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Molotov–Ribbentrop Pact

The Molotov–Ribbentrop Pact was a non-aggression pact between Nazi Germany and the Soviet Union that enabled those powers to partition Eastern Europe between them. The pact was signed in Moscow on 23 August 1939 by German Foreign Minister Joachim von Ribbentrop and Soviet Foreign Minister Vyacheslav Molotov[1] and was officially known as the Treaty of Non-Aggression between Germany and the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics.[2][3] Unofficially, it has also been referred to as the Hitler–Stalin Pact,[4][5] Nazi–Soviet Pact[6] or Nazi–Soviet Alliance.[7]

Molotov–Ribbentrop Pact[a]
Treaty of Non-Aggression between Germany and the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics[b]
Stalin and Ribbentrop shaking hands after the signing of the pact in the Kremlin
Signed23 August 1939; 83 years ago (1939-08-23)
LocationMoscow, Soviet Union
Expiration23 August 1949
(planned)
22 June 1941
(terminated)
30 July 1941
(officially declared null and void)
Signatories Joachim von Ribbentrop
Vyacheslav Molotov
Parties
Languages
  • German
  • Russian
Full text
Molotov–Ribbentrop Pact at Wikisource

The establishment of the treaty was preceded by Soviet efforts to form a tripartite alliance with Britain and France. The Soviet Union began negotiations with Germany on 22 August, one day after talks broke down with Britain and France, and the Molotov–Ribbentrop pact was signed the next day. Its clauses provided a written guarantee of peace by each party towards the other and a commitment that declared that neither government would ally itself to or aid an enemy of the other. In addition to the publicly-announced stipulations of non-aggression, the treaty included the Secret Protocol, which defined the borders of Soviet and German spheres of influence across Poland, Lithuania, Latvia, Estonia and Finland. The secret protocol also recognised the interest of Lithuania in the Vilnius region, and Germany declared its complete uninterest in Bessarabia. The rumoured existence of the Secret Protocol was proved only when it was made public during the Nuremberg Trials.[8]

Soon after the pact, Germany invaded Poland on 1 September 1939. Soviet leader Joseph Stalin ordered the Soviet invasion of Poland on 17 September, one day after a Soviet–Japanese ceasefire came into effect after the Battles of Khalkhin Gol[9] and one day after the Supreme Soviet of the Soviet Union had approved the Molotov–Ribbentrop Pact.[10] After the invasions, the new border between the two countries was confirmed by the supplementary protocol of the German–Soviet Frontier Treaty. In March 1940, parts of the Karelia and Salla regions, in Finland, were annexed by the Soviet Union after the Winter War. That was followed by the Soviet annexation of Estonia, Latvia, Lithuania and parts of Romania (Bessarabia, Northern Bukovina and the Hertsa region). Concern for ethnic Ukrainians and Belarusians had been used as pretexts for the Soviets' invasion of Poland. Stalin's invasion of Bukovina in 1940 violated the pact since it went beyond the Soviet sphere of influence that had been agreed with the Axis.[11]

The territories of Poland annexed by the Soviet Union after the 1939 Soviet invasion east of the Curzon line remained in the Soviet Union after the war ended and are now in Ukraine and Belarus. Vilnius was given to Lithuania. Only Podlaskie and a small part of Galicia east of the San River, around Przemyśl, were returned to Poland. Of all the other territories annexed by the Soviet Union in 1939 to 1940, those detached from Finland (Western Karelia, Petsamo), Estonia (Estonian Ingria and Petseri County) and Latvia (Abrene) remain part of Russia, the successor state to the Russian SSR after the dissolution of the Soviet Union in 1991. The territories annexed from Romania had also been integrated into the Soviet Union (as the Moldavian SSR or oblasts of the Ukrainian SSR). The core of Bessarabia now forms Moldova. Northern Bessarabia, Northern Bukovina and the Hertsa region now form the Chernivtsi Oblast of Ukraine. Southern Bessarabia is part of the Odessa Oblast, which is also in Ukraine.

The pact was terminated on 22 June 1941, when Germany launched Operation Barbarossa and invaded the Soviet Union, in pursuit of the ideological goal of Lebensraum.[12] The Anglo-Soviet Agreement replaced it. After the war, Ribbentrop was convicted of war crimes at the Nuremberg trials and executed. Molotov died in 1986.

Background

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
 
Map of territorial changes in Europe after World War I (as of 1923). Note that the creation of the Irish Free State and Northern Ireland is not shown.
 
Map of the Second Polish Republic, 1937

The outcome of World War I was disastrous for both the German and the Russian Empires. The Russian Civil War broke out in late 1917 after the Bolshevik Revolution and Vladimir Lenin, the first leader of the new Soviet Russia, recognised the independence of Finland, Estonia, Latvia, Lithuania and Poland. Moreover, facing a German military advance, Lenin and Trotsky were forced to agree to the Treaty of Brest-Litovsk,[13] which ceded many western Russian territories to Germany. After the German collapse, a multinational Allied-led army intervened in the civil war (1917–1922).[14]

On 16 April 1922, the German Weimar Republic and the Soviet Union agreed to the Treaty of Rapallo in which they renounced territorial and financial claims against each other.[15] Each party also pledged neutrality in the event of an attack against the other with the Treaty of Berlin (1926).[16] Trade between the two countries had fallen sharply after World War I, but trade agreements signed in the mid-1920s helped to increase trade to 433 million ℛℳ per year by 1927.[17]

At the beginning of the 1930s, the Nazi Party's rise to power increased tensions between Germany and the Soviet Union, along with other countries with ethnic Slavs, who were considered "Untermenschen" (subhuman) according to Nazi racial ideology.[18] Moreover, the anti-Semitic Nazis associated ethnic Jews with both communism and financial capitalism, both of which they opposed.[19][20] Nazi theory held that Slavs in the Soviet Union were being ruled by "Jewish Bolshevik" masters.[21] Hitler had spoken of an inevitable battle for the acquisition of land for Germany in the east.[22] The resulting manifestation of German anti-Bolshevism and an increase in Soviet foreign debts caused a dramatic decline in German–Soviet trade.[c] Imports of Soviet goods to Germany fell to 223 million ℛℳ in 1934 by the more isolationist Stalinist regime asserting power and by the abandonment of postwar Treaty of Versailles military controls, both of which decreased Germany's reliance on Soviet imports.[17][24][clarification needed]

In 1936, Germany and Fascist Italy supported the Spanish Nationalists in the Spanish Civil War, but the Soviets supported the Spanish Republic.[25] Thus, the Spanish Civil War became a proxy war between Germany and the Soviet Union.[26] In 1936, Germany and Japan entered the Anti-Comintern Pact,[27] and they were joined a year later by Italy.[28]

On 31 March 1939, Britain extended a guarantee to Poland that "if any action clearly threatened Polish independence, and if the Poles felt it vital to resist such action by force, Britain would come to their aid". Hitler was furious since that meant that the British were committed to political interests in Europe and that his land grabs such as the takeover of Czechoslovakia would no longer be taken lightly. His response to the political checkmate would later be heard at a rally in Wilhelmshaven: "No power on earth would be able to break German might, and if the Western Allies thought Germany would stand by while they marshalled their 'satellite states' to act in their interests, then they were sorely mistaken". Ultimately, Hitler's discontent with a British-Polish alliance led to a restructuring of strategy towards Moscow. Alfred Rosenberg wrote that he had spoken to Hermann Goering of the potential alliance with the Soviet Union: "When Germany's life is at stake, even a temporary alliance with Moscow must be contemplated". Sometime in early May 1939 at Berghof, Ribbentrop showed Hitler a film of Stalin viewing his military in a recent parade. Hitler became intrigued with the idea of allying with the Soviets and Ribbentrop recalled Hitler saying that Stalin "looked like a man he could do business with". Ribbentrop was then given the nod to pursue negotiations with Moscow.[29]

Munich Conference

Hitler's fierce anti-Soviet rhetoric was one of the reasons that Britain and France decided that Soviet participation in the 1938 Munich Conference on Czechoslovakia would be both dangerous and useless.[30] In the Munich Agreement that followed[31] the conference agreed to a German annexation of part of Czechoslovakia in late 1938, but in early 1939 it had been completely dissolved.[32] The policy of appeasement toward Germany was conducted by the governments of British Prime Minister Neville Chamberlain and French Prime Minister Édouard Daladier.[33] The policy immediately raised the question of whether the Soviet Union could avoid being next on Hitler's list.[34] The Soviet leadership believed that the West wanted to encourage German aggression in the East[35] and to stay neutral in a war initiated by Germany in the hope that Germany and the Soviet Union would wear each other out and put an end to both regimes.[36]

 
All territories taken from Czechoslovakia by its neighbours in October 1938 (Munich Agreement) and March 1939

For Germany, an autarkic economic approach and an alliance with Britain were impossible and so closer relations with the Soviet Union to obtain raw materials became necessary.[37] Besides economic reasons, an expected British blockade during a war would also create massive shortages for Germany in a number of key raw materials.[38] After the Munich Agreement, the resulting increase in German military supply needs and Soviet demands for military machinery made talks between the two countries occur from late 1938 to March 1939.[39] Also, the third Soviet five-year plan required new infusions of technology and industrial equipment.[37][40][clarification needed] German war planners had estimated serious shortfalls of raw materials if Germany entered a war without the Soviet supply.[41]

On 31 March 1939, in response to Germany's defiance of the Munich Agreement and the creation of the Protectorate of Bohemia and Moravia,[42] Britain pledged its support and that of France to guarantee the independence of Poland, Belgium, Romania, Greece and Turkey.[43] On 6 April, Poland and Britain agreed to formalise the guarantee as a military alliance, pending negotiations.[44] On 28 April, Hitler denounced the 1934 German–Polish declaration of non-aggression and the 1935 Anglo–German Naval Agreement.[45]

In mid-March 1939, attempting to contain Hitler's expansionism, the Soviet Union, Britain and France started to trade a flurry of suggestions and counterplans on a potential political and military agreement.[46][47] Informal consultations started in April, but the main negotiations began only in May.[47] Meanwhile, throughout early 1939, Germany had secretly hinted to Soviet diplomats that it could offer better terms for a political agreement than could Britain and France.[48][49][50]

The Soviet Union, which feared Western powers and the possibility of "capitalist encirclements", had little hope either of preventing war and wanted nothing less than an ironclad military alliance with France and Britain[51] to provide guaranteed support for a two-pronged attack on Germany.[52] Stalin's adherence to the collective security line was thus purely conditional.[53] Britain and France believed that war could still be avoided and that since the Soviet Union was so weakened by the Great Purge[54] that it could not be a main military participant.[52] Many military sources[clarification needed] were at variance with the last point, especially after the Soviet victories over the Japanese Kwantung Army in the Manchuria.[55] France was more anxious to find an agreement with the Soviet Union than Britain was. As a continental power, France was more willing to make concessions and more fearful of the dangers of an agreement between the Soviet Union and Germany.[56] The contrasting attitudes partly explain why the Soviets have often been charged with playing a double game in 1939 of carrying on open negotiations for an alliance with Britain and France but secretly considering propositions from Germany.[56]

By the end of May, drafts had been formally presented.[47] In mid-June, the main tripartite negotiations started.[57] Discussions were focused on potential guarantees to Central and Eastern Europe in the case of German aggression.[58] The Soviets proposed to consider that a political turn towards Germany by the Baltic states would constitute an "indirect aggression" towards the Soviet Union.[59] Britain opposed such proposals because they feared the Soviets' proposed language would justify a Soviet intervention in Finland and the Baltic states or push those countries to seek closer relations with Germany.[60][61] The discussion of a definition of "indirect aggression" became one of the sticking points between the parties, and by mid-July, the tripartite political negotiations effectively stalled while the parties agreed to start negotiations on a military agreement, which the Soviets insisted had to be reached at the same time as any political agreement.[62] One day before the military negotiations began, the Soviet Politburo pessimistically expected the coming negotiations to go nowhere and formally decided to consider German proposals seriously.[63] The military negotiations began on 12 August in Moscow, with a British delegation headed by the retired admiral Sir Reginald Drax, French delegation headed by General Aimé Doumenc and the Soviet delegation headed by Kliment Voroshilov, the commissar of defence, and Boris Shaposhnikov, chief of the general staff. Without written credentials, Drax was not authorised to guarantee anything to the Soviet Union and had been instructed by the British government to prolong the discussions as long as possible and to avoid answering the question of whether Poland would agree to permit Soviet troops to enter the country if the Germans invaded.[64] As the negotiations failed, a great opportunity to prevent the German aggression was probably lost.[65]

Negotiations

 
Molotov (left) and Ribbentrop at the signing of the pact
 
"The Prussian Tribute in Moscow" in the Polish satirical newspaper Mucha of 8 September 1939

Beginning of secret talks

From April to July, Soviet and German officials made statements on the potential for the beginning of political negotiations, but no actual negotiations took place.[66] "The Soviet Union had wanted good relations with Germany for years and was happy to see that feeling finally reciprocated", wrote the historian Gerhard L. Weinberg.[67] The ensuing discussion of a potential political deal between Germany and the Soviet Union had to be channeled into the framework of economic negotiations between the two countries, since close military and diplomatic connections that existed before the mid-1930s had been largely severed.[68] In May, Stalin replaced his foreign minister from 1930 to 1939, Maxim Litvinov, who had advocated rapprochement with the West and was also Jewish,[69] with Vyacheslav Molotov to allow the Soviet Union more latitude in discussions with more parties, instead of only Britain and France.[70]

