtung! Panzer
  • German Statistics including September Campaign losses
  • Brief Campaign losses and more statistics
  • Fall Weiß – The Fall of Poland
  • Radio reports on the German invasion of Poland[dead link] and Nazi broadcast claiming that Germany's action is an act of defence[dead link]
  • Headline story on BBC: Germany invades Poland 1 September 1939.
  • Halford Mackinder's Necessary War An essay describing the Polish Campaign in a larger strategic context of the war
  • Detailed Polish Army organization schemas by Dr. Leo Niehorster
  • Detailed German Army organization schemas by Dr. Leo Niehorster
  • Polish Armoured Units 1939 30 April 2008 at the Wayback Machine
  • "The Polish Campaign of September 1939 in Perspective" Polish News, 24 September 2008
  • Invasion of Poland by Bradley Lightbody, Last updated 2011-03-30
  • The Mythical Polish Cavalry Charge
  • Polish forces in the West 8 February 2016 at the Wayback Machine. A website describing the Polish forces in France, UK and the Netherlands

War propaganda newsreel

  • Advance into Poland. National Archives and Records Administration (German. Series: Motion Picture Films. G-2 Army Military Intelligence Division). Internet Archive: Reel 1 of 4, Reel 2 of 4, Reel 3 of 4, Reel 4 of 4
  • Invasion of Poland in 1939 by German Army (1943). Film Bulletin n. 48 US Department of the Army, Signal Corps Photographic Center. Internet Archive.
  • Special Release – Europe At War! (1939). Universal Studios. Internet Archive.

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For more details on the invasion by the Soviet Union see Soviet invasion of Poland For more details on the invasion by the Slovak Republic see Slovak invasion of Poland For other invasions see Invasion of Poland disambiguation The invasion of Poland 1 September 6 October 1939 was a joint attack on the Republic of Poland by Nazi Germany the Slovak Republic and the Soviet Union which marked the beginning of World War II 13 The German invasion began on 1 September 1939 one week after the signing of the Molotov Ribbentrop Pact between Germany and the Soviet Union and one day after the Supreme Soviet of the Soviet Union had approved the pact 14 The Soviets invaded Poland on 17 September The campaign ended on 6 October with Germany and the Soviet Union dividing and annexing the whole of Poland under the terms of the German Soviet Frontier Treaty The invasion is also known in Poland as the September campaign Polish kampania wrzesniowa or 1939 defensive war Polish wojna obronna 1939 roku and known in Germany as the Poland campaign German Uberfall auf Polen Polenfeldzug Invasion of PolandPart of the European theatre of World War IILeft to right top to bottom Luftwaffe bombers over Poland Schleswig Holstein attacking the Westerplatte Danzig Police destroying the Polish border post German tank and armored car formation German and Soviet troops shaking hands bombing of Warsaw Date1 September 1939 6 October 1939 35 days LocationPoland eastern Germany and the Free City of Danzig modern day Gdansk ResultGerman Soviet Slovak victoryTerritorialchangesPolish territory divided among Germany Lithuania the Soviet Union and the Slovak client state Danzig annexed by Germany Kresy annexed by the Soviet Union Vilnius granted to LithuaniaBelligerents Nazi Germany Soviet Union from 17 September Slovak Republic see details PolandCommanders and leadersNazi Germany Fedor von Bock Army Group North Gerd von Rundstedt Army Group South Soviet Union Mikhail Kovalyov Belorussian Front Semyon Timoshenko Ukrainian Front Slovak Republic Ferdinand Catlos Army Bernolak Poland Edward Rydz Smigly Marshal of Poland Waclaw Stachiewicz Chief General Staff E Krukowicz Przedrzymirski Modlin Army Wladyslaw Bortnowski Pomorze Army Tadeusz Kutrzeba Poznan Army Juliusz Rommel Lodz Warszawa Army Antoni Szylling Krakow Army Kazimierz Fabrycy Karpaty Army Stefan Dab Biernacki Prusy Army Units involvedInvading armies Nazi Germany Army Group North 3rd Army 4th ArmyArmy Group South 8th Army 10th Army 14th ArmySoviet Union Belorussian Front 3rd Army 11th Army 10th Army 4th ArmyUkrainian Front 5th Army 6th Army 12th Army Front Cavalry GroupSlovak Republic Bernolak ArmyPolish armies Karpaty ArmyKrakow ArmyLublin Army improvised Lodz ArmyModlin ArmyPomorze ArmyPoznan ArmyPrusy ArmyWarszawa Army improvised StrengthTotal 2 000 000 Nazi Germany 66 divisions 6 brigades 9 000 guns 1 2 750 tanks 2 315 aircraft 2 Soviet Union 33 divisions 11 brigades 4 959 guns 4 736 tanks 3 300 aircraftSlovak Republic 3 divisionsTotal 1 000 000 Note 1 39 divisions 5 16 brigades 5 4 300 guns 5 210 tanks 670 tankettes 800 aircraft 1 Casualties and lossesTotal 59 000Nazi Germany Note 2 17 269 killed 30 300 wounded 3 500 missing 236 tanks 800 vehicles 246 aircraftSoviet Union Note 3 1 475 killed 2 383 wounded 10 or 5 327 casualties 11 43 tanksSlovak Republic 37 killed 11 missing 114 wounded 2 aircraft 12 Total 874 700 Note 4 66 000 killed 133 700 wounded 675 000 captured 132 tanks and cars 327 aircraft German forces invaded Poland from the north south and west the morning after the Gleiwitz incident Slovak military forces advanced alongside the Germans in northern Slovakia As the Wehrmacht advanced Polish forces withdrew from their forward bases of operation close to the Germany Poland border to more established defense lines to the east After the mid September Polish defeat in the Battle of the Bzura the Germans gained an undisputed advantage Polish forces then withdrew to the southeast where they prepared for a long defence of the Romanian Bridgehead and awaited expected support and relief from France and the United Kingdom 15 On 3 September based on their alliance agreements with Poland the United Kingdom and France declared war on Germany in the end their aid to Poland was very limited France invaded a small part of Germany in the Saar Offensive and the Polish army was effectively defeated even before the British Expeditionary Force could be transported to Europe with the bulk of the BEF in France by the end of September On 17 September the Soviet Red Army invaded Eastern Poland the territory beyond the Curzon Line that fell into the Soviet sphere of influence according to the secret protocol of the Molotov Ribbentrop Pact this rendered the Polish plan of defence obsolete 16 Facing a second front the Polish government concluded the defence of the Romanian Bridgehead was no longer feasible and ordered an emergency evacuation of all troops to neutral Romania 17 On 6 October following the Polish defeat at the Battle of Kock German and Soviet forces gained full control over Poland The success of the invasion marked the end of the Second Polish Republic though Poland never formally surrendered On 8 October after an initial period of military administration Germany directly annexed western Poland and the former Free City of Danzig and placed the remaining block of territory under the administration of the newly established General Government The Soviet Union incorporated its newly acquired areas into its constituent Byelorussian and Ukrainian republics and immediately started a campaign of Sovietization In the aftermath of the invasion a collective of underground resistance organizations formed the Polish Underground State within the territory of the former Polish state Many of the military exiles who escaped Poland joined the Polish Armed Forces in the West an armed force loyal to the Polish government in exile Contents 1 Background 1 1 Breakdown of talks 2 Opposing forces 2 1 Germany 2 2 Poland 3 Details 3 1 German plan 3 2 Polish defence plan 3 3 German invasion 3 4 Soviet invasion 3 5 Civilian deaths 4 Aftermath 5 Eyewitness accounts 6 Misconceptions 6 1 Combat between Polish cavalry and German tanks 6 2 Polish Air Force 6 3 Polish resistance to the invasion 6 4 First use of Blitzkrieg strategy 7 See also 8 Notes 9 References 10 Sources and further reading 11 Further reading 12 External linksBackgroundMain article Causes of World War II On 30 January 1933 the National Socialist German Workers Party under its leader Adolf Hitler came to power in Germany 18 While some dissident elements within the Weimar Republic had long sought to annex territories belonging to Poland it was Hitler s own idea and not a realization of any pre 1933 Weimar plans to invade and partition Poland 19 annex Bohemia and Austria and create satellite or puppet states economically subordinate to Germany 20 As part of this long term policy Hitler at first pursued a policy of rapprochement with Poland trying to improve opinion in Germany culminating in the German Polish Non Aggression Pact of 1934 21 Earlier Hitler s foreign policy worked to weaken ties between Poland and France and attempted to manoeuvre Poland into the Anti Comintern Pact forming a cooperative front against the Soviet Union 21 22 Poland would be granted territory to its northeast in Ukraine and Belarus if it agreed to wage war against the Soviet Union but the concessions the Poles were expected to make meant that their homeland would become largely dependent on Germany functioning as little more than a client state The Poles feared that their independence would eventually be threatened altogether 22 historically Hitler had already denounced the right of Poland to independence in 1930 writing that Poles and Czechs were a rabble not worth a penny more than the inhabitants of Sudan or India How can they demand the rights of independent states 23 The population of the Free City of Danzig was strongly in favour of annexation by Germany as were many of the ethnic German inhabitants of the Polish territory that separated the German exclave of East Prussia from the rest of the Reich 24 The Polish Corridor constituted land long disputed by Poland and Germany and was inhabited by a Polish majority The Corridor had become a part of Poland after the Treaty of Versailles Many Germans also wanted the urban port city of Danzig and its environs comprising the Free City of Danzig to be reincorporated into Germany Danzig city had a German majority 25 and had been separated from Germany after Versailles and made into the nominally independent Free City Hitler sought to use this as casus belli a reason for war reverse the post 1918 territorial losses and on many occasions had appealed to German nationalism promising to liberate the German minority still in the Corridor as well as Danzig 26 Events leading to World War IITreaty of Versailles 1919 Polish Soviet War 1919 Treaty of Saint Germain en Laye 1919 Treaty of Trianon 1920 Treaty of Rapallo 1920 Franco Polish alliance 1921 March on Rome 1922 Corfu incident 1923 Occupation of the Ruhr 1923 1925 Mein Kampf 1925 Second Italo Senussi War 1923 1932 Dawes Plan 1924 Locarno Treaties 1925 Young Plan 1929 Great Depression 1929 Japanese invasion of Manchuria 1931 Pacification of Manchukuo 