On 23 August 1939, two Focke-Wulf Condors, containing German diplomats, officials, and photographers (about 20 in each plane), headed by Ribbentrop, descended into Moscow. As the Nazi emissaries stepped off the plane, a Soviet military band played "Deutschland, Deutschland über Alles". The Nazi arrival was well planned, with all aesthetics in order. The classic hammer and sickle was propped up next to the swastika of the Nazi flag that had been used in a local film studio for Soviet propaganda films. After stepping off the plane and shaking hands, Ribbentrop and Gustav Hilger along with German ambassador Friedrich-Werner von der Schulenburg and Stalin's chief bodyguard, Nikolai Vlasik, entered a limousine operated by the NKVD to travel to Red Square. The limousine arrived close to Stalin's office and was greeted by Alexander Poskrebyshev, the chief of Stalin's personal chancellery. The Germans were led up a flight of stairs to a room with lavish furnishings. Stalin and Molotov greeted the visitors, much to the Nazis' surprise. It was well known that Stalin avoided meeting foreign visitors, and so his presence at the meeting showed how seriously that the Soviets were taking the negotiations.[71]

In late July and early August 1939, Soviet and German officials agreed on most of the details of a planned economic agreement[72] and specifically addressed a potential political agreement,[73][74][75][d] which the Soviets stated could come only after an economic agreement.[77]

The German presence in the Soviet capital during negotiations can be regarded as rather tense. German pilot Hans Baur recalled that Soviet secret police followed every move. Their job was to inform authorities when he left his residence and where he was headed. Baur's guide informed him: "Another car would tack itself onto us and follow us fifty or so yards in the rear, and wherever we went and whatever we did, the secret police would be on our heels." Baur also recalled trying to tip his Russian driver, which led to a harsh exchange of words: "He was furious. He wanted to know whether this was the thanks he got for having done his best for us to get him into prison. We knew perfectly well it was forbidden to take tips."[71]

August negotiations

In early August, Germany and the Soviet Union worked out the last details of their economic deal[78] and started to discuss a political alliance. Both countries' diplomats explained to each other the reasons for the hostility in their foreign policy in the 1930s and found common ground in both countries' anticapitalism: "there is one common element in the ideology of Germany, Italy, and the Soviet Union: opposition to the capitalist democracies" or that "it seems to us rather unnatural that a socialist state would stand on the side of the western democracies".[79][80][81][82]

At the same time, British, French, and Soviet negotiators scheduled three-party talks on military matters to occur in Moscow in August 1939 that aimed to define what the agreement would specify on the reaction of the three powers to a German attack.[60] The tripartite military talks, started in mid-August, hit a sticking point on the passage of Soviet troops through Poland if Germans attacked, and the parties waited as British and French officials overseas pressured Polish officials to agree to such terms.[83][84] Polish officials refused to allow Soviet troops into Polish territory if Germany attacked; Polish Foreign Minister Józef Beck pointed out that the Polish government feared that if the Red Army entered Polish territory, it would never leave.[85][86]

On 19 August, the 1939 German–Soviet Commercial Agreement was finally signed.[87] On 21 August, the Soviets suspended the tripartite military talks and cited other reasons.[48][88] The same day, Stalin received assurances that Germany would approve secret protocols to the proposed non-aggression pact that would place the half of Poland east of the Vistula River as well as Latvia, Estonia, Finland and Bessarabia in the Soviet sphere of influence.[89] That night, Stalin replied that the Soviets were willing to sign the pact and that he would receive Ribbentrop on 23 August.[90]

News leaks

 
The New York Times reported Nazi troop movement on 25 August 1939, soon before the Gleiwitz incident on 31 August 1939, led by Alfred Naujocks (pictured).

On 25 August 1939, the New York Times ran a front-page story by Otto D. Tolischus, "Nazi Talks Secret", whose subtitle included "Soviet and Reich Agree on East".[91] On 26 August 1939, the New York Times reported Japanese anger[92] and French communist surprise[93] over the pact. The same day, however, Tolischus filed a story that noted Nazi troops on the move near Gleiwitz (now Gliwice), which led to the false flag Gleiwitz incident on 31 August 1939.[94] On 28 August 1939, the New York Times was still reporting on fears of a Gleiwitz raid.[95] On 29 August 1939, the New York Times reported that the Supreme Soviet had failed on its first day of convening to act on the pact.[96] The same day, the New York Times also reported from Montreal, Canada, that American Professor Samuel N. Harper of the University of Chicago had stated publicly his belief that "the Russo-German non-aggression pact conceals an agreement whereby Russia and Germany may have planned spheres of influence for Eastern Europe".[5] On 30 August 1939, the New York Times reported a Soviet buildup on its Western frontiers by moving 200,000 troops from the Far East.[97]

Secret protocol

On 22 August, one day after talks broke down with France and Britain, Moscow revealed that Ribbentrop would visit Stalin the next day. The Soviets were still negotiating with the British and the French missions in Moscow. With the Western nations unwilling to accede to Soviet demands, Stalin instead entered a secret German–Soviet pact.[98] On 23 August, a ten-year non-aggression pact was signed with provisions that included consultation, arbitration if either party disagreed, neutrality if either went to war against a third power and no membership of a group "which is directly or indirectly aimed at the other". The article "On Soviet–German Relations" in the Soviet newspaper Izvestia of 21 August 1939, stated:

Following completion of the Soviet–German trade and credit agreement, there has arisen the question of improving political links between Germany and the USSR.[99]

 
The Molotov–Ribbentrop Pact (German copy)
 
Last page of the Additional Secret Protocol of the Pact (Russian copy)

There was also a secret protocol to the pact, which was revealed only after Germany's defeat in 1945[100] although hints about its provisions had been leaked much earlier, so as to influence Lithuania.[101] According to the protocol, Romania, Poland, Lithuania, Latvia, Estonia, and Finland were divided into German and Soviet "spheres of influence".[100] In the north, Finland, Estonia, and Latvia were assigned to the Soviet sphere.[100] Poland was to be partitioned in the event of its "political rearrangement": the areas east of the Pisa, Narev, Vistula, and San Rivers would go to the Soviet Union, and Germany would occupy the west.[100] Lithuania, which was adjacent to East Prussia, was assigned to the German sphere of influence, but a second secret protocol, agreed to in September 1939, reassigned Lithuania to the Soviet Union.[102] According to the protocol, Lithuania would be granted its historical capital, Vilnius, which was controlled by Poland during the interwar period. Another clause stipulated that Germany would not interfere with the Soviet Union's actions towards Bessarabia, which was then part of Romania.[100] As a result, Bessarabia as well as the Northern Bukovina and Hertsa regions were occupied by the Soviets and integrated into the Soviet Union.

At the signing, Ribbentrop and Stalin enjoyed warm conversations, exchanged toasts and further addressed the prior hostilities between the countries in the 1930s.[103] They characterised Great Britain as always attempting to disrupt Soviet–German relations and stated that the Anti-Comintern Pact was aimed not at the Soviet Union but actually at Western democracies and "frightened principally the City of London [British financiers] and the English shopkeepers."[104]

Revelation

The agreement stunned the world. John Gunther, in Moscow in August 1939, recalled how the news of the 19 August commercial agreement surprised journalists and diplomats, who hoped for world peace. They did not expect the 21 August announcement of the non-aggression pact: "Nothing more unbelievable could be imagined. Astonishment and skepticism turned quickly to consternation and alarm".[105] The news was met with utter shock and surprise by government leaders and media worldwide, most of whom were aware of only the British–French–Soviet negotiations, which had taken place for months;[48][105] by Germany's allies, notably Japan; by the Comintern and foreign Communist parties; and Jewish communities all around the world.[106]

On 24 August, Pravda and Izvestia carried news of the pact's public portions, complete with the now-famous front-page picture of Molotov signing the treaty with a smiling Stalin looking on.[48] The same day, German diplomat Hans von Herwarth, whose grandmother was Jewish, informed Italian diplomat Guido Relli[107] and American chargé d'affaires Charles Bohlen of the secret protocol on the vital interests in the countries' allotted "spheres of influence" but failed to reveal the annexation rights for "territorial and political rearrangement".[108][109] The agreement's public terms so exceeded the terms of an ordinary non-aggression treaty—requiring that both parties consult with each other, and not aid a third party attacking either—that Gunther heard a joke that Stalin had joined the anti-Comintern pact.[105] Time Magazine repeatedly referred to the Pact as the "Communazi Pact" and its participants as "communazis" until April 1941.[110][111][112][113][114]

Soviet propaganda and representatives went to great lengths to minimize the importance of the fact that they had opposed and fought the Germans in various ways for a decade prior to signing the pact. Molotov tried to reassure the Germans of his good intentions by commenting to journalists that "fascism is a matter of taste".[115] For its part, Germany also did a public volte-face regarding its virulent opposition to the Soviet Union, but Hitler still viewed an attack on the Soviet Union as "inevitable".[116]

Concerns over the possible existence of a secret protocol were expressed first by the intelligence organizations of the Baltic states[citation needed] only days after the pact was signed. Speculation grew stronger when Soviet negotiators referred to its content during the negotiations for military bases in those countries (see occupation of the Baltic States).

The day after the pact was signed, the Franco- British military delegation urgently requested a meeting with Soviet military negotiator Kliment Voroshilov.[117] On 25 August, Voroshilov told them that "in view of the changed political situation, no useful purpose can be served in continuing the conversation."[117] The same day, Hitler told the British ambassador to Berlin that the pact with the Soviets prevented Germany from facing a two-front war, which changed the strategic situation from that in World War I, and that Britain should accept his demands on Poland.[118]

On 25 August, Hitler was surprised when Britain joined a defense pact with Poland.[118] Hitler postponed his plans for an invasion of Poland on 26 August to 1 September.[118][119] In accordance with the defence pact, Britain and France declared war on Germany on 3 September.[120]

 

Consequences in Finland, Poland, the Baltic States and Romania

 
Nazis destroying border markers on the Polish-German border, 1939

Initial invasions

On 1 September, Germany invaded Poland from the west.[121] Within a few days, Germany began conducting massacres of Polish and Jewish civilians and POWs,[122][123] which took place in over 30 towns and villages in the first month of the German occupation.[124][125][126] The Luftwaffe also took part by strafing fleeing civilian refugees on roads and by carrying out a bombing campaign.[127][128][129][130] The Soviet Union assisted German air forces by allowing them to use signals broadcast by the Soviet radio station at Minsk, allegedly "for urgent aeronautical experiments."[131] Hitler declared at Danzig:

Poland never will rise again in the form of the Versailles treaty. That is guaranteed not only by Germany, but also ... Russia.[132]

 
Cartoon in the Evening Standard depicting Hitler greeting Stalin after the invasion of Poland, with the words: "The scum of the earth, I believe?" To which Stalin replies: "The bloody assassin of the workers, I presume?";[133] 20 September 1939.
 
Common parade of Wehrmacht and Red Army in Brest at the end of the invasion of Poland. At the centre are Major General Heinz Guderian and Brigadier Semyon Krivoshein.

In the opinion of Robert Service, Stalin did not move instantly but was waiting to see whether the Germans would halt within the agreed area, and the Soviet Union also needed to secure the frontier in the Soviet–Japanese Border Wars.[134] On 17 September, the Red Army invaded Poland, violating the 1932 Soviet–Polish Non-Aggression Pact, and occupied the Polish territory assigned to it by the Molotov–Ribbentrop Pact. That was followed by co-ordination with German forces in Poland.[135] Polish troops already fighting much stronger German forces on its west desperately tried to delay the capture of Warsaw. Consequently, Polish forces could not mount significant resistance against the Soviets.[136] On 18 September, The New York Times published an editorial arguing that "Hitlerism is brown communism, Stalinism is red fascism...The world will now understand that the only real 'ideological' issue is one between democracy, liberty and peace on the one hand and despotism, terror and war on the other."[137]

On 21 September, Marshal of the Soviet Union Voroshilov, German military attaché General Köstring, and other officers signed a formal agreement in Moscow co-ordinating military movements in Poland, including the "purging" of saboteurs and the Red Army assisting with destruction of the "enemy".[138] Joint German–Soviet parades were held in Lvov and Brest-Litovsk, and the countries' military commanders met in the latter city.[139] Stalin had decided in August that he was going to liquidate the Polish state, and a German–Soviet meeting in September addressed the future structure of the "Polish region."[139] Soviet authorities immediately started a campaign of Sovietisation[140][141] of the newly-acquired areas. The Soviets organised staged elections,[142] the result of which was to become a legitimisation of the Soviet annexation of eastern Poland.[143]

Modification of secret protocols

 
Soviet and German soldiers in Lublin
 
"Second Ribbentrop–Molotov Pact" of 28 September 1939. Map of Poland signed by Stalin and Ribbentrop (focused on the Kresy) adjusting the German-Soviet border in the aftermath of German and Soviet invasion of Poland.

Eleven days after the Soviet invasion of the Polish Kresy, the secret protocol of the Molotov–Ribbentrop Pact was modified by the German–Soviet Treaty of Friendship, Cooperation and Demarcation,[144] allotting Germany a larger part of Poland and transferring Lithuania, with the exception of the left bank of the River Scheschupe, the "Lithuanian Strip", from the envisioned German sphere to the Soviet sphere.[145] On 28 September 1939, the Soviet Union and German Reich issued a joint declaration in which they declared:

After the Government of the German Reich and the Government of the USSR have, by means of the treaty signed today, definitively settled the problems arising from the collapse of the Polish state and have thereby created a sure foundation for lasting peace in the region, they mutually express their conviction that it would serve the true interest of all peoples to put an end to the state of war existing at present between Germany on the one side and England and France on the other. Both Governments will, therefore, direct their common efforts, jointly with other friendly powers if the occasion arises, toward attaining this goal as soon as possible. Should, however, the efforts of the two Governments remain fruitless, this would demonstrate the fact that England and France are responsible for the continuation of the war, whereupon, in case of the continuation of the war, the Governments of Germany and of the USSR shall engage in mutual consultations with regard to necessary measures.[146]

On 3 October, Friedrich Werner von der Schulenburg, the German ambassador in Moscow, informed Joachim Ribbentrop that the Soviet government was willing to cede the city of Vilnius and its environs. On 8 October 1939, a new Nazi-Soviet agreement was reached by an exchange of letters between Vyacheslav Molotov and the German ambassador.[147]

The Baltic states of Estonia, Latvia, and Lithuania were given no choice but to sign a so-called "Pact of Defence and Mutual Assistance", which permitted the Soviet Union to station troops in them.[145]

Soviet war with Finland and Katyn massacre

 
Lithuania between 1939 and 1941. Germany had requested the territory west of the River Šešupė, the area in pink, in the German-Soviet Boundary and Friendship Treaty but relinquished its claims for a compensation of $7.5 million.

After the Baltic states had been forced to accept treaties,[148] Stalin turned his sights on Finland and was confident that its capitulation could be attained without great effort.[149] The Soviets demanded territories on the Karelian Isthmus, the islands of the Gulf of Finland and a military base near the Finnish capital, Helsinki,[150][151] which Finland rejected.[152] The Soviets staged the shelling of Mainila on 26 November and used it as a pretext to withdraw from the Soviet–Finnish Non-Aggression Pact.[153] On 30 November, the Red Army invaded Finland, launching the Winter War with the aim of annexing Finland into the Soviet Union.[154][155][156] The Soviets formed the Finnish Democratic Republic to govern Finland after Soviet conquest.[157][158][159][160] The leader of the Leningrad Military District, Andrei Zhdanov, commissioned a celebratory piece from Dmitri Shostakovich, Suite on Finnish Themes, to be performed as the marching bands of the Red Army would be parading through Helsinki.[161] After Finnish defenses surprisingly held out for over three months and inflicted stiff losses on Soviet forces, under the command of Semyon Timoshenko, the Soviets settled for an interim peace. Finland ceded parts of Karelia and Salla (9% of Finnish territory),[162][page needed] which resulted in approximately 422,000 Karelians (12% of Finland's population) losing their homes.[163] Soviet official casualty counts in the war exceeded 200,000[164] although Soviet Premier Nikita Khrushchev later claimed that the casualties may have been one million.[165]

Around that time, after several Gestapo–NKVD Conferences, Soviet NKVD officers also conducted lengthy interrogations of 300,000 Polish POWs in camps[166][167][168][169] that were a selection process to determine who would be killed.[170] On 5 March 1940, in what would later be known as the Katyn massacre,[170][171][172] 22,000 members of the military as well as intellectuals were executed, labelled "nationalists and counterrevolutionaries" or kept at camps and prisons in western Ukraine and Belarus.[citation needed]

Soviet Union occupies the Baltic states and part of Romania

 
Soviet expansion in 1939-1940

In mid-June 1940, while international attention focused on the German invasion of France, Soviet NKVD troops raided border posts in Lithuania, Estonia and Latvia.[145][173] State administrations were liquidated[by whom?] and replaced by Soviet cadres,[145] who deported or killed 34,250 Latvians, 75,000 Lithuanians and almost 60,000 Estonians.[174] Elections took place, with a single pro-Soviet candidate listed for many positions, and the resulting people's assemblies immediately requesting admission into the Soviet Union, which was granted.[145] (The Soviets annexed the whole of Lithuania, including the Šešupė area, which had been earmarked for Germany.)

Finally, on 26 June, four days after the armistice between France and Nazi Germany, the Soviet Union issued an ultimatum that demanded Bessarabia and unexpectedly Northern Bukovina from Romania.[175] Two days later, the Romanians acceded to the Soviet demands, and the Soviets occupied the territories. The Hertsa region was initially not requested by the Soviets but was later occupied by force after the Romanians had agreed to the initial Soviet demands.[175] The subsequent waves of deportations began in Bessarabia and Northern Bukovina.

Beginnings of Operation Tannenberg and other Nazi atrocities

At the end of October 1939, Germany enacted the death penalty for disobedience to the German occupation.[176] Germany began a campaign of "Germanization", which meant assimilating the occupied territories politically, culturally, socially and economically into the German Reich.[177][178][179] 50,000–200,000 Polish children were kidnapped to be Germanised.[180][181]

 
Polish hostages being blindfolded during preparations for their mass execution in Palmiry, 1940

The elimination of Polish elites and intelligentsia was part of Generalplan Ost. The Intelligenzaktion, a plan to eliminate the Polish intelligentsia, Poland's 'leadership class', took place soon after the German invasion of Poland and lasted from fall of 1939 to the spring of 1940. As the result of the operation, in ten regional actions, about 60,000 Polish nobles, teachers, social workers, priests, judges and political activists were killed.[182][183] It was continued in May 1940, when Germany launched AB-Aktion,[180] More than 16,000 members of the intelligentsia were murdered in Operation Tannenberg alone.[184]

Germany also planned to incorporate all of the land into Nazi Germany.[178] That effort resulted in the forced resettlement of two million Poles. Families were forced to travel in the severe winter of 1939–1940, leaving behind almost all of their possessions without compensation.[178] As part of Operation Tannenberg alone, 750,000 Polish peasants were forced to leave, and their property was given to Germans.[185] A further 330,000 were murdered.[186] Germany planned the eventual move of ethnic Poles to Siberia.[187][188]

Although Germany used forced labourers in most other occupied countries, Poles and other Slavs were viewed as inferior by Nazi propaganda and thus better suited for such duties.[180] Between 1 and 2.5 million Polish citizens[180][189] were transported to the Reich for forced labour.[190][191] All Polish males were made to perform forced labour.[180] While ethnic Poles were subject to selective persecution, all ethnic Jews were targeted by the Reich.[189] In the winter of 1939–40, about 100,000 Jews were thus deported to Poland.[192] They were initially gathered into massive urban ghettos,[193] such as the 380,000 held in the Warsaw Ghetto, where large numbers died of starvation and diseases under their harsh conditions, including 43,000 in the Warsaw Ghetto alone.[189][194][195] Poles and ethnic Jews were imprisoned in nearly every camp of the extensive concentration camp system in German-occupied Poland and the Reich. In Auschwitz, which began operating on 14 June 1940, 1.1 million people perished.[196][197]

Romania and Soviet republics

 
Romania's territorial losses in the summer of 1940

In the summer of 1940, fear of the Soviet Union, in conjunction with German support for the territorial demands of Romania's neighbours and the Romanian government's own miscalculations, resulted in more territorial losses for Romania. Between 28 June and 4 July, the Soviet Union occupied and annexed Bessarabia, Northern Bukovina and the Hertsa region of Romania.[198]

On 30 August, Ribbentrop and Italian Foreign Minister Galeazzo Ciano issued the Second Vienna Award, giving Northern Transylvania to Hungary. On 7 September, Romania ceded Southern Dobruja to Bulgaria (Axis-sponsored Treaty of Craiova).[199] After various events over the following months, Romania increasingly took on the aspect of a German-occupied country.[199]

The Soviet-occupied territories were converted into republics of the Soviet Union. During the two years after the annexation, the Soviets arrested approximately 100,000 Polish citizens[200] and deported between 350,000 and 1,500,000, of whom between 250,000 and 1,000,000 died, mostly civilians.[201][e] Forced re-settlements into gulag labour camps and exile settlements in remote areas of the Soviet Union occurred.[141] According to Norman Davies,[207] almost half of them were dead by July 1940.[208]

Further secret protocol modifications settling borders and immigration issues

On 10 January 1941, Germany and the Soviet Union signed an agreement settling several ongoing issues.[209] Secret protocols in the new agreement modified the "Secret Additional Protocols" of the German–Soviet Boundary and Friendship Treaty, ceding the Lithuanian Strip to the Soviet Union in exchange for US$7.5 million (31.5 million ℛℳ).[209] The agreement formally set the border between Germany and the Soviet Union between the Igorka River and the Baltic Sea.[210] It also extended trade regulation of the 1940 German-Soviet Commercial Agreement until 1 August 1942, increased deliveries above the levels of the first year of that agreement,[210] settled trading rights in the Baltics and Bessarabia, calculated the compensation for German property interests in the Baltic states that were now occupied by the Soviets and covered other issues.[209] It also covered the migration to Germany within 2+12 months of ethnic Germans and German citizens in Soviet-held Baltic territories and the migration to the Soviet Union of Baltic and "White Russian" "nationals" in the German-held territories.[210]

Soviet–German relations

 
German and Soviet soldiers meet in jointly-occupied Brest.

Early political issues

Before the Molotov-Ribbentrop pact was announced, Western communists denied that such a treaty would be signed. Herbert Biberman, a future member of the Hollywood Ten, denounced rumours as "Fascist propaganda." Earl Browder, the head of the Communist Party USA, stated that "there is as much chance of agreement as of Earl Browder being elected president of the Chamber of Commerce."[211] Gunther wrote, however, that some knew "communism and Fascism were more closely allied than was normally understood", and Ernst von Weizsäcker had told Nevile Henderson on 16 August that the Soviet Union would "join in sharing in the Polish spoils".[105] In September 1939, the Comintern suspended all anti-Nazi and anti-fascist propaganda and explained that the war in Europe was a matter of capitalist states attacking one another for imperialist purposes.[212] Western communists acted accordingly; although they had previously supported collective security, they now denounced Britain and France for going to war.[211]

When anti-German demonstrations erupted in Prague, Czechoslovakia, the Comintern ordered the Communist Party of Czechoslovakia to employ all of its strength to paralyse "chauvinist elements".[212] Moscow soon forced the French Communist Party and the Communist Party of Great Britain to adopt anti-war positions. On 7 September, Stalin called Georgi Dimitrov,[clarification needed] who sketched a new Comintern line on the war that stated that the war was unjust and imperialist, which was approved by the secretariat of the Comintern on 9 September. Thus, western communist parties now had to oppose the war and to vote against war credits.[213] Although the French communists had unanimously voted in Parliament for war credits on 2 September and declared their "unshakeable will" to defend the country on 19 September, the Comintern formally instructed the party to condemn the war as imperialist on 27 September. By 1 October, the French communists advocated listening to German peace proposals, and leader Maurice Thorez deserted from the French Army on 4 October and fled to Russia.[214] Other communists also deserted from the army.

The Communist Party of Germany featured similar attitudes. In Die Welt, a communist newspaper published in Stockholm[f] the exiled communist leader Walter Ulbricht opposed the Allies, stated that Britain represented "the most reactionary force in the world",[216] and argued, "The German government declared itself ready for friendly relations with the Soviet Union, whereas the English–French war bloc desires a war against the socialist Soviet Union. The Soviet people and the working people of Germany have an interest in preventing the English war plan".[217]

Despite a warning by the Comintern, German tensions were raised when the Soviets stated in September that they must enter Poland to "protect" their ethnic Ukrainian and Belarusian brethren from Germany. Molotov later admitted to German officials that the excuse was necessary because the Kremlin could find no other pretext for the Soviet invasion.[218]

During the early months of the Pact, the Soviet foreign policy became critical of the Allies and more pro-German in turn. During the Fifth Session of the Supreme Soviet on 31 October 1939, Molotov analyzed the international situation, thus giving the direction for communist propaganda. According to Molotov, Germany had a legitimate interest in regaining its position as a great power, and the Allies had started an aggressive war in order to maintain the Versailles system.[219]

Expansion of raw materials and military trading

Germany and the Soviet Union entered an intricate trade pact on 11 February 1940 that was over four times larger than the one that the two countries had signed in August 1939.[220] The new trade pact helped Germany surmount a British blockade.[220] In the first year, Germany received one million tons of cereals, half-a-million tons of wheat, 900,000 tons of oil, 100,000 tons of cotton, 500,000 tons of phosphates and considerable amounts of other vital raw materials, along with the transit of one million tons of soybeans from Manchuria. Those and other supplies were being transported through Soviet and occupied Polish territories.[220] The Soviets were to receive a naval cruiser, the plans to the battleship Bismarck, heavy naval guns, other naval gear and 30 of Germany's latest warplanes, including the Bf 109 and Bf 110 fighters and Ju 88 bomber.[220] The Soviets would also receive oil and electric equipment, locomotives, turbines, generators, diesel engines, ships, machine tools, and samples of German artillery, tanks, explosives, chemical-warfare equipment, and other items.[220]

The Soviets also helped Germany to avoid British naval blockades by providing a submarine base, Basis Nord, in the northern Soviet Union near Murmansk.[212] That also provided a refueling and maintenance location and a takeoff point for raids and attacks on shipping.[212] In addition, the Soviets provided Germany with access to the Northern Sea Route for both cargo ships and raiders though only the commerce raider Komet used the route before the German invasion, which forced Britain to protect sea lanes in both the Atlantic and the Pacific.[221]

Summer deterioration of relations

The Finnish and Baltic invasions began a deterioration of relations between the Soviets and Germany.[222] Stalin's invasions were a severe irritant to Berlin since the intent to accomplish them had not been communicated to the Germans beforehand, and they prompted concern that Stalin was seeking to form an anti-German bloc.[223] Molotov's reassurances to the Germans only intensified the Germans' mistrust. On 16 June, as the Soviets invaded Lithuania but before they had invaded Latvia and Estonia, Ribbentrop instructed his staff "to submit a report as soon as possible as to whether in the Baltic States a tendency to seek support from the Reich can be observed or whether an attempt was made to form a bloc."[224]

In August 1940, the Soviet Union briefly suspended its deliveries under its commercial agreement after relations were strained after disagreements over policy in Romania, the Soviet war with Finland, Germany's falling behind on its deliveries of goods under the pact and Stalin's worry that Hitler's war with the West might end quickly after France signed an armistice.[225] The suspension created significant resource problems for Germany.[225] By the end of August, relations had improved again, as the countries had redrawn the Hungarian and Romanian borders and settled some Bulgarian claims, and Stalin was again convinced that Germany would face a long war in the west with Britain's improvement in its air battle with Germany and the execution of an agreement between the United States and Britain regarding destroyers and bases.[226]