1931 1942 January 28 incident 1932 Geneva Conference 1932 1934 Defense of the Great Wall 1933 Battle of Rehe 1933 Nazis rise to power in Germany 1933 Tanggu Truce 1933 Italo Soviet Pact 1933 Inner Mongolian Campaign 1933 1936 German Polish declaration of non aggression 1934 Franco Soviet Treaty of Mutual Assistance 1935 Soviet Czechoslovakia Treaty of Mutual Assistance 1935 He Umezu Agreement 1935 Anglo German Naval Agreement 1935 December 9th Movement Second Italo Ethiopian War 1935 1936 Remilitarization of the Rhineland 1936 Spanish Civil War 1936 1939 Italo German Axis protocol 1936 Anti Comintern Pact 1936 Suiyuan campaign 1936 Xi an Incident 1936 Second Sino Japanese War 1937 1945 USS Panay incident 1937 Anschluss Mar 1938 May Crisis May 1938 Battle of Lake Khasan July Aug 1938 Bled Agreement Aug 1938 Undeclared German Czechoslovak War Sep 1938 Munich Agreement Sep 1938 First Vienna Award Nov 1938 German occupation of Czechoslovakia Mar 1939 Hungarian invasion of Carpatho Ukraine Mar 1939 German ultimatum to Lithuania Mar 1939 Slovak Hungarian War Mar 1939 Final offensive of the Spanish Civil War Mar Apr 1939 Danzig Crisis Mar Aug 1939 British guarantee to Poland Mar 1939 Italian invasion of Albania Apr 1939 Soviet British French Moscow negotiations Apr Aug 1939 Pact of Steel May 1939 Battles of Khalkhin Gol May Sep 1939 Molotov Ribbentrop Pact Aug 1939 Invasion of Poland Sep 1939 The invasion was referred to by Germany as the 1939 Defensive War Verteidigungskrieg since Hitler proclaimed that Poland had attacked Germany and that Germans in Poland are persecuted with a bloody terror and are driven from their homes The series of border violations which are unbearable to a great power prove that the Poles no longer are willing to respect the German frontier 27 Poland participated with Germany in the partition of Czechoslovakia that followed the Munich Agreement although they were not part of the agreement It coerced Czechoslovakia to surrender the region of Cesky Tesin by issuing an ultimatum to that effect on 30 September 1938 which was accepted by Czechoslovakia on 1 October 28 This region had a Polish majority and had been disputed between Czechoslovakia and Poland in the aftermath of World War I 29 30 The Polish annexation of Slovak territory several villages in the regions of Cadca Orava and Spis later served as the justification for the Slovak state to join the German invasion By 1937 Germany began to increase its demands for Danzig while proposing that an extraterritorial roadway part of the Reichsautobahn system be built in order to connect East Prussia with Germany proper running through the Polish Corridor 31 Poland rejected this proposal fearing that after accepting these demands it would become increasingly subject to the will of Germany and eventually lose its independence as the Czechs had 32 Polish leaders also distrusted Hitler 32 The British were also wary of Germany s increasing strength and assertiveness threatening its balance of power strategy 33 On 31 March 1939 Poland formed a military alliance with the United Kingdom and with France believing that Polish independence and territorial integrity would be defended with their support if it were to be threatened by Germany 34 On the other hand British Prime Minister Neville Chamberlain and his Foreign Secretary Lord Halifax still hoped to strike a deal with Hitler regarding Danzig and possibly the Polish Corridor Chamberlain and his supporters believed war could be avoided and hoped Germany would agree to leave the rest of Poland alone German hegemony over Central Europe was also at stake In private Hitler said in May that Danzig was not the important issue to him but pursuit of Lebensraum for Germany 35 Breakdown of talks With tensions mounting Germany turned to aggressive diplomacy On 28 April 1939 Hitler unilaterally withdrew from both the German Polish Non Aggression Pact of 1934 and the Anglo German Naval Agreement of 1935 Talks over Danzig and the Corridor broke down and months passed without diplomatic interaction between Germany and Poland During this interim period the Germans learned that France and Britain had failed to secure an alliance with the Soviet Union against Germany and that the Soviet Union was interested in an alliance with Germany against Poland Hitler had already issued orders to prepare for a possible solution of the Polish problem by military means through the Case White scenario In May in a statement to his generals while they were in the midst of planning the invasion of Poland Hitler made it clear that the invasion would not come without resistance as it had in Czechoslovakia 36 With minor exceptions German national unification has been achieved Further successes cannot be achieved without bloodshed Poland will always be on the side of our adversaries Danzig is not the objective It is a matter of expanding our living space in the east of making our food supply secure and solving the problem of the Baltic states To provide sufficient food you must have sparsely settled areas There is therefore no question of sparing Poland and the decision remains to attack Poland at the first opportunity We cannot expect a repetition of Czechoslovakia There will be fighting 36 Vyacheslav Molotov signs the Molotov Ribbentrop Pact a German Soviet non aggression pact On 22 August just over a week before the onset of war Hitler delivered a speech to his military commanders at the Obersalzberg The object of the war is physically to destroy the enemy That is why I have prepared for the moment only in the East my Death s Head formations with orders to kill without pity or mercy all men women and children of Polish descent or language Only in this way can we obtain the living space we need 37 With the surprise signing of the Molotov Ribbentrop Pact on 23 August the result of secret Nazi Soviet talks held in Moscow Germany neutralized the possibility of Soviet opposition to a campaign against Poland and war became imminent In fact the Soviets agreed not to aid France or the UK in the event of their going to war with Germany over Poland and in a secret protocol of the pact the Germans and the Soviets agreed to divide Eastern Europe including Poland into two spheres of influence the western one third of the country was to go to Germany and the eastern two thirds to the Soviet Union The German assault was originally scheduled to begin at 4 00 a m on 26 August However on 25 August the Polish British Common Defence Pact was signed as an annex to the Franco Polish alliance 1921 In this accord Britain committed itself to the defence of Poland guaranteeing to preserve Polish independence At the same time the British and the Poles were hinting to Berlin that they were willing to resume discussions not at all how Hitler hoped to frame the conflict Thus he wavered and postponed his attack until 1 September managing to in effect halt the entire invasion in mid leap Planned and actual divisions of Poland according to the Molotov Ribbentrop Pact with later adjustments However there was one exception on the night of 25 26 August a German sabotage group which had not heard anything about a delay of the invasion made an attack on the Jablunkov Pass and Mosty railway station in Silesia On the morning of 26 August this group was repelled by Polish troops The German side described all this as an incident caused by an insane individual see Jablonkow incident On 26 August Hitler tried to dissuade the British and the French from interfering in the upcoming conflict even pledging that the Wehrmacht forces would be made available to Britain s empire in the future The negotiations convinced Hitler that there was little chance the Western Allies would declare war on Germany and even if they did because of the lack of territorial guarantees to Poland they would be willing to negotiate a compromise favourable to Germany after its conquest of Poland Meanwhile the increased number of overflights by high altitude reconnaissance aircraft and cross border troop movements signaled that war was imminent The map shows the beginning of the European part of World War II in September 1939 On 29 August prompted by the British Germany issued one last diplomatic offer with Fall Weiss yet to be rescheduled That evening the German government responded in a communication that it aimed not only for the restoration of Danzig but also the Polish Corridor which had not previously been part of Hitler s demands in addition to the safeguarding of the German minority in Poland It said that they were willing to commence negotiations but indicated that a Polish representative with the power to sign an agreement had to arrive in Berlin the next day while in the meantime it would draw up a set of proposals 38 The British Cabinet was pleased that negotiations had been agreed to but mindful of how Emil Hacha had been forced to sign his country away under similar circumstances just months earlier regarded the requirement for an immediate arrival of a Polish representative with full signing powers as an unacceptable ultimatum 39 40 On the night of 30 31 August German Foreign Minister Joachim von Ribbentrop read a 16 point German proposal to ambassador Nevile Henderson When the ambassador requested a copy of the proposals for transmission to the Polish government Ribbentrop refused on the grounds that the requested Polish representative had failed to arrive by midnight 41 When Polish Ambassador Lipski went to see Ribbentrop later on 31 August to indicate that Poland was favorably disposed to negotiations he announced that he did not have the full power to sign and Ribbentrop dismissed him It was then broadcast that Poland had rejected Germany s offer and negotiations with Poland came to an end Hitler issued orders for the invasion to commence soon afterwards On 29 August Polish Minister of Foreign Affairs Jozef Beck ordered military mobilization but under the pressure from Great Britain and France the mobilization was cancelled When the final mobilization started it added to the confusion 42 On 30 August the Polish Navy sent its destroyer flotilla to Britain executing the Peking Plan On the same day Marshal of Poland Edward Rydz Smigly announced the mobilization of Polish troops However he was pressured into revoking the order by the French who apparently still hoped for a diplomatic settlement failing to realize that the Germans were fully mobilized and concentrated at the Polish border 43 During the night of 31 August the Gleiwitz incident a false flag attack on the radio station was staged near the border city of Gleiwitz in Upper Silesia by German units posing as Polish troops as part of the wider Operation Himmler 44 On 31 August Hitler ordered hostilities against Poland to start at 4 45 the next morning However partly because of the earlier stoppage Poland finally managed