In early September however, Germany arranged its own occupation of Romania, targeting its oil fields.[227] That move raised tensions with the Soviets, who responded that Germany was supposed to have consulted with the Soviet Union under Article III of the pact.[227]

German–Soviet Axis talks

 
Ribbentrop taking leave of Molotov in Berlin, November 1940

After Germany in September 1940 entered the Tripartite Pact with Japan and Italy, Ribbentrop wrote to Stalin, inviting Molotov to Berlin for negotiations aimed to create a 'continental bloc' of Germany, Italy, Japan, and the Soviet Union that would oppose Britain and the United States.[228] Stalin sent Molotov to Berlin to negotiate the terms for the Soviet Union to join the Axis and potentially to enjoy the spoils of the pact.[229][230] After negotiations during November 1940 on where to extend the Soviet sphere of influence, Hitler broke off talks and continued planning for the eventual attempts to invade the Soviet Union.[228][231]

Late relations

 
Situation in Europe by May to June 1941, immediately before Operation Barbarossa

In an effort to demonstrate peaceful intentions toward Germany, on 13 April 1941, the Soviets signed a neutrality pact with Japan, an Axis power.[232] While Stalin had little faith in Japan's commitment to neutrality, he felt that the pact was important for its political symbolism to reinforce a public affection for Germany.[233] Stalin felt that there was a growing split in German circles about whether Germany should initiate a war with the Soviet Union.[233] Stalin did not know that Hitler had been secretly discussing an invasion of the Soviet Union since summer 1940[234] and that Hitler had ordered his military in late 1940 to prepare for war in the East, regardless of the parties' talks of a potential Soviet entry as a fourth Axis power.[235]

Termination

 
The new border between Nazi Germany and Soviet Union from September 1939 to June 1941, somewhere in the occupied territory of Poland

Germany unilaterally terminated the pact at 03:15 on 22 June 1941 by launching a massive attack on the Soviet Union in Operation Barbarossa.[121] Stalin had ignored repeated warnings that Germany was likely to invade[236][237][238] and ordered no "full-scale" mobilisation of forces although the mobilisation was ongoing.[239] After the launch of the invasion, the territories gained by the Soviet Union as a result of the pact were lost in a matter of weeks. The southeastern part was absorbed into Greater Germany's General Government, and the rest was integrated with the Reichskommissariats Ostland and Ukraine. Within six months, the Soviet military had suffered 4.3 million casualties,[240] and three million more had been captured.[241] The lucrative export of Soviet raw materials to Germany over the course of the economic relations continued uninterrupted until the outbreak of hostilities. The Soviet exports in several key areas enabled Germany to maintain its stocks of rubber and grain from the first day of the invasion to October 1941.[242]

Aftermath

 
Grey area: prewar Polish territory east of the Curzon Line annexed by the Soviet Union after the war
 
Soviet expansion, changes to Central European borders and creation of the Eastern bloc after World War II

Discovery of the secret protocol

The German original of the secret protocols was presumably destroyed in the bombing of Germany,[243] but in late 1943, Ribbentrop had ordered the most secret records of the German Foreign Office from 1933 onward, amounting to some 9,800 pages, to be microfilmed. When the various departments of the Foreign Office in Berlin were evacuated to Thuringia at the end of the war, Karl von Loesch, a civil servant who had worked for the chief interpreter Paul Otto Schmidt, was entrusted with the microfilm copies. He eventually received orders to destroy the secret documents but decided to bury the metal container with the microfilms as personal insurance for his future well-being. In May 1945, von Loesch approached the British Lieutenant Colonel Robert C. Thomson with the request to transmit a personal letter to Duncan Sandys, Churchill's son-in-law. In the letter, von Loesch revealed that he had knowledge of the documents' whereabouts but expected preferential treatment in return. Thomson and his American counterpart, Ralph Collins, agreed to transfer von Loesch to Marburg, in the American zone if he would produce the microfilms. The microfilms contained a copy of the Non-Aggression Treaty as well as the Secret Protocol.[244] Both documents were discovered as part of the microfilmed records in August 1945 by US State Department employee Wendell B. Blancke, the head of a special unit called "Exploitation German Archives" (EGA).[245]

News of the secret protocols first appeared during the Nuremberg trials. Alfred Seidl, the attorney for defendant Hans Frank, was able to place into evidence an affidavit that described them. It was written from memory by Nazi Foreign Office lawyer Friedrich Gaus [de], who wrote the text and was present at its signing in Moscow. Later, Seidl obtained the German-language text of the secret protocols from an anonymous Allied source and attempted to place them into evidence while he was questioning witness Ernst von Weizsäcker, a former Foreign Office State Secretary. The Allied prosecutors objected, and the texts were not accepted into evidence, but Weizsäcker was permitted to describe them from memory, thus corroborating the Gaus affidavit. Finally, at the request of a St. Louis Post-Dispatch reporter, American deputy prosecutor Thomas J. Dodd acquired a copy of the secret protocols from Seidl and had it translated into English. They were first published on 22 May 1946 in a front-page story in that newspaper.[246] Later, in Britain, they were published by The Manchester Guardian.

The protocols gained wider media attention when they were included in an official State Department collection, Nazi–Soviet Relations 1939–1941, edited by Raymond J. Sontag and James S. Beddie and published on 21 January 1948. The decision to publish the key documents on German–Soviet relations, including the treaty and protocol, had been taken already in spring 1947. Sontag and Beddie prepared the collection throughout the summer of 1947. In November 1947, President Harry S. Truman personally approved the publication, but it was held back in view of the Foreign Ministers Conference in London scheduled for December. Since negotiations at that conference did not prove to be constructive from an American point of view, the document edition was sent to press. The documents made headlines worldwide.[247] State Department officials counted it as a success: "The Soviet Government was caught flat-footed in what was the first effective blow from our side in a clear-cut propaganda war."[248]

Despite publication of the recovered copy in western media, for decades, the official policy of the Soviet Union was to deny the existence of the secret protocol.[249] The secret protocol's existence was officially denied until 1989. Vyacheslav Molotov, one of the signatories, went to his grave categorically rejecting its existence.[250] The French Communist Party did not acknowledge the existence of the secret protocol until 1968, as the party de-Stalinized.[214]

On 23 August 1986, tens of thousands of demonstrators in 21 western cities, including New York, London, Stockholm, Toronto, Seattle, and Perth participated in Black Ribbon Day Rallies to draw attention to the secret protocols.[251]

Stalin's Falsifiers of History and Axis negotiations

In response to the publication of the secret protocols and other secret German–Soviet relations documents in the State Department edition Nazi–Soviet Relations (1948), Stalin published Falsifiers of History, which included the claim that during the pact's operation, Stalin rejected Hitler's claim to share in a division of the world,[252] without mentioning the Soviet offer to join the Axis. That version persisted, without exception, in historical studies, official accounts, memoirs, and textbooks published in the Soviet Union until the dissolution of the Soviet Union.[252]

The book also claimed that the Munich agreement was a "secret agreement" between Germany and "the west" and a "highly important phase in their policy aimed at goading the Hitlerite aggressors against the Soviet Union."[253][254]

Denial of the secret protocol

For decades, it was the official policy of the Soviet Union to deny the existence of the secret protocol to the Soviet–German Pact. At the behest of Mikhail Gorbachev, Alexander Nikolaevich Yakovlev headed a commission investigating the existence of such a protocol. In December 1989, the commission concluded that the protocol had existed and revealed its findings to the Congress of People's Deputies of the Soviet Union.[243] As a result, the Congress passed the declaration confirming the existence of the secret protocols and condemning and denouncing them.[255][256] The Soviet government thus finally acknowledged and denounced the Secret Treaty[257] and Mikhail Gorbachev, the last Head of State condemned the pact. Vladimir Putin condemned the pact as "immoral" but also defended it as a "necessary evil".[258][259] At a press conference on 19 December 2019, Putin went further and announced that the signing of the pact was no worse than the 1938 Munich Agreement, which led to the partition of Czechoslovakia.[260][261]

Both successor states of the pact parties have declared the secret protocols to be invalid from the moment that they were signed: the Federal Republic of Germany on 1 September 1989 and the Soviet Union on 24 December 1989,[262] following an examination of the microfilmed copy of the German originals.[263]

The Soviet copy of the original document was declassified in 1992 and published in a scientific journal in early 1993.[263]

In August 2009, in an article written for the Polish newspaper Gazeta Wyborcza, Russian Prime Minister Vladimir Putin condemned the Molotov–Ribbentrop Pact as "immoral".[264][265]

The new Russian nationalists and revisionists, including Russian negationist Aleksandr Dyukov and Nataliya Narotchnitskaya, whose book carried an approving foreword by the Russian foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov, described the pact as a necessary measure because of the British and French failure to enter into an antifascist pact.[257][266]

Postwar commentary on motives of Stalin and Hitler

Some scholars believe that, from the very beginning of the Tripartite negotiations between the Soviet Union, Great Britain and France, the Soviets clearly required the other parties to agree to a Soviet occupation of Estonia, Latvia and Lithuania[50] and for Finland to be included in the Soviet sphere of influence.[267]

On the timing of German rapprochement, many historians agree that the dismissal of Maxim Litvinov, whose Jewish ethnicity was viewed unfavourably by Nazi Germany, removed an obstacle to negotiations with Germany.[70][268][269][270][271][272][273][274] Stalin immediately directed Molotov to "purge the ministry of Jews."[275][271][276] Given Litvinov's prior attempts to create an anti-fascist coalition, association with the doctrine of collective security with France and Britain and a pro-Western orientation[277] by the standards of the Kremlin, his dismissal indicated the existence of a Soviet option of rapprochement with Germany.[278][g] Likewise, Molotov's appointment served as a signal to Germany that the Soviet Union was open to offers.[278] The dismissal also signaled to France and Britain the existence of a potential negotiation option with Germany.[47][279] One British official wrote that Litvinov's termination also meant the loss of an admirable technician or shock-absorber but that Molotov's "modus operandi" was "more truly Bolshevik than diplomatic or cosmopolitan."[280] Carr argued that the Soviet Union's replacement of Litvinov with Molotov on 3 May 1939 indicated not an irrevocable shift towards alignment with Germany but rather was Stalin's way of engaging in hard bargaining with the British and the French by appointing a proverbial hard man to the Foreign Commissariat.[281] Historian Albert Resis stated that the Litvinov dismissal gave the Soviets freedom to pursue faster German negotiations but that they did not abandon British–French talks.[282] Derek Watson argued that Molotov could get the best deal with Britain and France because he was not encumbered with the baggage of collective security and could negotiate with Germany.[283] Geoffrey Roberts argued that Litvinov's dismissal helped the Soviets with British–French talks because Litvinov doubted or maybe even opposed such discussions.[284]

E. H. Carr, a frequent defender of Soviet policy,[285] stated: "In return for 'non-intervention' Stalin secured a breathing space of immunity from German attack."[286] According to Carr, the "bastion" created by means of the pact "was and could only be, a line of defense against potential German attack."[286] According to Carr, an important advantage was that "if Soviet Russia had eventually to fight Hitler, the Western Powers would already be involved."[286][287] However, during the last decades, that view has been disputed. Historian Werner Maser stated that "the claim that the Soviet Union was at the time threatened by Hitler, as Stalin supposed ... is a legend, to whose creators Stalin himself belonged.[288] In Maser's view, "neither Germany nor Japan were in a situation [of] invading the USSR even with the least perspective [sic] of success," which must not have been known to Stalin.[289] Carr further stated that for a long time, the primary motive of Stalin's sudden change of course was assumed to be the fear of German aggressive intentions.[290] On the other hand, Soviet-born Australian historical writer Alex Ryvchin characterized the pact as "a Soviet deal with the devil, which contained a secret protocol providing for the remaining independent states of East-Central Europe to be treated as courses on some debauched degustation menu for two of the greatest monsters in history."[291]

Many Polish newspapers published numerous articles claiming that Russia must apologise to Poland for the pact.[292]

Two weeks after Soviet armies had entered the Baltic states, Berlin requested Finland to permit the transit of German troops, and five weeks later Hitler issued a secret directive "to take up the Russian problem, to think about war preparations," a war whose objective would include establishment of a Baltic confederation.[293]

A number of German historians have debunked the claim that Operation Barbarossa was a preemptive strike, such as Andreas Hillgruber, Rolf-Dieter Müller, and Christian Hartmann, but they also acknowledge that the Soviets were aggressive to their neighbors.[294][295][296]

Remembrance and response

The pact was a taboo subject in the postwar Soviet Union.[297] In December 1989, the Congress of People's Deputies of the Soviet Union condemned the pact and its secret protocol as "legally deficient and invalid."[298] In modern Russia, the pact is often portrayed positively or neutrally by the pro-government propaganda; for example, Russian textbooks tend to describe the pact as a defensive measure, not as one aiming at territorial expansion.[297] In 2009, Russian President Vladimir Putin stated that "there are grounds to condemn the Pact",[299] but in 2014, described it as "necessary for Russia's survival".[300][301] Accusations that cast doubt on the positive portrayal of the USSR's role in World War II have been seen as highly problematic for the modern Russian state, which sees Russia's victory in the war as one of "the most venerated pillars of state ideology", which legitimises the current government and its policies.[302][303]

In 2009, the European Parliament proclaimed 23 August, the anniversary of the Molotov–Ribbentrop Pact, as the European Day of Remembrance for Victims of Stalinism and Nazism, to be commemorated with dignity and impartiality.[304] In connection with the Molotov–Ribbentrop Pact, the Organization for Security and Co-operation in Europe parliamentary resolution condemned both communism and fascism for starting World War II and called for a day of remembrance for victims of both Stalinism and Nazism on 23 August.[305] In response to the resolution, Russian lawmakers threatened the OSCE with "harsh consequences".[305][306] A similar resolution was passed by the European Parliament a decade later, blaming the 1939 Molotov–Ribbentrop pact for the outbreak of war in Europe and again leading to criticism by Russian authorities.[302][303][307]

During the re-ignition of Cold War tensions in 1982, the US Congress during the Reagan administration established Baltic Freedom Day, to be remembered every 14 June in the United States.[308]

See also

Molotov–Ribbentrop Pact

Related

Notes

  1. ^ Russian: Пакт Молотова-Риббентропа
  2. ^ Russian: Договор о Ненападении между Германией и Союзом Советских Социалистических Республик
  3. ^ To 53 million ℛℳ in German imports (0.9% of Germany's total imports and 6.3% of Russia's total exports) and 34 million ℛℳ in German exports (0.6% of Germany's total exports and 4.6% of Russia's total imports) in 1938.[23]
  4. ^ On 28 July, Molotov sent a political instruction to the Soviet ambassador in Berlin that marked the start of secret Soviet–German political negotiations.[76]
  5. ^ The actual number of deported in the period of 1939–1941 remains unknown and various estimates vary from 350,000[202] to over 2 million, mostly World War II estimates by the underground. The earlier number is based on records made by the NKVD and does not include roughly 180,000 prisoners of war, who were also in Soviet captivity. Most modern historians estimate the number of all people deported from areas taken by Soviet Union during that period at between 800,000 and 1,500,000;[203][204] for example, RJ Rummel gives the number of 1,200,000 million;[205] Tony Kushner and Katharine Knox give 1,500,000.[206]
  6. ^ Having been banned in Stockholm, it continued to be published in Zurich.[215]
  7. ^ According to Paul Flewers, Stalin's address to the eighteenth congress of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union on 10 March 1939, discounted any idea of German designs on the Soviet Union. Stalin had intended: "To be cautious and not allow our country to be drawn into conflicts by warmongers who are accustomed to have others pull the chestnuts out of the fire for them." This was intended to warn the Western powers that they could not necessarily rely upon the support of the Soviet Union.[213]

References

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  2. ^ "Faksimile Nichtangriffsvertrag zwischen Deutschland und der Union der Sozialistischen Sowjetrepubliken, 23. August 1939 / Bayerische Staatsbibliothek (BSB, München)". 1000dokumente.de. Retrieved 14 March 2020.
  3. ^ Ronen, Yaël (19 May 2011). Transition from Illegal Regimes under International Law. Cambridge University Press. pp. xix. ISBN 978-1-139-49617-9.
  4. ^ Schwendemann, Heinrich (1995). "German-Soviet Economic Relations at the Time of the Hitler-Stalin pact 1939-1941". Cahiers du Monde russe. 36 (1/2): 161–178. doi:10.3406/cmr.1995.2425. ISSN 1252-6576. JSTOR 20170949.
  5. ^ a b "See Secret in Accord: Dr. Harper Says Stalin-Hitler Pact May Prove an Alliance". New York Times. 28 August 1939. p. 11. Retrieved 2 January 2019.
  6. ^ Doerr, Paul W. (1 July 2001). "'Frigid but Unprovocative': British Policy towards the USSR from the Nazi-Soviet Pact to the Winter War, 1939". Journal of Contemporary History. 36 (3): 423–439. doi:10.1177/002200940103600302. ISSN 0022-0094. S2CID 159616101.
  7. ^ Nolfo, Ennio Di (1992). "Italy and the nazi-soviet alliance of August 23, 1939". Sección cronológica = Section chronologique = Chronological Section, Vol. 1, 1992 (Sección cronológica): 413–419. ISBN 978-84-600-8153-1.
  8. ^ Senn, Alfred (January 1990). "Perestroika in Lithuanian Historiography: The Molotov-Ribbentrop Pact". The Russian Review. 49 (1): 44–53. doi:10.2307/130082. JSTOR 130082.
  9. ^ Goldman 2012, pp. 163–64.
  10. ^ Collier, Martin, and Pedley, Philip Germany 1919–45 (2000) p. 146
  11. ^ Brackman, Roman The Secret File of Joseph Stalin: A Hidden Life (2001) p. 341
  12. ^ "German-Soviet Pact". Holocaust Encyclopedia. United States Holocaust Memorial Museum. Retrieved 7 April 2019.
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  273. ^ Levin, Nora (1988). The Jews in the Soviet Union Since 1917: Paradox of Survival. NYU Press. p. 330. ISBN 0-8147-5051-6. [Litvinov] was referred to by the German radio as 'Litvinov-Finkelstein' – was dropped in favor of Vyascheslav Molotov. 'The eminent Jew', as Churchill put it, 'the target of German antagonism was flung aside ... like a broken tool ... The Jew Litvinov was gone and Hitler's dominant prejudice placated.'
  274. ^ Roberts 1992b, Introduction: 'Perhaps the only thing that can be salvaged from the wreckage of the orthodox interpretation of Litvinov's dismissal is some notion that, by appointing Molotov foreign minister, Stalin was preparing for the contingency of a possible deal with Hitler. In view of Litvinov's Jewish heritage and his militant anti-Nazism, that is not an unreasonable supposition. But it is a hypothesis for which there is as yet no evidence. Moreover, we shall see that what evidence there is suggests that Stalin's decision was determined by a quite different set of circumstances and calculations.'
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  283. ^ Watson 2000, pp. 695–722: 'The choice of Molotov reflected not only the appointment of a nationalist and one of Stalin's leading lieutenants, a Russian who was not a Jew and who could negotiate with Nazi Germany, but also someone unencumbered with the baggage of collective security who could obtain the best deal with Britain and France, if they could be forced into an agreement.'
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External links

  • Originals of the treaty and protocols from the archives of the Russian Foreign Ministry, published by History Foundation in Russia in May 2019
  • Text of the pact
  • Nazi–Soviet Relations 1939–1941
  • Leonas Cerskus. The Story of Lithuanian soldier
  • Modern History Sourcebook, a collection of public domain and copy-permitted texts in modern European and World history has scanned photocopies of original documents
  • The Meaning of the Soviet–German Non-Aggression Pact Molotov speech to the Supreme Soviet on August 31, 1939