to mobilize only about 70 of its planned forces only about 900 000 of 1 350 000 soldiers planned to mobilize in first order and because of that many units were still forming or moving to their designated frontline positions The late mobilization reduced combat capability of the Polish Army by about 1 3 Opposing forcesSee also Opposing forces in the Polish September Campaign Soviet order of battle for invasion of Poland in 1939 and Slovak invasion of Poland Germany See also German order of battle for the invasion of Poland Germany had a substantial numeric advantage over Poland and had developed a significant military before the conflict The Heer army had 3 472 tanks in its inventory of which 2 859 were with the Field Army and 408 with the Replacement Army 45 453 tanks were assigned into four light divisions while another 225 tanks were in detached regiments and companies 46 Most notably the Germans had seven Panzer divisions with 2 009 tanks between them using a new operational doctrine 47 It held that these divisions should act in coordination with other elements of the military punching holes in the enemy line and isolating selected units which would be encircled and destroyed This would be followed up by less mobile mechanized infantry and foot soldiers The Luftwaffe air force provided both tactical and strategic air power particularly dive bombers that disrupted lines of supply and communications Together the new methods were nicknamed Blitzkrieg lightning war While historian Basil Liddell Hart claimed Poland was a full demonstration of the Blitzkrieg theory 48 some other historians disagree 49 Aircraft played a major role in the campaign Bombers also attacked cities causing huge losses amongst the civilian population through terror bombing and strafing The Luftwaffe forces consisted of 1 180 fighters 290 Ju 87 Stuka dive bombers 1 100 conventional bombers mainly Heinkel He 111s and Dornier Do 17s and an assortment of 550 transport and 350 reconnaissance aircraft 50 51 In total Germany had close to 4 000 aircraft most of them modern A force of 2 315 aircraft was assigned to Weiss 52 Due to its earlier participation in the Spanish Civil War the Luftwaffe was probably the most experienced best trained and best equipped air force in the world in 1939 53 Poland See also Polish army order of battle in 1939 and Plan West Polish Infantry Emerging in 1918 as an independent country after 123 years after the Partitions of Poland the Second Polish Republic when compared with countries such as United Kingdom or Germany was a relatively indigent and mostly agricultural country The partitioning powers did not invest in the development of industry especially in the armaments industry in ethnically Polish areas Moreover Poland had to deal with damage caused by World War I This resulted in the need to build a defense industry from scratch Between 1936 and 1939 Poland invested heavily in the newly created Central Industrial Region Preparations for a defensive war with Germany were ongoing for many years but most plans assumed fighting would not begin before 1942 To raise funds for industrial development Poland sold much of the modern equipment it produced 54 In 1936 a National Defence Fund was set up to collect funds necessary for strengthening the Polish Armed forces The Polish Army had approximately a million soldiers but not all were mobilized by 1 September Latecomers sustained significant casualties when public transport became targets of the Luftwaffe The Polish military had fewer armored forces than the Germans and these units dispersed within the infantry were unable to effectively engage the Germans 55 Experiences in the Polish Soviet War shaped Polish Army organizational and operational doctrine Unlike the trench warfare of World War I the Polish Soviet War was a conflict in which the cavalry s mobility played a decisive role 56 Poland acknowledged the benefits of mobility but was unable to invest heavily in many of the expensive unproven inventions since then In spite of this Polish cavalry brigades were used as mobile mounted infantry and had some successes against both German infantry and cavalry 57 Bofors 37 mm anti tank gun on the fire post during exercises An average Polish infantry division consisted of 16 492 soldiers and was equipped with 326 light and medium machine guns 132 heavy machine guns 92 anti tank rifles and several dozen light medium heavy anti tank and anti airplane field artillery Contrary to the 1 009 cars and trucks and 4 842 horses in the average German infantry division the average Polish infantry division had 76 cars and trucks and 6 939 horses 58 The Polish Air Force Lotnictwo Wojskowe was at a severe disadvantage against the German Luftwaffe due to inferiority in numbers and the obsolescence of its fighter planes However contrary to German propaganda it was not destroyed on the ground in fact it was successfully dispersed before the conflict started and not a single one of its combat planes was destroyed on the ground in the first days of the conflict 59 In the era of fast progress in aviation the Polish Air Force lacked modern fighters vastly due to the cancellation of many advanced projects such as the PZL 38 Wilk and a delay in the introduction of a completely new modern Polish fighter PZL 50 Jastrzab However its pilots were among the world s best trained as proven a year later in the Battle of Britain in which the Poles played a notable part 60 Polish PZL P 11 fighter aircraft Polish PZL 37 Los medium bombers with crews Overall the Germans enjoyed numerical and qualitative aircraft superiority Poland had only about 600 aircraft of which only PZL 37 Los heavy bombers were modern and comparable to their German counterparts The Polish Air Force had roughly 185 PZL P 11 and some 95 PZL P 7 fighters 175 PZL 23 Karas Bs 35 Karas as light bombers Note 5 However for the September Campaign not all of those aircraft were mobilized By 1 September out of about 120 heavy bombers PZL 37s produced only 36 PZL 37s were deployed the rest being mostly in training units All those aircraft were of indigenous Polish design with the bombers being more modern than the fighters according to the Ludomil Rayski air force expansion plan which relied on a strong bomber force The Polish Air Force consisted of a Bomber Brigade Pursuit Brigade and aircraft assigned to the various ground armies 62 The Polish fighters were older than their German counterparts the PZL P 11 fighter produced in the early 1930s had a top speed of only 365 km h 227 mph far less than German bombers To compensate the pilots relied on its maneuverability and high diving speed 53 The Polish Air Force s decisions to strengthen its resources came too late mostly due to budget limitations As a last minute order in the summer of 1939 Poland bought 160 French Morane Saulnier M S 406 fighters and 111 English airplanes 100 light bombers Fairey Battle 10 Hurricanes and 1 Supermarine Spitfire the sale of 150 Spitfires asked by the Polish government was rejected by the Air Ministry 63 Despite the fact that some of the airplanes had been shipped to Poland the first transport of purchased aircraft on the ship Lassel sailed from Liverpool on 28 August 64 none of them would take part in combat In late 1938 the Polish Air Force also ordered 300 advanced PZL 46 Sum light bombers but due to a delay in starting mass production none of them were delivered before 1 September 65 When in the spring of 1939 it turned out that there were problems with the implementation of the new PZL 50 Jastrzab fighter it was decided to temporarily implement the production of the fighter PZL P 11 G Kobuz Nevertheless due to the outbreak of the war not one of the ordered 90 aircraft of this type were delivered to the army 66 Polish 7TP light tanks in formation during maneuvers The tank force consisted of two armored brigades four independent tank battalions and some 30 companies of TKS tankettes attached to infantry divisions and cavalry brigades 67 A standard tank of the Polish Army during the invasion of 1939 was the 7TP light tank It was the first tank in the world to be equipped with a diesel engine and 360 Gundlach periscope 68 The 7TP was significantly better armed than its most common opponents the German Panzer I and II but only 140 tanks were produced between 1935 and the outbreak of the war Poland had also a few relatively modern imported designs such as 50 Renault R35 tanks and 38 Vickers E tanks The Polish Navy was a small fleet of destroyers submarines and smaller support vessels Most Polish surface units followed Operation Peking leaving Polish ports on 20 August and escaping by way of the North Sea to join with the British Royal Navy Submarine forces participated in Operation Worek with the goal of engaging and damaging German shipping in the Baltic Sea but they had much less success In addition many merchant marine ships joined the British merchant fleet and took part in wartime convoys DetailsGerman plan Dispositions of the opposing forces on 31 August 1939 with the German order of battle overlaid in pink The September Campaign was devised by General Franz Halder the chief of the general staff and directed by General Walther von Brauchitsch the commander in chief of the upcoming campaign It called for the start of hostilities before a declaration of war and pursued a doctrine of mass encirclement and destruction of enemy forces The infantry far from completely mechanized but fitted with fast moving artillery and logistic support was to be supported by Panzers and small numbers of truck mounted infantry the Schutzen regiments forerunners of the panzergrenadiers to assist the rapid movement of troops and concentrate on localized parts of the enemy front eventually isolating segments of the enemy surrounding and destroying them The prewar armoured idea which an American journalist in 1939 dubbed Blitzkrieg which was advocated by some generals including Heinz Guderian would have had the armour punching holes in the enemy s front and ranging deep into rear areas but the campaign in Poland would be fought along more traditional lines That stemmed from conservatism on the part of the German High Command which mainly restricted the role of armour and mechanized forces to supporting the conventional infantry divisions 69 Poland s terrain was well suited for mobile operations when the weather co operated the country had flat plains with long frontiers totalling almost 5 600 km 3 500 mi Poland s long border with Germany on the west and north facing East Prussia extended 2 000 km 1 200 mi They had been lengthened by another 300 km 190 mi on the southern side in the aftermath of the 1938 Munich Agreement The German incorporation of Bohemia and Moravia and creation of the German puppet state of Slovakia meant that Poland s southern flank was also exposed 70 Hitler demanded that Poland be conquered in six weeks but German planners thought that it would require three months 71 They intended to exploit their long border fully with the great enveloping manoeuver of Fall Weiss German units were to invade Poland from three directions A main attack over the western Polish border which was to be carried out by Army Group South commanded by Colonel General Gerd von Rundstedt attacking from German Silesia and from the Moravian and Slovak border General Johannes Blaskowitz s 8th Army was to drive eastward against Lodz General Wilhelm List s 14th Army was to push on toward Krakow and to turn the Poles Carpathian flank General Walter von Reichenau s 10th Army in the centre with Army Group South s armour was to deliver the decisive blow with a northeastward thrust into the heart of Poland A second route of attack from northern Prussia Colonel General Fedor von Bock commanded Army Group North comprising General Georg von Kuchler s 3rd Army which was to strike southward from East Prussia and General Gunther von Kluge s 4th Army which was to attack eastward across the base of the Polish Corridor A tertiary attack by part of Army Group South s allied Slovak units from Slovakia From within Poland the German minority would assist by engaging in diversion and sabotage operations by Volksdeutscher Selbstschutz units that had been prepared before the war 69 All three assaults were to converge on Warsaw and the main Polish army was to be encircled and destroyed west of the Vistula Fall Weiss was initiated on 1 September 1939 and was the first operation of Second World War in Europe Polish defence plan Deployment of German Polish and Slovak divisions immediately before the German invasion The Polish determination to deploy forces directly at the German Polish border prompted by the Polish British Common Defence Pact shaped the country s defence plan Plan West Poland s most valuable natural resources industry and population were along the western border in Eastern Upper Silesia Polish policy centred on their protection especially since many politicians feared that if Poland retreated from the regions disputed by Germany Britain and France would sign a separate peace treaty with Germany like the 1938 Munich Agreement and allow Germany to stay in those regions 72 The fact that none of Poland s allies had specifically guaranteed Polish borders or territorial integrity was another Polish concern These reasons made the Polish government disregarded French advice to deploy the bulk of its forces behind natural barriers such as the Vistula and San Rivers despite some Polish generals supported the idea to be a better strategy The West Plan allowed the Polish armies to retreat inside the country but that was supposed to be a slow retreat behind prepared positions intended to give the armed forces time to complete its mobilization and execute a general counteroffensive with the support of the Western Allies 67 In case of a failure to defend most of the territory the army was to retreat to the south east of the country where the rough terrain the Stryj and Dniestr rivers valleys hills and swamps would provide natural lines of defence against the German advance and the Romanian Bridgehead could be created A camouflaged Polish P 11 fighter at a combat airfield The Polish General Staff had not begun elaborating the West defence plan until 4 March 1939 It was assumed that the Polish Army fighting in the initial phase of the war alone would have to defend the western regions of the country The plan of operations took into account the numerical and material superiority of the enemy and also assumed the defensive character of Polish operations The Polish intentions were defending the western regions that were judged as indispensable for waging the war taking advantage of the propitious conditions for counterattacks by reserve units and avoiding it from being smashed before the beginning of Franco British operations in Western Europe The operation plan had not been elaborated in detail and concerned only the first stage of operations 73 The British and the French estimated that Poland would be able to defend itself for two to three months and Poland estimated it could do so for at least six months While Poland drafted its estimates based upon the expectation that the Western Allies would honor their treaty obligations and quickly start an offensive of their own the French and the British expected the war to develop into trench warfare much like World War I The Polish government was not notified of the strategy and based all of its defence plans on promises of quick relief by the Western Allies 74 75 Polish forces were stretched thinly along the Polish German border and lacked compact defence lines and good defence positions along disadvantageous terrain That strategy also left supply lines poorly protected One third of Poland s forces were massed in or near the Polish Corridor making them vulnerable to a double envelopment from East Prussia and the west Another third was concentrated in the north central part of the country between the major cities of Lodz and Warsaw 76 The forward positioning of Polish forces vastly increased the difficulty of carrying out strategic maneuvres compounded by inadequate mobility as Polish units often lacked the ability to retreat from their defensive positions as they were being overrun by more mobile German mechanized formations 77 Peking Plan Polish destroyers evacuate the Baltic Sea en route to the United Kingdom As the prospect of conflict increased the British government pressed Marshal Edward Smigly Rydz to evacuate the most modern elements of the Polish Navy from the Baltic Sea 78 In the event of war the Polish military leaders realized that the ships that remained in the Baltic were likely to be quickly sunk by the Germans Furthermore since the Danish Straits were well within operating range of the German Kriegsmarine and Luftwaffe there was little chance of an evacuation plan succeeding if it were implemented after hostilities began Four days after the signing of the Polish British Common Defence Pact three destroyers of the Polish Navy executed the Peking Plan and so evacuated to Great Britain 78 Although the Polish military had prepared for conflict the civilian population remained largely unprepared Polish prewar propaganda emphasized that any German invasion would be easily repelled That made Polish defeats during the German invasion come as a shock to the civilian population 77 Lacking training for such a disaster the civilian population panicked and retreated east spreading chaos lowering the troops morale and making road transportation for Polish troops very difficult 77 The propaganda also had some negative consequences for the Polish troops themselves whose communications disrupted by German mobile units operating in the rear and civilians blocking roads were further thrown into chaos by bizarre reports from Polish radio stations and newspapers which often reported imaginary victories and other military operations That led to some Polish troops being encircled or taking a stand against overwhelming odds when they thought they were actually counterattacking or would soon receive reinforcements from other victorious areas 77 German invasion Map showing the advances made by the Germans and the disposition of all troops from 1 to 14 September Wielun was destroyed by Luftwaffe bombing Following several German staged incidents such as the Gleiwitz incident part of Operation Himmler which German propaganda used as a pretext to claim that German forces were acting in self defence one of the first acts of war took place on 1 September 1939 At 04 45 the old German pre dreadnought battleship Schleswig Holstein opened fire on the Polish military transit depot at Westerplatte in the Free City of Danzig on the Baltic Sea However in many places German units crossed the Polish border even before that time Around then the Luftwaffe attacked a number of military and civilian targets including Wielun the first large scale city bombing of the war At 08 00 German troops still without a formal declaration of war issued attacked near the Polish village of Mokra The Battle of the Border had begun Later that day the Germans attacked Poland s western southern and northern borders and German aircraft began raids on Polish cities The main axis of attack led eastwards from Germany through the western Polish border Supporting attacks came from East Prussia in the north and a joint German Slovak tertiary attack by units Field Army Bernolak from the German allied Slovak Republic in the south All three assaults converged on the Polish capital Warsaw 79 Front page of French newspaper Paris Soir France Declares War on Germany 3 September 1939 France and Britain declared war on Germany on 3 September but failed to provide any meaningful support The German French border saw only a few minor skirmishes and most German forces including 85 of armoured forces were engaged in Poland Despite some Polish successes in minor border battles the German technical operational and numerical superiority forced the Polish armies to retreat from the borders towards Warsaw and Lwow The Luftwaffe gained air superiority early in the campaign By destroying communications the Luftwaffe increased the pace of the advance which overran Polish airstrips and early warning sites causing logistical problems for the Poles Many Polish Air Force units ran low on supplies and 98 of their number withdrew into neutral Romania 80 The Polish initial strength of 400 was reduced to 54 by 14 September and air opposition virtually ceased 80 with the main Polish air bases destroyed during the first 48 hours of the war 81 Hitler watching German soldiers march into Poland in September 1939 Germany attacked from three directions on land Gunther von Kluge led 20 divisions that entered the Polish Corridor and met a second force heading to Warsaw from East Prussia Gerd von Rundstedt s 35 divisions attacked southern Poland 81 By 3 September when von Kluge in the north had reached the Vistula River then some 10 km 6 2 mi from the German border and Georg von Kuchler was approaching the Narew River Walther von Reichenau s armour was already beyond the Warta river Two days later his left wing was well to the rear of Lodz and his right wing at the town of Kielce On 7 September the defenders of Warsaw had fallen back to a 48 km 30 mi line paralleling the Vistula River where they rallied against German tank thrusts The defensive line ran between Plonsk and Pultusk respectively north west and north east of Warsaw The right wing of the Poles had been hammered back from Ciechanow about 40 km 25 mi north west of Pultusk and was pivoting on Plonsk At one stage the Poles were driven from Pultusk and the Germans threatened to turn the Polish