molotov, ribbentrop, pact, german, soviet, pact, redirects, here, weimar, german, soviet, aggression, pact, treaty, berlin, 1926, aggression, pact, between, nazi, germany, soviet, union, that, enabled, those, powers, partition, eastern, europe, between, them, . German Soviet pact redirects here For the Weimar era German Soviet non aggression pact see Treaty of Berlin 1926 The Molotov Ribbentrop Pact was a non aggression pact between Nazi Germany and the Soviet Union that enabled those powers to partition Eastern Europe between them The pact was signed in Moscow on 23 August 1939 by German Foreign Minister Joachim von Ribbentrop and Soviet Foreign Minister Vyacheslav Molotov 1 and was officially known as the Treaty of Non Aggression between Germany and the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics 2 3 Unofficially it has also been referred to as the Hitler Stalin Pact 4 5 Nazi Soviet Pact 6 or Nazi Soviet Alliance 7 Molotov Ribbentrop Pact a Treaty of Non Aggression between Germany and the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics b Stalin and Ribbentrop shaking hands after the signing of the pact in the KremlinSigned23 August 1939 83 years ago 1939 08 23 LocationMoscow Soviet UnionExpiration23 August 1949 planned 22 June 1941 terminated 30 July 1941 officially declared null and void SignatoriesJoachim von Ribbentrop Vyacheslav MolotovParties Germany Soviet UnionLanguagesGermanRussianFull textMolotov Ribbentrop Pact at WikisourceThe establishment of the treaty was preceded by Soviet efforts to form a tripartite alliance with Britain and France The Soviet Union began negotiations with Germany on 22 August one day after talks broke down with Britain and France and the Molotov Ribbentrop pact was signed the next day Its clauses provided a written guarantee of peace by each party towards the other and a commitment that declared that neither government would ally itself to or aid an enemy of the other In addition to the publicly announced stipulations of non aggression the treaty included the Secret Protocol which defined the borders of Soviet and German spheres of influence across Poland Lithuania Latvia Estonia and Finland The secret protocol also recognised the interest of Lithuania in the Vilnius region and Germany declared its complete uninterest in Bessarabia The rumoured existence of the Secret Protocol was proved only when it was made public during the Nuremberg Trials 8 Soon after the pact Germany invaded Poland on 1 September 1939 Soviet leader Joseph Stalin ordered the Soviet invasion of Poland on 17 September one day after a Soviet Japanese ceasefire came into effect after the Battles of Khalkhin Gol 9 and one day after the Supreme Soviet of the Soviet Union had approved the Molotov Ribbentrop Pact 10 After the invasions the new border between the two countries was confirmed by the supplementary protocol of the German Soviet Frontier Treaty In March 1940 parts of the Karelia and Salla regions in Finland were annexed by the Soviet Union after the Winter War That was followed by the Soviet annexation of Estonia Latvia Lithuania and parts of Romania Bessarabia Northern Bukovina and the Hertsa region Concern for ethnic Ukrainians and Belarusians had been used as pretexts for the Soviets invasion of Poland Stalin s invasion of Bukovina in 1940 violated the pact since it went beyond the Soviet sphere of influence that had been agreed with the Axis 11 The territories of Poland annexed by the Soviet Union after the 1939 Soviet invasion east of the Curzon line remained in the Soviet Union after the war ended and are now in Ukraine and Belarus Vilnius was given to Lithuania Only Podlaskie and a small part of Galicia east of the San River around Przemysl were returned to Poland Of all the other territories annexed by the Soviet Union in 1939 to 1940 those detached from Finland Western Karelia Petsamo Estonia Estonian Ingria and Petseri County and Latvia Abrene remain part of Russia the successor state to the Russian SSR after the dissolution of the Soviet Union in 1991 The territories annexed from Romania had also been integrated into the Soviet Union as the Moldavian SSR or oblasts of the Ukrainian SSR The core of Bessarabia now forms Moldova Northern Bessarabia Northern Bukovina and the Hertsa region now form the Chernivtsi Oblast of Ukraine Southern Bessarabia is part of the Odessa Oblast which is also in Ukraine The pact was terminated on 22 June 1941 when Germany launched Operation Barbarossa and invaded the Soviet Union in pursuit of the ideological goal of Lebensraum 12 The Anglo Soviet Agreement replaced it After the war Ribbentrop was convicted of war crimes at the Nuremberg trials and executed Molotov died in 1986 Contents 1 Background 1 1 Munich Conference 2 Negotiations 2 1 Beginning of secret talks 2 2 August negotiations 2 3 News leaks 3 Secret protocol 4 Revelation 5 Consequences in Finland Poland the Baltic States and Romania 5 1 Initial invasions 5 2 Modification of secret protocols 5 3 Soviet war with Finland and Katyn massacre 5 4 Soviet Union occupies the Baltic states and part of Romania 5 5 Beginnings of Operation Tannenberg and other Nazi atrocities 5 6 Romania and Soviet republics 5 7 Further secret protocol modifications settling borders and immigration issues 6 Soviet German relations 6 1 Early political issues 6 2 Expansion of raw materials and military trading 6 3 Summer deterioration of relations 6 4 German Soviet Axis talks 6 5 Late relations 7 Termination 8 Aftermath 8 1 Discovery of the secret protocol 8 2 Stalin s Falsifiers of History and Axis negotiations 8 3 Denial of the secret protocol 8 4 Postwar commentary on motives of Stalin and Hitler 9 Remembrance and response 10 See also 10 1 Molotov Ribbentrop Pact 10 2 Related 11 Notes 12 References 13 Sources 14 External linksBackground EditMain articles Soviet German relations before 1941 and Molotov Ribbentrop Pact negotiations 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 Map of territorial changes in Europe after World War I as of 1923 Note that the creation of the Irish Free State and Northern Ireland is not shown Map of the Second Polish Republic 1937 The outcome of World War I was disastrous for both the German and the Russian Empires The Russian Civil War broke out in late 1917 after the Bolshevik Revolution and Vladimir Lenin the first leader of the new Soviet Russia recognised the independence of Finland Estonia Latvia Lithuania and Poland Moreover facing a German military advance Lenin and Trotsky were forced to agree to the Treaty of Brest Litovsk 13 which ceded many western Russian territories to Germany After the German collapse a multinational Allied led army intervened in the civil war 1917 1922 14 On 16 April 1922 the German Weimar Republic and the Soviet Union agreed to the Treaty of Rapallo in which they renounced territorial and financial claims against each other 15 Each party also pledged neutrality in the event of an attack against the other with the Treaty of Berlin 1926 16 Trade between the two countries had fallen sharply after World War I but trade agreements signed in the mid 1920s helped to increase trade to 433 million ℛℳ per year by 1927 17 At the beginning of the 1930s the Nazi Party s rise to power increased tensions between Germany and the Soviet Union along with other countries with ethnic Slavs who were considered Untermenschen subhuman according to Nazi racial ideology 18 Moreover the anti Semitic Nazis associated ethnic Jews with both communism and financial capitalism both of which they opposed 19 20 Nazi theory held that Slavs in the Soviet Union were being ruled by Jewish Bolshevik masters 21 Hitler had spoken of an inevitable battle for the acquisition of land for Germany in the east 22 The resulting manifestation of German anti Bolshevism and an increase in Soviet foreign debts caused a dramatic decline in German Soviet trade c Imports of Soviet goods to Germany fell to 223 million ℛℳ in 1934 by the more isolationist Stalinist regime asserting power and by the abandonment of postwar Treaty of Versailles military controls both of which decreased Germany s reliance on Soviet imports 17 24 clarification needed In 1936 Germany and Fascist Italy supported the Spanish Nationalists in the Spanish Civil War but the Soviets supported the Spanish Republic 25 Thus the Spanish Civil War became a proxy war between Germany and the Soviet Union 26 In 1936 Germany and Japan entered the Anti Comintern Pact 27 and they were joined a year later by Italy 28 On 31 March 1939 Britain extended a guarantee to Poland that if any action clearly threatened Polish independence and if the Poles felt it vital to resist such action by force Britain would come to their aid Hitler was furious since that meant that the British were committed to political interests in Europe and that his land grabs such as the takeover of Czechoslovakia would no longer be taken lightly His response to the political checkmate would later be heard at a rally in Wilhelmshaven No power on earth would be able to break German might and if the Western Allies thought Germany would stand by while they marshalled their satellite states to act in their interests then they were sorely mistaken Ultimately Hitler s discontent with a British Polish alliance led to a restructuring of strategy towards Moscow Alfred Rosenberg wrote that he had spoken to Hermann Goering of the potential alliance with the Soviet Union When Germany s life is at stake even a temporary alliance with Moscow must be contemplated Sometime in early May 1939 at Berghof Ribbentrop showed Hitler a film of Stalin viewing his military in a recent parade Hitler became intrigued with the idea of allying with the Soviets and Ribbentrop recalled Hitler saying that Stalin looked like a man he could do business with Ribbentrop was then given the nod to pursue negotiations with Moscow 29 Munich Conference Edit Hitler s fierce anti Soviet rhetoric was one of the reasons that Britain and France decided that Soviet participation in the 1938 Munich Conference on Czechoslovakia would be both dangerous and useless 30 In the Munich Agreement that followed 31 the conference agreed to a German annexation of part of Czechoslovakia in late 1938 but in early 1939 it had been completely dissolved 32 The policy of appeasement toward Germany was conducted by the governments of British Prime Minister Neville Chamberlain and French Prime Minister Edouard Daladier 33 The policy immediately raised the question of whether the Soviet Union could avoid being next on Hitler s list 34 The Soviet leadership believed that the West wanted to encourage German aggression in the East 35 and to stay neutral in a war initiated by Germany in the hope that Germany and the Soviet Union would wear each other out and put an end to both regimes 36 All territories taken from Czechoslovakia by its neighbours in October 1938 Munich Agreement and March 1939 For Germany an autarkic economic approach and an alliance with Britain were impossible and so closer relations with the Soviet Union to obtain raw materials became necessary 37 Besides economic reasons an expected British blockade during a war would also create massive shortages for Germany in a number of key raw materials 38 After the Munich Agreement the resulting increase in German military supply needs and Soviet demands for military machinery made talks between the two countries occur from late 1938 to March 1939 39 Also the third Soviet five year plan required new infusions of technology and industrial equipment 37 40 clarification needed German war planners had estimated serious shortfalls of raw materials if Germany entered a war without the Soviet supply 41 On 31 March 1939 in response to Germany s defiance of the Munich Agreement and the creation of the Protectorate of Bohemia and Moravia 42 Britain pledged its support and that of France to guarantee the independence of Poland Belgium Romania Greece and Turkey 43 On 6 April Poland and Britain agreed to formalise the guarantee as a military alliance pending negotiations 44 On 28 April Hitler denounced the 1934 German Polish declaration of non aggression and the 1935 Anglo German Naval Agreement 45 In mid March 1939 attempting to contain Hitler s expansionism the Soviet Union Britain and France started to trade a flurry of suggestions and counterplans on a potential political and military agreement 46 47 Informal consultations started in April but the main negotiations began only in May 47 Meanwhile throughout early 1939 Germany had secretly hinted to Soviet diplomats that it could offer better terms for a political agreement than could Britain and France 48 49 50 The Soviet Union which feared Western powers and the possibility of capitalist encirclements had little hope either of preventing war and wanted nothing less than an ironclad military alliance with France and Britain 51 to provide guaranteed support for a two pronged attack on Germany 52 Stalin s adherence to the collective security line was thus purely conditional 53 Britain and France believed that war could still be avoided and that since the Soviet Union was so weakened by the Great Purge 54 that it could not be a main military participant 52 Many military sources clarification needed were at variance with the last point especially after the Soviet victories over the Japanese Kwantung Army in the Manchuria 55 France was more anxious to find an agreement with the Soviet Union than Britain was As a continental power France was more willing to make concessions and more fearful of the dangers of an agreement between the Soviet Union and Germany 56 The contrasting attitudes partly explain why the Soviets have often been charged with playing a double game in 1939 of carrying on open negotiations for an alliance with Britain and France but secretly considering propositions from Germany 56 By the end of May drafts had been formally presented 47 In mid June the main tripartite negotiations started 57 Discussions were focused on potential guarantees to Central and Eastern Europe in the case of German aggression 58 The Soviets proposed to consider that a political turn towards Germany by the Baltic states would constitute an indirect aggression towards the Soviet Union 59 Britain opposed such proposals because they feared the Soviets proposed language would justify a Soviet intervention in Finland and the Baltic states or push those countries to seek closer relations with Germany 60 61 The discussion of a definition of indirect aggression became one of the sticking points between the parties and by mid July the tripartite political negotiations effectively stalled while the parties agreed to start negotiations on a military agreement which the Soviets insisted had to be reached at the same time as any political agreement 62 One day before the military negotiations began the Soviet Politburo pessimistically expected the coming negotiations to go nowhere and formally decided to consider German proposals seriously 63 The military negotiations began on 12 August in Moscow with a British delegation headed by the retired admiral Sir Reginald Drax French delegation headed by General Aime Doumenc and the Soviet delegation headed by Kliment Voroshilov the commissar of defence and Boris Shaposhnikov chief of the general staff Without written credentials Drax was not authorised to guarantee anything to the Soviet Union and had been instructed by the British government to prolong the discussions as long as possible and to avoid answering the question of whether Poland would agree to permit Soviet troops to enter the country if the Germans invaded 64 As the negotiations failed a great opportunity to prevent the German aggression was probably lost 65 Negotiations EditMain article Molotov Ribbentrop Pact negotiations Molotov left and Ribbentrop at the signing of the pact The Prussian Tribute in Moscow in the Polish satirical newspaper Mucha of 8 September 1939 Beginning of secret talks Edit See also Nazi Soviet economic relations 1934 41 From April to July Soviet and German officials made statements on the potential for the beginning of political negotiations but no actual negotiations took place 66 The Soviet Union had wanted good relations with Germany for years and was happy to see that feeling finally reciprocated wrote the historian Gerhard L Weinberg 67 The ensuing discussion of a potential political deal between Germany and the Soviet Union had to be channeled into the framework of economic negotiations between the two countries since close military and diplomatic connections that existed before the mid 1930s had been largely severed 68 In May Stalin replaced his foreign minister from 1930 to 1939 Maxim Litvinov who had advocated rapprochement with the West and was also Jewish 69 with Vyacheslav Molotov to allow the Soviet Union more latitude in discussions with more parties instead of only Britain and France 70 On 23 August 1939 two Focke Wulf Condors containing German diplomats officials and photographers about 20 in each plane headed by Ribbentrop descended into Moscow As the Nazi emissaries stepped off the plane a Soviet military band played Deutschland Deutschland uber Alles The Nazi arrival was well planned with all aesthetics in order The classic hammer and sickle was propped up next to the swastika of the Nazi flag that had been used in a local film studio for Soviet propaganda films After stepping off the plane and shaking hands Ribbentrop and Gustav Hilger along with German ambassador Friedrich Werner von der Schulenburg and Stalin s chief bodyguard Nikolai Vlasik entered a limousine operated by the NKVD to travel to Red Square The limousine arrived close to Stalin s office and was greeted by Alexander Poskrebyshev the chief of Stalin s personal chancellery The Germans were led up a flight of stairs to a room with lavish furnishings Stalin and Molotov greeted the visitors much to the Nazis surprise It was well known that Stalin avoided meeting foreign visitors and so his presence at the meeting showed how seriously that the Soviets were taking the negotiations 71 In late July and early August 1939 Soviet and German officials agreed on most of the details of a planned economic agreement 72 and specifically addressed a potential political agreement 73 74 75 d which the Soviets stated could come only after an economic agreement 77 The German presence in the Soviet capital during negotiations can be regarded as rather tense German pilot Hans Baur recalled that Soviet secret police followed every move Their job was to inform authorities when he left his residence and where he was headed Baur s guide informed him Another car would tack itself onto us and follow us fifty or so yards in the rear and wherever we went and whatever we did the secret police would be on our heels Baur also recalled trying to tip his Russian driver which led to a harsh exchange of words He was furious He wanted to know whether this was the thanks he got for having done his best for us to get him into prison We knew perfectly well it was forbidden to take tips 71 August negotiations Edit See also German Soviet Credit Agreement 1939 In early August Germany and the Soviet Union worked out the last details of their economic deal 78 and started to discuss a political alliance Both countries diplomats explained to each other the reasons for the hostility in their foreign policy in the 1930s and found common ground in both countries anticapitalism there is one common element in the ideology of Germany Italy and the Soviet Union opposition to the capitalist democracies or that it seems to us rather unnatural that a socialist state would stand on the side of the western