flank and thrust on to the Vistula and Warsaw Pultusk however was regained in the face of withering German fire Many German tanks were captured after a German attack had pierced the line but the Polish defenders outflanked them 82 By 8 September one of Reichenau s armoured corps having advanced 225 km 140 mi during the first week of the campaign reached the outskirts of Warsaw Light divisions on Reichenau s right were on the Vistula between Warsaw and the town of Sandomierz by 9 September and List in the south was on the San River north and south of the town of Przemysl At the same time Guderian led his 3rd Army tanks across the Narew attacking the line of the Bug River that had already encircled Warsaw All of the German armies made progress in fulfilling their parts of the plan The Polish armies split up into uncoordinated fragments some of which were retreating while others were launching disjointed attacks on the nearest German columns Cheerful German and Slovak soldiers posing with a group of local Lemkos in Komancza September 1939 Polish infantry in attack Polish forces abandoned the regions of Pomerelia the Polish Corridor Greater Poland and Polish Upper Silesia in the first week The Polish plan for border defence was a dismal failure The German advance as a whole was not slowed On 10 September the Polish commander in chief Marshal Edward Rydz Smigly ordered a general retreat to the south east towards the Romanian Bridgehead 83 Meanwhile the Germans were tightening their encirclement of the Polish forces west of the Vistula in the Lodz area and still farther west around Poznan and penetrating deeply into eastern Poland Warsaw which had undergone heavy aerial bombardment since the first hours of the war was attacked on 9 September and was put under siege on 13 September Around then advanced German forces also reached Lwow a major city in eastern Poland and 1 150 German aircraft bombed Warsaw on 24 September The Polish defensive plan called for a strategy of encirclement It would allow the Germans to advance in between two Polish Army groups in the line between Berlin and Warsaw Lodz and Armia Prusy would then move in and repulse the German spearhead trapping it For that to happen Armia Prusy needed to be fully mobilized by 3 September However Polish military planners failed to foresee the speed of the German advance and assumed that Armia Prusy would need to be fully mobilized by 16 September 84 Bombed Polish Army column during the Battle of the Bzura German troops during the fighting in the streets of Warsaw The largest battle during this campaign the Battle of Bzura took place near the Bzura River west of Warsaw and lasted from 9 to 19 September The Polish armies Poznan and Pomorze retreating from the border area of the Polish Corridor attacked the flank of the advancing German 8th Army but the counterattack failed despite initial success After the defeat Poland lost its ability to take the initiative and counterattack on a large scale The German air power was instrumental during the battle The offensive of the Luftwaffe broke what remained of the Polish resistance in an awesome demonstration of air power 85 The Luftwaffe quickly destroyed the bridges across the Bzura River Then the Polish forces were trapped out in the open and were attacked by wave after wave of Stukas dropping 50 kg 110 lb light bombs which caused huge numbers of casualties The Polish anti aircraft batteries ran out of ammunition and retreated to the forests but were then smoked out by the Heinkel He 111 and Dornier Do 17s dropping 100 kg 220 lb incendiaries The Luftwaffe left the army with the task of mopping up survivors The Stukageschwaders alone dropped 388 t 428 short tons of bombs during the battle 85 By 12 September all of Poland west of the Vistula had been conquered except for the isolated Warsaw 81 The Polish government led by President Ignacy Moscicki and the high command led by Marshal Edward Rydz Smigly left Warsaw in the first days of the campaign and headed southeast reaching Lublin on 6 September From there it moved on 9 September to Kremenez and on 13 September to Zaleshiki on the Romanian border 86 Rydz Smigly ordered the Polish forces to retreat in the same direction behind the Vistula and San Rivers beginning the preparations for the defence of the Romanian Bridgehead area 83 Soviet invasion Further information Soviet invasion of Poland Disposition of all troops following the Soviet invasion From the beginning the German government repeatedly asked Molotov whether the Soviet Union would keep to its side of the partition bargain 87 88 The Soviet forces were holding fast along their designated invasion points pending finalization of the five month long undeclared war with Japan in the Far East successful end of the conflict for the Soviet Union which occurred in the Battles of Khalkhin Gol On 15 September 1939 Molotov and Shigenori Tōgō completed their agreement that ended the conflict and the Nomonhan ceasefire went into effect on 16 September 1939 Now cleared of any second front threat from the Japanese Soviet Premier Joseph Stalin ordered his forces into Poland on 17 September 89 It was agreed that the Soviets would relinquish its interest in the territories between the new border and Warsaw in exchange for inclusion of Lithuania in the Soviet zone of interest By 17 September the Polish defence had already been broken and the only hope was to retreat and reorganize along the Romanian Bridgehead However the plans were rendered obsolete nearly overnight when the over 800 000 strong Soviet Red Army entered and created the Belarusian and Ukrainian fronts after they had invaded the eastern regions of Poland in violation of the Riga Peace Treaty the Soviet Polish Non Aggression Pact and other international treaties both bilateral and multilateral Note 6 Soviet diplomacy had lied that they were protecting the Ukrainian and Belarusian minorities of eastern Poland since the Polish government had abandoned the country and the Polish state ceased to exist 91 Polish antiaircraft artillery in Lwow 1939 The Polish border defence forces in the east known as the Korpus Ochrony Pogranicza had about 25 battalions Rydz Smigly ordered them to fall back and not to engage the Soviets 83 That however did not prevent some clashes and small battles such as the Battle of Grodno as soldiers and locals attempted to defend the city The Soviets executed numerous Polish officers including prisoners of war like General Jozef Olszyna Wilczynski 92 93 The Organization of Ukrainian Nationalists rose against the Poles and communist partisans organized local revolts robbing and killing civilians 94 Those movements were quickly disciplined by the NKVD The Soviet invasion was one of the decisive factors that convinced the Polish government that the war in Poland was lost 95 Before the Soviet attack from the east the Polish military s plan had called for long term defence against Germany in south eastern Poland and to await relief from an attack by the Western Allies on Germany s western border 95 However the Polish government refused to surrender or to negotiate peace with Germany Instead it ordered all units to evacuate Poland and to reorganize in France Red Army enters the provincial capital of Wilno during the Soviet invasion 19 September 1939 Meanwhile Polish forces tried to move towards the Romanian Bridgehead area still actively resisting the German invasion From 17 to 20 September Polish armies Krakow and Lublin were crippled at the Battle of Tomaszow Lubelski the second largest battle of the campaign Lwow capitulated on 22 September because of the Soviet intervention the city had been attacked by the Germans over a week earlier and in the middle of the siege the German troops handed operations over to their Soviet allies 96 Despite a series of intensifying German attacks Warsaw defended by quickly reorganized retreating units civilian volunteers and militias held out until 28 September The Modlin Fortress north of Warsaw capitulated on 29 September after an intense 16 day battle Some isolated Polish garrisons managed to hold their positions long after they had been surrounded by German forces The enclave of Westerplatte s tiny garrison capitulated on 7 September and the Oksywie garrison held until 19 September the Hel Fortified Area was defended until 2 October 97 In the last week of September Hitler made a speech in Danzig and said Meantime Russia felt moved on its part to march in for the protection of the interests of the White Russian and Ukrainian people in Poland We realize now that in England and France this German and Russian co operation is considered a terrible crime An Englishman even wrote that it is perfidious well the English ought to know I believe England thinks this co operation perfidious because the co operation of democratic England with bolshevist Russia failed while National Socialist Germany s attempt with Soviet Russia succeeded Poland never will rise again in the form of the Versailles treaty That is guaranteed not only by Germany but also guaranteed by Russia Adolf Hitler 19 September 1939 98 Despite a Polish victory at the Battle of Szack the Soviets later executed all the officers and NCOs they had captured the Red Army reached the line of rivers Narew Bug Vistula and San by 28 September in many cases meeting German units advancing from the other direction Polish defenders on the Hel Peninsula on the shore of the Baltic Sea held out until 2 October The last operational unit of the Polish Army General Franciszek Kleeberg s Samodzielna Grupa Operacyjna Polesie surrendered after the four day Battle of Kock near Lublin on 6 October marking the end of the September Campaign 99 Civilian deaths Main article World War II casualties of Poland Nurses care for infants in a makeshift maternity ward at Saint Sophia Hospital in besieged Warsaw During bombardment The Polish Campaign was the first action by Hitler in his attempt to create Lebensraum living space for Germans Nazi propaganda was one of the factors behind the German brutality directed at civilians that had worked relentlessly to convince the Germans into believing that Jews and Slavs were Untermenschen subhumans 100 101 A girl cries over the body of her 14 year old sister who was strafed by the Luftwaffe From the first day of invasion the German air force the Luftwaffe attacked civilian targets and columns of refugees along the roads to terrorize the Polish people disrupt communications and target Polish morale The Luftwaffe killed 6 000 to 7 000 Polish civilians during the bombing of Warsaw 102 The German invasion saw atrocities committed against Polish men women and children 103 The German forces both SS and the regular Wehrmacht murdered tens of thousands of Polish civilians such as the Leibstandarte SS Adolf Hitler was notorious throughout the campaign for burning villages 104 and committing atrocities in numerous Polish towns including massacres in Blonie Zloczew Boleslawiec Torzeniec Goworowo Mlawa and Wloclawek 105 During Operation Tannenberg a campaign of ethnic cleansing organized by multiple elements of the German government tens of thousands of Polish civilians were shot at 760 mass execution sites by the Einsatzgruppen Altogether the civilian losses of Polish population amounted to about 150 000 to 200 000 106 Roughly 1 250 German civilians were also killed during the invasion Also 2 000 died fighting Polish troops as members of ethnic German militia forces such as the Volksdeutscher Selbstschutz which was a fifth column during the invasion 107 AftermathSee also Military Administration in Poland War crimes in occupied Poland during World War II and Nazi crimes against the Polish nation Hitler attends a Wehrmacht victory parade in Warsaw on 5 October 1939 John Gunther wrote in December 1939 that the German campaign was a masterpiece Nothing quite like it has been seen in military history 81 The country was divided between Germany and the Soviet Union Slovakia gained back those territories taken by Poland in autumn 1938 Lithuania received the city of Vilnius and its environs on 28 October 1939 from the Soviet Union On 8 and 13 September 1939 the German military district in the area of Posen commanded by general Alfred von Vollard Bockelberg de and West Prussia commanded by general Walter Heitz were established in conquered Greater Poland and Pomerelia respectively 108 Based on laws of 21 May 1935 and 1 June 1938 the German military delegated civil administrative powers to Chiefs of Civil Administration CdZ 108 Hitler appointed Arthur Greiser to become the CdZ of the Posen military district and Danzig s Gauleiter Albert Forster to become the CdZ of the West Prussian military district 108 On 3 October 1939 the military districts centered on and named Lodz and Krakau were set up under command of major generals Gerd von Rundstedt and Wilhelm List and Hitler appointed Hans Frank and Arthur Seyss Inquart as civil heads respectively 108 Thus the entirety of occupied Poland was divided into four military districts West Prussia Posen Lodz and Krakau 109 Frank was at the same time appointed supreme chief administrator for all occupied territories 108 On 28 September another secret German Soviet protocol modified the arrangements of August all of Lithuania was shifted to the Soviet sphere of influence in exchange the dividing line in Poland was moved in Germany s favour eastwards towards the Bug River On 8 October Germany formally annexed the western parts of Poland with Greiser and Forster as Reichsstatthalter while the south central parts were administered as the General Government led by Frank German and Soviet troops shaking hands following the invasion Even though water barriers separated most of the spheres of interest the Soviet and German troops met on numerous occasions The most remarkable event of this kind occurred at Brest Litovsk on 22 September The German 19th Panzer Corps commanded by General Heinz Guderian had occupied the city which lay within the Soviet sphere of interest When the Soviet 29th Tank Brigade commanded by Semyon Krivoshein approached the commanders agreed that the German troops would withdraw and the Soviet troops would enter the city saluting each other 110 At Brest Litovsk Soviet and German commanders held a joint victory parade before German forces withdrew westward behind a new demarcation line 16 111 Just three days earlier however the parties had a more hostile encounter near Lwow Lviv Lemberg when the German 137th Gebirgsjagerregimenter mountain infantry regiment attacked a reconnaissance detachment of the Soviet 24th Tank Brigade after a few casualties on both sides the parties turned to negotiations The German troops left the area and the Red Army troops entered Lwow on 22 September The Molotov Ribbentrop pact and the invasion of Poland marked the beginning of a period during which the government of the Soviet Union increasingly tried to convince itself that the actions of Germany were reasonable and were not developments to be worried about despite evidence to the contrary 112 On 7 September 1939 just a few days after France and Britain joined the war against Germany Stalin explained to a colleague that the war was to the advantage of the Soviet Union as follows 113 A war is on between two groups of capitalist countries for the redivision of the world for the domination of the world We see nothing wrong in their having a good hard fight and weakening each other Hitler without understanding it or desiring it is shaking and undermining the capitalist system We can manoeuvre pit one side against the other to set them fighting with each other as fiercely as possible The annihilation of Poland would mean one fewer bourgeois fascist state to contend with What would be the harm if as a result of the rout of Poland we were to extend the socialist system onto new territories and populations 113 Further information Polish Armed Forces in the West Polish Armed Forces in the East and Polish Underground State Polish troops withdrawn to Hungary in September 1939 About 65 000 Polish troops were killed in the fighting with 420 000 others being captured by the Germans and 240 000 more by the Soviets for a total of 660 000 prisoners Up to 120 000 Polish troops escaped to neutral Romania through the Romanian Bridgehead and Hungary and another 20 000 to Latvia and Lithuania with the majority eventually making their way to France or Britain Most of the Polish Navy succeeded in evacuating to Britain as well German personnel losses were less than their enemies c 16 000 killed German soldiers removing Polish government insignia None of the parties to the conflict Germany the Western Allies or the Soviet Union expected that the German invasion of Poland would lead to a war that would surpass World War I in its scale and cost citation needed It would be months before Hitler would see the futility of his peace negotiation attempts with the United Kingdom and France but the culmination of combined European and Pacific conflicts would result in what was truly a world war Thus what was not seen by most politicians and generals in 1939 is clear from the historical perspective The Polish September Campaign marked the beginning of a pan European war which combined with the Japanese invasion of China in 1937 and the Pacific War in 1941 to form the global conflict known as World War II The invasion of Poland led Britain and France to declare war on Germany on 3 September However they did little to affect the outcome of the September Campaign No declaration of war was issued by Britain and France against the Soviet Union This lack of direct help led many Poles to believe that they had been betrayed by their Western allies British Foreign Secretary Lord Halifax said they were only obligated to declare war on Germany due to the first clause of the Anglo Polish Agreement in 1939 114 The different attitude of the Anglo French allies of Poland towards Nazi Germany and the USSR was argued at this time for example by the future head of the British government Churchill Russians were guilty of gross treachery during the recent negotiations but Marshal Voroshilov s demand that the Russian armies if they were allies of Poland should occupy Vilnius and Lvov was a perfectly reasonable military demand It was rejected by Poland whose arguments despite their naturalness cannot be considered satisfactory in the light of current events As a result Russia took up the same positions as an enemy of Poland that it might have taken as a very dubious and suspected friend The difference is actually not as great as it might seem The Russians mobilized a very large force and showed that they were able to move quickly and far from their pre war positions They now border on Germany and the latter is completely unable to expose the Eastern front A large German army will have to be left behind to monitor it As far as I know General Hamelin estimates its strength at least 20 divisions but there may well be 25 or even more Therefore the Eastern front potentially exists 115 Russia is pursuing a cold policy of its own interests We would prefer that the Russian armies stand in their present positions as friends and allies of Poland rather than as invaders But to protect Russia from the Nazi threat it was clearly necessary that Russian armies should stand on this line In any case this line exists and consequently the Eastern front has been created which Nazi Germany will not dare to attack 115 On 23 May 1939 Hitler explained to his officers that the object of the aggression was not Danzig but the need to obtain German Lebensraum and details of this concept would be later formulated in the infamous Generalplan Ost 116 117 The invasion decimated urban residential areas civilians soon became indistinguishable from combatants and the forthcoming German occupation both on the annexed territories and in the General Government was one of the most brutal episodes of World War II resulting in between 5 47 million and 5 67 million Polish deaths 118 about one sixth of the country s total population and over 90 of its Jewish minority including the mass murder of 3 million Polish citizens mainly Jews as part of the final solution in extermination camps like Auschwitz in concentration camps and in numerous ad hoc massacres where civilians were rounded up taken to a nearby forest machine gunned and then buried whether they were dead or not 119 Among the 100 000 people murdered in the Intelligenzaktion operations in 1939 1940 approximately 61 000 were members of the Polish intelligentsia scholars clergy former officers and others whom the Germans identified as political targets in the Special Prosecution Book Poland compiled before the war began in September 1939 120 According to the Polish Institute of National Remembrance Soviet occupation between 1939 and 1941 resulted in the death of 150 000 and deportation of 320 000 of Polish citizens 118 121 when all who were deemed dangerous to the Soviet regime were subject to Sovietization forced resettlement imprisonment in labor camps the Gulags or murdered like the Polish officers in the Katyn massacre a 1st Polish Corps on exercise in Scotland in 1941 Since October 1939 the Polish army that could escape imprisonment from the Soviets or Nazis were mainly heading for British and French territories These places were considered safe because of the pre war alliance between Great Britain France and Poland Not only did the government escape but also the national gold supply was evacuated via Romania and brought to the West notably London and Ottawa 122 123 The approximately 75 tonnes 83 short tons of gold was considered sufficient to field an