democracies 79 80 81 82 At the same time British French and Soviet negotiators scheduled three party talks on military matters to occur in Moscow in August 1939 that aimed to define what the agreement would specify on the reaction of the three powers to a German attack 60 The tripartite military talks started in mid August hit a sticking point on the passage of Soviet troops through Poland if Germans attacked and the parties waited as British and French officials overseas pressured Polish officials to agree to such terms 83 84 Polish officials refused to allow Soviet troops into Polish territory if Germany attacked Polish Foreign Minister Jozef Beck pointed out that the Polish government feared that if the Red Army entered Polish territory it would never leave 85 86 On 19 August the 1939 German Soviet Commercial Agreement was finally signed 87 On 21 August the Soviets suspended the tripartite military talks and cited other reasons 48 88 The same day Stalin received assurances that Germany would approve secret protocols to the proposed non aggression pact that would place the half of Poland east of the Vistula River as well as Latvia Estonia Finland and Bessarabia in the Soviet sphere of influence 89 That night Stalin replied that the Soviets were willing to sign the pact and that he would receive Ribbentrop on 23 August 90 News leaks Edit The New York Times reported Nazi troop movement on 25 August 1939 soon before the Gleiwitz incident on 31 August 1939 led by Alfred Naujocks pictured On 25 August 1939 the New York Times ran a front page story by Otto D Tolischus Nazi Talks Secret whose subtitle included Soviet and Reich Agree on East 91 On 26 August 1939 the New York Times reported Japanese anger 92 and French communist surprise 93 over the pact The same day however Tolischus filed a story that noted Nazi troops on the move near Gleiwitz now Gliwice which led to the false flag Gleiwitz incident on 31 August 1939 94 On 28 August 1939 the New York Times was still reporting on fears of a Gleiwitz raid 95 On 29 August 1939 the New York Times reported that the Supreme Soviet had failed on its first day of convening to act on the pact 96 The same day the New York Times also reported from Montreal Canada that American Professor Samuel N Harper of the University of Chicago had stated publicly his belief that the Russo German non aggression pact conceals an agreement whereby Russia and Germany may have planned spheres of influence for Eastern Europe 5 On 30 August 1939 the New York Times reported a Soviet buildup on its Western frontiers by moving 200 000 troops from the Far East 97 Secret protocol EditOn 22 August one day after talks broke down with France and Britain Moscow revealed that Ribbentrop would visit Stalin the next day The Soviets were still negotiating with the British and the French missions in Moscow With the Western nations unwilling to accede to Soviet demands Stalin instead entered a secret German Soviet pact 98 On 23 August a ten year non aggression pact was signed with provisions that included consultation arbitration if either party disagreed neutrality if either went to war against a third power and no membership of a group which is directly or indirectly aimed at the other The article On Soviet German Relations in the Soviet newspaper Izvestia of 21 August 1939 stated Following completion of the Soviet German trade and credit agreement there has arisen the question of improving political links between Germany and the USSR 99 The Molotov Ribbentrop Pact German copy Last page of the Additional Secret Protocol of the Pact Russian copy There was also a secret protocol to the pact which was revealed only after Germany s defeat in 1945 100 although hints about its provisions had been leaked much earlier so as to influence Lithuania 101 According to the protocol Romania Poland Lithuania Latvia Estonia and Finland were divided into German and Soviet spheres of influence 100 In the north Finland Estonia and Latvia were assigned to the Soviet sphere 100 Poland was to be partitioned in the event of its political rearrangement the areas east of the Pisa Narev Vistula and San Rivers would go to the Soviet Union and Germany would occupy the west 100 Lithuania which was adjacent to East Prussia was assigned to the German sphere of influence but a second secret protocol agreed to in September 1939 reassigned Lithuania to the Soviet Union 102 According to the protocol Lithuania would be granted its historical capital Vilnius which was controlled by Poland during the interwar period Another clause stipulated that Germany would not interfere with the Soviet Union s actions towards Bessarabia which was then part of Romania 100 As a result Bessarabia as well as the Northern Bukovina and Hertsa regions were occupied by the Soviets and integrated into the Soviet Union At the signing Ribbentrop and Stalin enjoyed warm conversations exchanged toasts and further addressed the prior hostilities between the countries in the 1930s 103 They characterised Great Britain as always attempting to disrupt Soviet German relations and stated that the Anti Comintern Pact was aimed not at the Soviet Union but actually at Western democracies and frightened principally the City of London British financiers and the English shopkeepers 104 Revelation EditThe agreement stunned the world John Gunther in Moscow in August 1939 recalled how the news of the 19 August commercial agreement surprised journalists and diplomats who hoped for world peace They did not expect the 21 August announcement of the non aggression pact Nothing more unbelievable could be imagined Astonishment and skepticism turned quickly to consternation and alarm 105 The news was met with utter shock and surprise by government leaders and media worldwide most of whom were aware of only the British French Soviet negotiations which had taken place for months 48 105 by Germany s allies notably Japan by the Comintern and foreign Communist parties and Jewish communities all around the world 106 On 24 August Pravda and Izvestia carried news of the pact s public portions complete with the now famous front page picture of Molotov signing the treaty with a smiling Stalin looking on 48 The same day German diplomat Hans von Herwarth whose grandmother was Jewish informed Italian diplomat Guido Relli 107 and American charge d affaires Charles Bohlen of the secret protocol on the vital interests in the countries allotted spheres of influence but failed to reveal the annexation rights for territorial and political rearrangement 108 109 The agreement s public terms so exceeded the terms of an ordinary non aggression treaty requiring that both parties consult with each other and not aid a third party attacking either that Gunther heard a joke that Stalin had joined the anti Comintern pact 105 Time Magazine repeatedly referred to the Pact as the Communazi Pact and its participants as communazis until April 1941 110 111 112 113 114 Soviet propaganda and representatives went to great lengths to minimize the importance of the fact that they had opposed and fought the Germans in various ways for a decade prior to signing the pact Molotov tried to reassure the Germans of his good intentions by commenting to journalists that fascism is a matter of taste 115 For its part Germany also did a public volte face regarding its virulent opposition to the Soviet Union but Hitler still viewed an attack on the Soviet Union as inevitable 116 Concerns over the possible existence of a secret protocol were expressed first by the intelligence organizations of the Baltic states citation needed only days after the pact was signed Speculation grew stronger when Soviet negotiators referred to its content during the negotiations for military bases in those countries see occupation of the Baltic States The day after the pact was signed the Franco British military delegation urgently requested a meeting with Soviet military negotiator Kliment Voroshilov 117 On 25 August Voroshilov told them that in view of the changed political situation no useful purpose can be served in continuing the conversation 117 The same day Hitler told the British ambassador to Berlin that the pact with the Soviets prevented Germany from facing a two front war which changed the strategic situation from that in World War I and that Britain should accept his demands on Poland 118 On 25 August Hitler was surprised when Britain joined a defense pact with Poland 118 Hitler postponed his plans for an invasion of Poland on 26 August to 1 September 118 119 In accordance with the defence pact Britain and France declared war on Germany on 3 September 120 Consequences in Finland Poland the Baltic States and Romania Edit Nazis destroying border markers on the Polish German border 1939 Initial invasions Edit Main articles Invasion of Poland and Soviet invasion of Poland See also German Soviet military parade in Brest Litovsk On 1 September Germany invaded Poland from the west 121 Within a few days Germany began conducting massacres of Polish and Jewish civilians and POWs 122 123 which took place in over 30 towns and villages in the first month of the German occupation 124 125 126 The Luftwaffe also took part by strafing fleeing civilian refugees on roads and by carrying out a bombing campaign 127 128 129 130 The Soviet Union assisted German air forces by allowing them to use signals broadcast by the Soviet radio station at Minsk allegedly for urgent aeronautical experiments 131 Hitler declared at Danzig Poland never will rise again in the form of the Versailles treaty That is guaranteed not only by Germany but also Russia 132 Cartoon in the Evening Standard depicting Hitler greeting Stalin after the invasion of Poland with the words The scum of the earth I believe To which Stalin replies The bloody assassin of the workers I presume 133 20 September 1939 Common parade of Wehrmacht and Red Army in Brest at the end of the invasion of Poland At the centre are Major General Heinz Guderian and Brigadier Semyon Krivoshein In the opinion of Robert Service Stalin did not move instantly but was waiting to see whether the Germans would halt within the agreed area and the Soviet Union also needed to secure the frontier in the Soviet Japanese Border Wars 134 On 17 September the Red Army invaded Poland violating the 1932 Soviet Polish Non Aggression Pact and occupied the Polish territory assigned to it by the Molotov Ribbentrop Pact That was followed by co ordination with German forces in Poland 135 Polish troops already fighting much stronger German forces on its west desperately tried to delay the capture of Warsaw Consequently Polish forces could not mount significant resistance against the Soviets 136 On 18 September The New York Times published an editorial arguing that Hitlerism is brown communism Stalinism is red fascism The world will now understand that the only real ideological issue is one between democracy liberty and peace on the one hand and despotism terror and war on the other 137 On 21 September Marshal of the Soviet Union Voroshilov German military attache General Kostring and other officers signed a formal agreement in Moscow co ordinating military movements in Poland including the purging of saboteurs and the Red Army assisting with destruction of the enemy 138 Joint German Soviet parades were held in Lvov and Brest Litovsk and the countries military commanders met in the latter city 139 Stalin had decided in August that he was going to liquidate the Polish state and a German Soviet meeting in September addressed the future structure of the Polish region 139 Soviet authorities immediately started a campaign of Sovietisation 140 141 of the newly acquired areas The Soviets organised staged elections 142 the result of which was to become a legitimisation of the Soviet annexation of eastern Poland 143 Modification of secret protocols Edit Soviet and German soldiers in Lublin Second Ribbentrop Molotov Pact of 28 September 1939 Map of Poland signed by Stalin and Ribbentrop focused on the Kresy adjusting the German Soviet border in the aftermath of German and Soviet invasion of Poland Eleven days after the Soviet invasion of the Polish Kresy the secret protocol of the Molotov Ribbentrop Pact was modified by the German Soviet Treaty of Friendship Cooperation and Demarcation 144 allotting Germany a larger part of Poland and transferring Lithuania with the exception of the left bank of the River Scheschupe the Lithuanian Strip from the envisioned German sphere to the Soviet sphere 145 On 28 September 1939 the Soviet Union and German Reich issued a joint declaration in which they declared After the Government of the German Reich and the Government of the USSR have by means of the treaty signed today definitively settled the problems arising from the collapse of the Polish state and have thereby created a sure foundation for lasting peace in the region they mutually express their conviction that it would serve the true interest of all peoples to put an end to the state of war existing at present between Germany on the one side and England and France on the other Both Governments will therefore direct their common efforts jointly with other friendly powers if the occasion arises toward attaining this goal as soon as possible Should however the efforts of the two Governments remain fruitless this would demonstrate the fact that England and France are responsible for the continuation of the war whereupon in case of the continuation of the war the Governments of Germany and of the USSR shall engage in mutual consultations with regard to necessary measures 146 On 3 October Friedrich Werner von der Schulenburg the German ambassador in Moscow informed Joachim Ribbentrop that the Soviet government was willing to cede the city of Vilnius and its environs On 8 October 1939 a new Nazi Soviet agreement was reached by an exchange of letters between Vyacheslav Molotov and the German ambassador 147 The Baltic states of Estonia Latvia and Lithuania were given no choice but to sign a so called Pact of Defence and Mutual Assistance which permitted the Soviet Union to station troops in them 145 Soviet war with Finland and Katyn massacre Edit Main articles Winter War and Katyn massacre Lithuania between 1939 and 1941 Germany had requested the territory west of the River Sesupe the area in pink in the German Soviet Boundary and Friendship Treaty but relinquished its claims for a compensation of 7 5 million After the Baltic states had been forced to accept treaties 148 Stalin turned his sights on Finland and was confident that its capitulation could be attained without great effort 149 The Soviets demanded territories on the Karelian Isthmus the islands of the Gulf of Finland and a military base near the Finnish capital Helsinki 150 151 which Finland rejected 152 The Soviets staged the shelling of Mainila on 26 November and used it as a pretext to withdraw from the Soviet Finnish Non Aggression Pact 153 On 30 November the Red Army invaded Finland launching the Winter War with the aim of annexing Finland into the Soviet Union 154 155 156 The Soviets formed the Finnish Democratic Republic to govern Finland after Soviet conquest 157 158 159 160 The leader of the Leningrad Military District Andrei Zhdanov commissioned a celebratory piece from Dmitri Shostakovich Suite on Finnish Themes to be performed as the marching bands of the Red Army would be parading through Helsinki 161 After Finnish defenses surprisingly held out for over three months and inflicted stiff losses on Soviet forces under the command of Semyon Timoshenko the Soviets settled for an interim peace Finland ceded parts of Karelia and Salla 9 of Finnish territory 162 page needed which resulted in approximately 422 000 Karelians 12 of Finland s population losing their homes 163 Soviet official casualty counts in the war exceeded 200 000 164 although Soviet Premier Nikita Khrushchev later claimed that the casualties may have been one million 165 Around that time after several Gestapo NKVD Conferences Soviet NKVD officers also conducted lengthy interrogations of 300 000 Polish POWs in camps 166 167 168 169 that were a selection process to determine who would be killed 170 On 5 March 1940 in what would later be known as the Katyn massacre 170 171 172 22 000 members of the military as well as intellectuals were executed labelled nationalists and counterrevolutionaries or kept at camps and prisons in western Ukraine and Belarus citation needed Soviet Union occupies the Baltic states and part of Romania Edit Main articles Soviet occupation of the Baltic states 1940 and Soviet occupation of Bessarabia and Northern Bukovina Soviet expansion in 1939 1940 In mid June 1940 while international attention focused on the German invasion of France Soviet NKVD troops raided border posts in Lithuania Estonia and Latvia 145 173 State administrations were liquidated by whom and replaced by Soviet cadres 145 who deported or killed 34 250 Latvians 75 000 Lithuanians and almost 60 000 Estonians 174 Elections took place with a single pro Soviet candidate listed for many positions and the resulting people s assemblies immediately requesting admission into the Soviet Union which was granted 145 The Soviets annexed the whole of Lithuania including the Sesupe area which had been earmarked for Germany Finally on 26 June four days after the armistice between France and Nazi Germany the Soviet Union issued an ultimatum that demanded Bessarabia and unexpectedly Northern Bukovina from Romania 175 Two days later the Romanians acceded to the Soviet demands and the Soviets occupied the territories The Hertsa region was initially not requested by the Soviets but was later occupied by force after the Romanians had agreed to the initial Soviet demands 175 The subsequent waves of deportations began in Bessarabia and Northern Bukovina Beginnings of Operation Tannenberg and other Nazi atrocities Edit Main articles Holocaust in Nazi occupied Poland Operation Tannenberg and Nazi crimes against ethnic Poles At the end of October 1939 Germany enacted the death penalty for disobedience to the German occupation 176 Germany began a campaign of Germanization which meant assimilating the occupied territories politically culturally socially and economically into the German Reich 177 178 179 50 000 200 000 Polish children were kidnapped to be Germanised 180 181 Polish hostages being blindfolded during preparations for their mass execution in Palmiry 1940 The elimination of Polish elites and intelligentsia was part of Generalplan Ost The Intelligenzaktion a plan to eliminate the Polish intelligentsia Poland s leadership class took place soon after the German invasion of Poland and lasted from fall of 1939 to the spring of 1940 As the result of the operation in ten regional actions about 60 000 Polish nobles teachers social workers priests judges and political activists were killed 182 183 It was continued in May 1940 when Germany launched AB Aktion 180 More than 16 000 members of the intelligentsia were murdered in Operation Tannenberg alone 184 Germany also planned to incorporate all of the land into Nazi Germany 178 That effort resulted in the forced resettlement of two million Poles Families were forced to travel in the severe winter of 1939 1940 leaving behind almost all of their possessions without compensation 178 As part of Operation Tannenberg alone 750 000 Polish peasants were forced to leave and their property was given to Germans 185 A further 330 000 were murdered 186 Germany planned the eventual move of ethnic Poles to Siberia 187 188 Although Germany used forced labourers in most other occupied countries Poles and other Slavs were viewed as inferior by Nazi