army for the duration of the war 124 Eyewitness accountsFrom Lemberg to Bordeaux Von Lemberg bis Bordeaux written by Leo Leixner a journalist and war correspondent is a first hand account of the battles that led to the falls of Poland the Low Countries and France It includes a rare eyewitness description of the Battle of Wegierska Gorka In August 1939 Leixner joined the Wehrmacht as a war reporter was promoted to sergeant and in 1941 published his recollections The book was originally issued by Franz Eher Nachfolger the central publishing house of the Nazi Party 125 The American journalist and filmmaker Julien Bryan came to besieged Warsaw on 7 September 1939 in the time of German bombardment He photographed the beginning of the war by using one roll of colour film Kodachrome and much black and white film He made one film about German crimes against civilians during the invasion In colour he photographed Polish soldiers fleeing civilians bombed houses and a German bomber He 111 destroyed by the Polish Army in Warsaw His photographs and film Siege are stored in the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum 126 MisconceptionsCombat between Polish cavalry and German tanks See also Charge at Krojanty Battlefield at Krojanty Polish uhlan with anti tank rifle Wz 35 1938 Polish cavalry units did not engage German tanks with lances and swords At the Battle of Tuchola Forest on 1 September 1939 the 18th Pomeranian Uhlan Regiment had been tasked to cover the retreat of Polish infantry In the evening the Pomeranian Uhlans encountered contingents of the advancing German 20th Infantry Division of Heinz Guderian s XIX Army Commander Kazimierz Mastalerz ordered an attack forcing the 20th infantry to withdraw and disperse The engagement proved to be successful as the German advance had been delayed However upon redeployment the 18th Pomeranians came under sudden and intense machine gun fire of German armored reconnaissance vehicles Despite their quick retreat nearly a third of the Uhlans were killed or wounded 127 A group of German and Italian war correspondents who visited the battlefield noticed the dead cavalry men and horses among the armored vehicles Italian reporter Indro Montanelli promptly published an article in the Corriere della Sera on the brave and heroic Polish cavalry men who charged German tanks with sabres and lances Historian Steven Zaloga in Poland 1939 The Birth of Blitzkrieg 2004 If a single image dominates the popular perception of the Polish campaign of 1939 it is the scene of Polish cavalry bravely charging the Panzers with their lances Like many other details of the campaign it is a myth that was created by German wartime propaganda and perpetuated by sloppy scholarship Yet such myths have also been embraced by the Poles themselves as symbols of their wartime gallantry achieving a cultural resonance in spite of their variance with the historical record 128 In 1939 only 10 of the Polish army was made up of cavalry units 129 Polish Air Force The Polish Air Force was not destroyed on the ground in the first days of the war Though numerically inferior it had been redeployed from major air bases to small camouflaged airfields shortly before the war Only some trainers and auxiliary aircraft were destroyed on the ground The Polish Air Force despite being significantly outnumbered and with its fighters outmatched by more advanced German fighters remained active until the second week of the campaign inflicting significant damage on the Luftwaffe 130 The Luftwaffe lost 285 aircraft to all operational causes with 279 more damaged and the Poles lost 333 aircraft 131 Polish resistance to the invasion Another question concerns whether Poland inflicted any significant losses on the German forces and whether it surrendered too quickly While exact estimates vary Poland cost the Germans about 45 000 casualties and 11 000 damaged or destroyed military vehicles including 993 tanks and armored cars 565 to 697 airplanes and 370 artillery pieces 132 133 134 As for duration the September Campaign lasted about a week and a half less than the Battle of France in 1940 even though the Anglo French forces were much closer to parity with the Germans in numerical strength and equipment and were supported by the Maginot line Note 7 Furthermore the Polish Army was preparing the Romanian Bridgehead which would have prolonged Polish defence but the plan was invalidated by the Soviet invasion of Poland on 17 September 1939 135 Poland also never officially surrendered to the Germans Under German occupation there was continued resistance by forces such as the Armia Krajowa Henryk Dobrzanski s guerillas and the Lesni forest partisans Polish soldiers with anti aircraft artillery near the Warsaw Central Station in the first days of September 1939 American embassy in Warsaw during the German air raid in September 1939 Visible shattered window First use of Blitzkrieg strategy It is often assumed that Blitzkrieg is the strategy that Germany first used in Poland Many early post war histories such as Barrie Pitt s in The Second World War BPC Publishing 1966 attribute German victory to enormous development in military technique which occurred between 1918 and 1940 and cite that Germany who translated British inter war theories into action called the result Blitzkrieg That idea has been repudiated by some authors Matthew Cooper writes Throughout the Polish Campaign the employment of the mechanized units revealed the idea that they were intended solely to ease the advance and to support the activities of the infantry Thus any strategic exploitation of the armoured idea was still born The paralysis of command and the breakdown of morale were not made the ultimate aim of the German ground and air forces and were only incidental by products of the traditional manoeuvers of rapid encirclement and of the supporting activities of the flying artillery of the Luftwaffe both of which had as their purpose the physical destruction of the enemy troops Such was the Vernichtungsgedanke of the Polish campaign Cooper 136 Vernichtungsgedanke was a strategy dating back to Frederick the Great and it was applied in the Polish Campaign little changed from the French campaigns in 1870 or 1914 The use of tanks left much to be desired Fear of enemy action against the flanks of the advance fear which was to prove so disastrous to German prospects in the west in 1940 and in the Soviet Union in 1941 was present from the beginning of the war Cooper 49 John Ellis writing in Brute Force asserted that there is considerable justice in Matthew Cooper s assertion that the panzer divisions were not given the kind of strategic mission that was to characterize authentic armoured blitzkrieg and were almost always closely subordinated to the various mass infantry armies Ellis 137 emphasis in original Zaloga and Madej in The Polish Campaign 1939 also address the subject of mythical interpretations of Blitzkrieg and the importance of other arms in the campaign Western accounts of the September campaign have stressed the shock value of the panzers and Stuka attacks they have tended to underestimate the punishing effect of German artillery on Polish units Mobile and available in significant quantity artillery shattered as many units as any other branch of the Wehrmacht Zaloga and Madej 138 See alsoEastern Front World War II Gestapo NKVD conferences History of Poland 1939 1945 List of Polish divisions in World War II Occupation of Poland 1939 1945 Oder Neisse line Phoney War Polish cavalry brigade order of battle in 1939 Polish contribution to World War II Polish resistance movement in World War II Siege of Warsaw 1939 The Black Book of Poland Timeline of the invasion of Poland List of World War II military equipment of Poland List of German military equipment of World War II List of Czechoslovakia interwar period weapons the Slovak arsenal was inherited from Czechoslovakia Slovak Air Force 1939 1945 Western betrayalNotes Various sources contradict each other so the figures quoted above should only be taken as a rough indication of the strength estimate The most common range differences and their brackets are German personnel 1 490 900 official figure of the Polish Ministry of Foreign Affairs or 1 800 000 Polish tanks 100 880 100 is the number of modern tanks while the 880 number includes older tanks from the World War I era and tankettes 3 4 The discrepancy in German casualties can be attributed to the fact that some German statistics still listed soldiers as missing decades after the war Today the most common and accepted numbers are 8 082 to 16 343 KIA 320 to 5 029 MIA 27 280 to 34 136 WIA 6 For comparison in his 1939 speech following the Polish campaign Adolf Hitler presented these German figures 10 576 KIA 30 222 WIA and 3 400 MIA 7 According to early Allied estimates including those of the Polish government in exile the number of German KIA casualties was 90 000 and WIA casualties was 200 000 7 8 Equipment losses are given as 832 German tanks 9 with approximately 236 9 to 341 as irrecoverable losses and approximately 319 other armored vehicles as irrecoverable losses including 165 Panzerspahwagen of them 101 as irrecoverable losses 9 522 561 German planes including 246 285 destroyed and 276 damaged 1 German minelayer M 85 and 1 German torpedo ship Tiger Soviet official losses figures provided by Krivosheev are currently estimated at 1 475 KIA or MIA presumed dead Ukrainian Front 972 Belorussian Front 503 and 2 383 WIA Ukrainian Front 1 741 Belorussian Front 642 The Soviets lost approximately 150 tanks in combat of which 43 as irrecoverable losses while hundreds more suffered technical failures 10 However Russian historian Igor Bunich estimates Soviet manpower losses at 5 327 KIA or MIA without a trace and WIA 11 Various sources contradict each other so the figures quoted above should only be taken as a rough indication of losses The most common range brackets for casualties are Poland 63 000 to 66 300 KIA 134 000 WIA 6 The often cited figure of 420 000 Polish prisoners of war represents only those captured by the Germans as Soviets captured about 250 000 Polish POWs themselves making the total number of Polish POWs about 660 000 690 000 In terms of equipment the Polish Navy lost 1 destroyer ORP Wicher 1 minelayer ORP Gryf and several support craft Equipment loses included 132 Polish tanks and armored cars 327 Polish planes 118 fighters 9 P 11c 43 reserve 30 P 7 85 reserve 118 P 23 Karas light bombers 36 P 37 Los bombers armed in line additionally a few of the total number produced were used in combat 84 reconnaissance RXIII Lublin RWD14 Czapla 115 reserve 61 Other treaties violated by the Soviet Union were the 1919 Covenant of the League of Nations to which the Soviet Union adhered in 1934 the Briand Kellogg Pact of 1928 and the 1933 London Convention on the Definition of Aggression 90 Polish to German forces in the September Campaign 1 000 000 soldiers 4 300 guns 880 tanks 435 aircraft Poland to 1 800 000 soldiers 10 000 guns 2 800 tanks 3 000 aircraft Germany French and participating Allies to German forces in the Battle of France 2 862 000 soldiers 13 974 guns 3 384 tanks 3 099 aircraft 2 Allies to 3 350 000 soldiers 7 378 guns 2 445 tanks 5 446 aircraft Germany References a b Ministry of Foreign Affairs The 1939 Campaign Archived 11 December 2013 at the Wayback Machine Polish Ministry of Foreign Affairs 2005 ER Hooton p 85 Internetowa encyklopedia PWN article on Kampania Wrzesniowa 1939 Website of the Polish Ministry of Foreign Affairs the Poles on the Front Lines a b c in Russian Pereslegin Vtoraya mirovaya vojna mezhdu realnostyami M Yauza Eksmo 2006 s 22 R E Dyupyui T N Dyupyui Vsemirnaya istoriya vojn S P M AST kn 4 s 93 a b Wojna Obronna Polski 1939 p 851 a b Polish War German Losses The Canberra Times 13 October 1939 Retrieved 17 January 2009 Nazi Loss in Poland Placed at 290 000 The New York Times 1941 Archived from the original 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Sprawiedliwosc nr 2 8 2005 a b c d e Andreas Toppe Militar und Kriegsvolkerrecht Rechtsnorm Fachdiskurs und Kriegspraxis in Deutschland 1899 1940 Oldenbourg Wissenschaftsverlag 2008 p 398 ISBN 3486582062 Leszek Moczulski 2009 Wojna polska Bellona GGKEY YJUTJZKPCPA Krivoshein S M Mezhdubure Vospominaniya Voronezh 1964 Krivoshein S M Between the Storms Memoirs Voronezh 1964 in Russian Guderian H Erinnerungen eines Soldaten Heidelberg 1951 English Memoirs of a Soldier Raack Richard 1995 Stalin s Drive to the West 1938 1945 Stanford University Press p 58 ISBN 978 0804724159 Retrieved 2 November 2011 Clark Lloyd Kursk The greatest battle Eastern Front 1943 2011 pp 62 67 76 80 a b Clark Lloyd Kursk The greatest battle Eastern Front 1943 2011 p 62 Sword Keith Sword 1991 British Reactions to the Soviet Occupation of Eastern Poland in September 1939 The Slavonic and East European Review 69 1 81 101 a b Cherchill U Vtoraya mirovaya vojna M Voenizdat 1991 s 204 Churchill U World war II Moscow 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und die Ausraubung der polnischen un judischen Bevolkerung 1939 1945 Munchen 2007 64 67 Anita J Prazmowska Britain and Poland 1939 1943 The Betrayed Ally 1995 21 Chapter 2 The Soviet German invasion and the Polish exodus 1939 1940 Polish forces in the West Archived from the original on 4 March 2016 Retrieved 10 January 2016 Huiskamp Florian 2015 Zonder Vrees en Zonder Verwijt Poolse militairen in West Europa tijdens de Tweede Wereldoorlog Amsterdam pp 64 65 LC Online Catalog Item Information Full Record catalog loc gov Julien Bryan Poland 1939 Fall Weiss Polish Cavalry Charges Against Tanks Panzerworld Retrieved 20 September 2020 Steve Zaloga 2004 Poland 1939 The Birth of Blitzkrieg Praeger ISBN 978 0275982782 page needed Henryk Smaczny Ksiega kawalerii polskiej Book of Polish cavalry TESCO Warszawa 1989 ISBN 8300025553 page needed Steven J Zaloga Ramiro Bujeiro Howard Gerrard Poland 1939 the birth of blitzkrieg Osprey Publishing 2002 ISBN 1841764086 Google Print p 50 Overy Richard J The Air War 1939 1945 London Europa Publications 1980 p 28 Roy Francis Leslie R F Leslie 1983 The History of Poland Since 1863 Cambridge University Press p 212 ISBN 978 0521275019 Bekker Cajus 1964 Angriffshohe 285 aircraft destroyed 279 damaged of initial force Forczyk 2019 pp 326 325 lists 236 tanks as totally destroyed and 457 damaged of which 180 were repaired and the remainder scrapped giving 180 277 513 tanks destroyed or scrapped following damage and 319 armoured cars lost Seidner 1978 Matthew Cooper The German Army 1939 1945 Its Political and Military Failure p 176 Ellis John 1999 Brute Force Allied Strategy and Tactics in the Second World War pp 3 4 Matthew Cooper The German Army 1939 1945 Its Political and Military Failure p 4Sources and further readingBaliszewski Dariusz 10 October 2004 Wojna sukcesow Wprost in Polish 1141 Retrieved 24 March 2005 Baliszewski Dariusz 19 September 2004 Most honoru Wprost in Polish 1138 Archived from the original on 14 May 2007 Retrieved 24 March 2005 Cooper Matthew 1978 The German Army 1939 1945 Its Political and Military Failure New York Stein and Day ISBN 978 0812824681 Corum James S 2013 The Luftwaffe s Campaigns in Poland and the West 1939 1940 A Case Study of handling Innovation in Wartime Security and Defence Quarterly 1 1 158 189 doi 10 35467 sdq 103158 Chodakiewicz Marek Jan 2004 Between Nazis and Soviets Occupation Politics in Poland 1939 1947 Lexington Books ISBN 978 0739104842 Ellis John 1999 Brute Force Allied Strategy and Tactics in the Second World War 1st US ed Viking Adult ISBN 978 0670807734 Fischer Benjamin B The Katyn Controversy Stalin s Killing Field Studies in Intelligence Archived from the original on 13 June 2007 Retrieved 10 December 2005 Forczyk Robert 2019 Case White The Invasion of Poland 1939 Oxford Osprey Publishing ISBN 978 1472834959 Goldman Stuart D 2012 Nomonhan 1939 The Red Army s Victory That Shaped World War II Naval Institute Press ISBN 978 1591143291 Hahn Fritz 1986 1987 Waffen und Geheimwaffen des deutschen Heeres 1933 1945 Weapons and Secret Weapons of the German Army 1933 1945 Koblenz Bernard amp Graefe ISBN 978 3763758302 Hooton E R 2007 Luftwaffe at War Gathering Storm 1933 1939 Vol I London Chevron Ian Allan ISBN 978 1903223710 Jentz Thomas 1996 Panzertruppen The Complete Guide to the Creation amp Combat Employment of Germany s Tank Force 1933 1942 v 1 Atglen Schiffer ISBN 978 0887409158 Kennedy Robert M 1980 The German Campaign in Poland 1939 Zenger ISBN 978 0892010646 Kushner Tony Knox Katharine 1999 Refugees in an Age of Genocide London New York Routledge ISBN 978 0714647838 Retrieved 2 November 2011 Lukas Richard C 2001 Forgotten Holocaust The Poles Under German Occupation 1939 1944 Hippocrene Books ISBN 978 0781809016 Majer Diemut et al 2003 Non Germans under the Third Reich The Nazi Judicial and Administrative System in Germany and Occupied Eastern Europe with Special Regard to Occupied Poland 1939 1945 Johns Hopkins University Press ISBN 978 0801864933 Moorhouse Roger Poland 1939 The Outbreak of World War II Basic Books 2020 popular history online review Nazi Loss in Poland Placed at 290 000 The New York Times Press release 28 September 1941 Retrieved 17 January 2009 Prazmowska Anita J 1995 Britain and Poland 1939 1943 The Betrayed Ally Cambridge Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0521483858 Piotrowski Tadeusz 1998 Poland s Holocaust Ethnic Strife Collaboration With Occupying Forces and Genocide in the Second Republic 1918 1947 Jefferson NC McFarland amp Company ISBN 978 0786429134 Sanford George 2005 Katyn and the Soviet Massacre of 1940 Truth Justice And Memory London New York Routledge ISBN 978 0415338738 Seidner Stanley S 1978 Marshal Edward Smigly Rydz Rydz and the Defence of Poland New York Taylor A J P Mayer S L eds 1974 A History of World War Two London Octopus Books ISBN 978 0706403992 Weinberg Gerhard 1994 A World at Arms A Global History of World War II Cambridge Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0521443173 Zaloga Steve Gerrard Howard 2002 Poland 1939 The Birth of Blitzkrieg Oxford Osprey Publishing ISBN 978 1841764085 Zaloga Steve 1982 The Polish Army 1939 1945 Oxford Osprey Publishing ISBN 978 0850454178 Kampania Wrzesniowa 1939 Internetowa encyklopedia PWN in Polish Archived from the original on 27 September 2005 Retrieved 10 December 2005 Further readingBohler Jochen 2006 Preface Auftakt zum Vernichtungskrieg Die Wehrmacht in Polen 1939 War of Annihilation The Wehrmacht in Poland 1939 in German Frankfurt Fischer Taschenbuch Verlag ISBN 978 3596163076 Gross Jan T 2002 Revolution from Abroad The Soviet Conquest of Poland s Western Ukraine and Western Belorussia Princeton Princeton University Press ISBN 978 0691096032 Moorhouse Roger 2019 First to Fight The Polish War 1939 The Bodley Head ISBN 978 1847924605 External links Wikiquote has quotations related to Polish September Campaign Wikimedia Commons has media related to Polish Defensive War of 1939 Wikisource has original text related to this article Adolf Hitler s Proclamation to the German Army 1 September 1939 Wikisource has original text related to this article Adolf Hitler s Address to the Reichstag 1 September 1939 Wikisource has original text related to this article Communication from the German Government to the British Government in Response to Great Britain s Ultimatum 3 September 1939 Wikisource has original text related to this article Adolf Hitler s Proclamation to the German People 3 September 1939 The Conquest of Poland and the Beginnings of Jewish Persecution Archived 8 November 2012 at the Wayback Machine on the Yad Vashem website German invasion of Poland Original reports from The Times Blitzkrieg Unleashed The German Invasion of Poland 1939 History of the invasion with focus on precise locations and events as experienced by real people Detailed outline of campaign mainly from German documents The Campaign in Poland at WorldWar2 Database The Campaign in Poland at Achtung Panzer German Statistics including September Campaign losses Brief Campaign losses and more statistics Fall Weiss The Fall of Poland Radio reports on the German invasion of Poland dead link and Nazi broadcast claiming that Germany s action is an act of defence dead link Headline story on BBC Germany invades Poland 1 September 1939 Halford Mackinder s Necessary War An essay describing the Polish Campaign in a larger strategic context of the war Detailed Polish Army organization schemas by Dr Leo Niehorster Detailed German Army organization schemas by Dr Leo Niehorster Polish Armoured Units 1939 Archived 30 April 2008 at the Wayback Machine Nazi invasion of Poland in 1939 Images and Documents from the Harrison Forman collection The Polish Campaign of September 1939 in Perspective Polish News 24 September 2008 Invasion of Poland by Bradley Lightbody Last updated 2011 03 30 The Mythical Polish Cavalry Charge Polish forces in the West Archived 8 February 2016 at the Wayback Machine A website describing the Polish forces in France UK and the NetherlandsWar propaganda newsreel Advance into Poland National Archives and Records Administration German Series Motion Picture Films G 2 Army Military Intelligence Division Internet Archive Reel 1 of 4 Reel 2 of 4 Reel 3 of 4 Reel 4 of 4 Invasion of Poland in 1939 by German Army 1943 Film Bulletin n 48 US Department of the Army Signal Corps Photographic Center Internet Archive Special Release Europe At War 1939 Universal Studios Internet Archive Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Invasion of Poland amp oldid 1133287265, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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