propaganda and thus better suited for such duties 180 Between 1 and 2 5 million Polish citizens 180 189 were transported to the Reich for forced labour 190 191 All Polish males were made to perform forced labour 180 While ethnic Poles were subject to selective persecution all ethnic Jews were targeted by the Reich 189 In the winter of 1939 40 about 100 000 Jews were thus deported to Poland 192 They were initially gathered into massive urban ghettos 193 such as the 380 000 held in the Warsaw Ghetto where large numbers died of starvation and diseases under their harsh conditions including 43 000 in the Warsaw Ghetto alone 189 194 195 Poles and ethnic Jews were imprisoned in nearly every camp of the extensive concentration camp system in German occupied Poland and the Reich In Auschwitz which began operating on 14 June 1940 1 1 million people perished 196 197 Romania and Soviet republics Edit Romania s territorial losses in the summer of 1940 Further information Second Vienna Award Population transfer in the Soviet Union and Involuntary settlements in the Soviet Union In the summer of 1940 fear of the Soviet Union in conjunction with German support for the territorial demands of Romania s neighbours and the Romanian government s own miscalculations resulted in more territorial losses for Romania Between 28 June and 4 July the Soviet Union occupied and annexed Bessarabia Northern Bukovina and the Hertsa region of Romania 198 On 30 August Ribbentrop and Italian Foreign Minister Galeazzo Ciano issued the Second Vienna Award giving Northern Transylvania to Hungary On 7 September Romania ceded Southern Dobruja to Bulgaria Axis sponsored Treaty of Craiova 199 After various events over the following months Romania increasingly took on the aspect of a German occupied country 199 The Soviet occupied territories were converted into republics of the Soviet Union During the two years after the annexation the Soviets arrested approximately 100 000 Polish citizens 200 and deported between 350 000 and 1 500 000 of whom between 250 000 and 1 000 000 died mostly civilians 201 e Forced re settlements into gulag labour camps and exile settlements in remote areas of the Soviet Union occurred 141 According to Norman Davies 207 almost half of them were dead by July 1940 208 Further secret protocol modifications settling borders and immigration issues Edit Main article German Soviet Border and Commercial Agreement On 10 January 1941 Germany and the Soviet Union signed an agreement settling several ongoing issues 209 Secret protocols in the new agreement modified the Secret Additional Protocols of the German Soviet Boundary and Friendship Treaty ceding the Lithuanian Strip to the Soviet Union in exchange for US 7 5 million 31 5 million ℛℳ 209 The agreement formally set the border between Germany and the Soviet Union between the Igorka River and the Baltic Sea 210 It also extended trade regulation of the 1940 German Soviet Commercial Agreement until 1 August 1942 increased deliveries above the levels of the first year of that agreement 210 settled trading rights in the Baltics and Bessarabia calculated the compensation for German property interests in the Baltic states that were now occupied by the Soviets and covered other issues 209 It also covered the migration to Germany within 2 1 2 months of ethnic Germans and German citizens in Soviet held Baltic territories and the migration to the Soviet Union of Baltic and White Russian nationals in the German held territories 210 Soviet German relations Edit German and Soviet soldiers meet in jointly occupied Brest Early political issues Edit Before the Molotov Ribbentrop pact was announced Western communists denied that such a treaty would be signed Herbert Biberman a future member of the Hollywood Ten denounced rumours as Fascist propaganda Earl Browder the head of the Communist Party USA stated that there is as much chance of agreement as of Earl Browder being elected president of the Chamber of Commerce 211 Gunther wrote however that some knew communism and Fascism were more closely allied than was normally understood and Ernst von Weizsacker had told Nevile Henderson on 16 August that the Soviet Union would join in sharing in the Polish spoils 105 In September 1939 the Comintern suspended all anti Nazi and anti fascist propaganda and explained that the war in Europe was a matter of capitalist states attacking one another for imperialist purposes 212 Western communists acted accordingly although they had previously supported collective security they now denounced Britain and France for going to war 211 When anti German demonstrations erupted in Prague Czechoslovakia the Comintern ordered the Communist Party of Czechoslovakia to employ all of its strength to paralyse chauvinist elements 212 Moscow soon forced the French Communist Party and the Communist Party of Great Britain to adopt anti war positions On 7 September Stalin called Georgi Dimitrov clarification needed who sketched a new Comintern line on the war that stated that the war was unjust and imperialist which was approved by the secretariat of the Comintern on 9 September Thus western communist parties now had to oppose the war and to vote against war credits 213 Although the French communists had unanimously voted in Parliament for war credits on 2 September and declared their unshakeable will to defend the country on 19 September the Comintern formally instructed the party to condemn the war as imperialist on 27 September By 1 October the French communists advocated listening to German peace proposals and leader Maurice Thorez deserted from the French Army on 4 October and fled to Russia 214 Other communists also deserted from the army The Communist Party of Germany featured similar attitudes In Die Welt a communist newspaper published in Stockholm f the exiled communist leader Walter Ulbricht opposed the Allies stated that Britain represented the most reactionary force in the world 216 and argued The German government declared itself ready for friendly relations with the Soviet Union whereas the English French war bloc desires a war against the socialist Soviet Union The Soviet people and the working people of Germany have an interest in preventing the English war plan 217 Despite a warning by the Comintern German tensions were raised when the Soviets stated in September that they must enter Poland to protect their ethnic Ukrainian and Belarusian brethren from Germany Molotov later admitted to German officials that the excuse was necessary because the Kremlin could find no other pretext for the Soviet invasion 218 During the early months of the Pact the Soviet foreign policy became critical of the Allies and more pro German in turn During the Fifth Session of the Supreme Soviet on 31 October 1939 Molotov analyzed the international situation thus giving the direction for communist propaganda According to Molotov Germany had a legitimate interest in regaining its position as a great power and the Allies had started an aggressive war in order to maintain the Versailles system 219 Expansion of raw materials and military trading Edit Main articles German Soviet Credit Agreement 1939 and German Soviet Commercial Agreement 1940 Germany and the Soviet Union entered an intricate trade pact on 11 February 1940 that was over four times larger than the one that the two countries had signed in August 1939 220 The new trade pact helped Germany surmount a British blockade 220 In the first year Germany received one million tons of cereals half a million tons of wheat 900 000 tons of oil 100 000 tons of cotton 500 000 tons of phosphates and considerable amounts of other vital raw materials along with the transit of one million tons of soybeans from Manchuria Those and other supplies were being transported through Soviet and occupied Polish territories 220 The Soviets were to receive a naval cruiser the plans to the battleship Bismarck heavy naval guns other naval gear and 30 of Germany s latest warplanes including the Bf 109 and Bf 110 fighters and Ju 88 bomber 220 The Soviets would also receive oil and electric equipment locomotives turbines generators diesel engines ships machine tools and samples of German artillery tanks explosives chemical warfare equipment and other items 220 The Soviets also helped Germany to avoid British naval blockades by providing a submarine base Basis Nord in the northern Soviet Union near Murmansk 212 That also provided a refueling and maintenance location and a takeoff point for raids and attacks on shipping 212 In addition the Soviets provided Germany with access to the Northern Sea Route for both cargo ships and raiders though only the commerce raider Komet used the route before the German invasion which forced Britain to protect sea lanes in both the Atlantic and the Pacific 221 Summer deterioration of relations Edit The Finnish and Baltic invasions began a deterioration of relations between the Soviets and Germany 222 Stalin s invasions were a severe irritant to Berlin since the intent to accomplish them had not been communicated to the Germans beforehand and they prompted concern that Stalin was seeking to form an anti German bloc 223 Molotov s reassurances to the Germans only intensified the Germans mistrust On 16 June as the Soviets invaded Lithuania but before they had invaded Latvia and Estonia Ribbentrop instructed his staff to submit a report as soon as possible as to whether in the Baltic States a tendency to seek support from the Reich can be observed or whether an attempt was made to form a bloc 224 In August 1940 the Soviet Union briefly suspended its deliveries under its commercial agreement after relations were strained after disagreements over policy in Romania the Soviet war with Finland Germany s falling behind on its deliveries of goods under the pact and Stalin s worry that Hitler s war with the West might end quickly after France signed an armistice 225 The suspension created significant resource problems for Germany 225 By the end of August relations had improved again as the countries had redrawn the Hungarian and Romanian borders and settled some Bulgarian claims and Stalin was again convinced that Germany would face a long war in the west with Britain s improvement in its air battle with Germany and the execution of an agreement between the United States and Britain regarding destroyers and bases 226 In early September however Germany arranged its own occupation of Romania targeting its oil fields 227 That move raised tensions with the Soviets who responded that Germany was supposed to have consulted with the Soviet Union under Article III of the pact 227 German Soviet Axis talks Edit Ribbentrop taking leave of Molotov in Berlin November 1940 Main article German Soviet Axis talks After Germany in September 1940 entered the Tripartite Pact with Japan and Italy Ribbentrop wrote to Stalin inviting Molotov to Berlin for negotiations aimed to create a continental bloc of Germany Italy Japan and the Soviet Union that would oppose Britain and the United States 228 Stalin sent Molotov to Berlin to negotiate the terms for the Soviet Union to join the Axis and potentially to enjoy the spoils of the pact 229 230 After negotiations during November 1940 on where to extend the Soviet sphere of influence Hitler broke off talks and continued planning for the eventual attempts to invade the Soviet Union 228 231 Late relations Edit Situation in Europe by May to June 1941 immediately before Operation Barbarossa In an effort to demonstrate peaceful intentions toward Germany on 13 April 1941 the Soviets signed a neutrality pact with Japan an Axis power 232 While Stalin had little faith in Japan s commitment to neutrality he felt that the pact was important for its political symbolism to reinforce a public affection for Germany 233 Stalin felt that there was a growing split in German circles about whether Germany should initiate a war with the Soviet Union 233 Stalin did not know that Hitler had been secretly discussing an invasion of the Soviet Union since summer 1940 234 and that Hitler had ordered his military in late 1940 to prepare for war in the East regardless of the parties talks of a potential Soviet entry as a fourth Axis power 235 Termination Edit The new border between Nazi Germany and Soviet Union from September 1939 to June 1941 somewhere in the occupied territory of Poland Germany unilaterally terminated the pact at 03 15 on 22 June 1941 by launching a massive attack on the Soviet Union in Operation Barbarossa 121 Stalin had ignored repeated warnings that Germany was likely to invade 236 237 238 and ordered no full scale mobilisation of forces although the mobilisation was ongoing 239 After the launch of the invasion the territories gained by the Soviet Union as a result of the pact were lost in a matter of weeks The southeastern part was absorbed into Greater Germany s General Government and the rest was integrated with the Reichskommissariats Ostland and Ukraine Within six months the Soviet military had suffered 4 3 million casualties 240 and three million more had been captured 241 The lucrative export of Soviet raw materials to Germany over the course of the economic relations continued uninterrupted until the outbreak of hostilities The Soviet exports in several key areas enabled Germany to maintain its stocks of rubber and grain from the first day of the invasion to October 1941 242 Aftermath Edit Grey area prewar Polish territory east of the Curzon Line annexed by the Soviet Union after the war Soviet expansion changes to Central European borders and creation of the Eastern bloc after World War II Discovery of the secret protocol Edit The German original of the secret protocols was presumably destroyed in the bombing of Germany 243 but in late 1943 Ribbentrop had ordered the most secret records of the German Foreign Office from 1933 onward amounting to some 9 800 pages to be microfilmed When the various departments of the Foreign Office in Berlin were evacuated to Thuringia at the end of the war Karl von Loesch a civil servant who had worked for the chief interpreter Paul Otto Schmidt was entrusted with the microfilm copies He eventually received orders to destroy the secret documents but decided to bury the metal container with the microfilms as personal insurance for his future well being In May 1945 von Loesch approached the British Lieutenant Colonel Robert C Thomson with the request to transmit a personal letter to Duncan Sandys Churchill s son in law In the letter von Loesch revealed that he had knowledge of the documents whereabouts but expected preferential treatment in return Thomson and his American counterpart Ralph Collins agreed to transfer von Loesch to Marburg in the American zone if he would produce the microfilms The microfilms contained a copy of the Non Aggression Treaty as well as the Secret Protocol 244 Both documents were discovered as part of the microfilmed records in August 1945 by US State Department employee Wendell B Blancke the head of a special unit called Exploitation German Archives EGA 245 News of the secret protocols first appeared during the Nuremberg trials Alfred Seidl the attorney for defendant Hans Frank was able to place into evidence an affidavit that described them It was written from memory by Nazi Foreign Office lawyer Friedrich Gaus de who wrote the text and was present at its signing in Moscow Later Seidl obtained the German language text of the secret protocols from an anonymous Allied source and attempted to place them into evidence while he was questioning witness Ernst von Weizsacker a former Foreign Office State Secretary The Allied prosecutors objected and the texts were not accepted into evidence but Weizsacker was permitted to describe them from memory thus corroborating the Gaus affidavit Finally at the request of a St Louis Post Dispatch reporter American deputy prosecutor Thomas J Dodd acquired a copy of the secret protocols from Seidl and had it translated into English They were first published on 22 May 1946 in a front page story in that newspaper 246 Later in Britain they were published by The Manchester Guardian The protocols gained wider media attention when they were included in an official State Department collection Nazi Soviet Relations 1939 1941 edited by Raymond J Sontag and James S Beddie and published on 21 January 1948 The decision to publish the key documents on German Soviet relations including the treaty and protocol had been taken already in spring 1947 Sontag and Beddie prepared the collection throughout the summer of 1947 In November 1947 President Harry S Truman personally approved the publication but it was held back in view of the Foreign Ministers Conference in London scheduled for December Since negotiations at that conference did not prove to be constructive from an American point of view the document edition was sent to press The documents made headlines worldwide 247 State Department officials counted it as a success The Soviet Government was caught flat footed in what was the first effective blow from our side in a clear cut propaganda war 248 Despite publication of the recovered copy in western media for decades the official policy of the Soviet Union was to deny the existence of the secret protocol 249 The secret protocol s existence was officially denied until 1989 Vyacheslav Molotov one of the signatories went to his grave categorically rejecting its existence 250 The French Communist Party did not acknowledge the existence of the secret protocol until 1968 as the party de Stalinized 214 On 23 August 1986 tens of thousands of demonstrators in 21 western cities including New York London Stockholm Toronto Seattle and Perth participated in Black Ribbon Day Rallies to draw attention to the secret protocols 251 Stalin s Falsifiers of History and Axis negotiations Edit In response to the publication of the secret protocols and other secret German Soviet relations documents in the State Department edition Nazi Soviet Relations 1948 Stalin published Falsifiers of History which included the claim that during the pact s operation Stalin rejected Hitler s claim to share in a division of the world 252 without mentioning the Soviet offer to join the Axis That version persisted without exception in historical studies official accounts memoirs and textbooks published in the Soviet Union until the dissolution of the Soviet Union 252 The book also claimed that the Munich agreement was a secret agreement between Germany and the west and a highly important phase in their policy aimed at goading the Hitlerite aggressors against the Soviet Union 253 254 Denial of the secret protocol Edit For decades it was the official policy of the Soviet Union to deny the existence of the secret protocol to the Soviet German Pact At the behest of Mikhail Gorbachev Alexander Nikolaevich Yakovlev headed a commission investigating the existence of such a protocol In December 1989 the commission concluded that the protocol had existed and revealed its findings to the Congress of People s Deputies of the Soviet Union 243 As a result the Congress passed the declaration confirming the existence of the secret protocols and condemning and denouncing them 255 256 The Soviet government thus finally acknowledged and denounced the Secret Treaty 257 and Mikhail Gorbachev the last Head of State condemned the pact Vladimir Putin condemned the pact as immoral but also defended it as a necessary evil 258 259 At a press conference on 19 December 2019 Putin went further and announced that the signing of the pact was no worse than the 1938 Munich Agreement which led to the partition of Czechoslovakia 260 261 Both successor states of the pact parties have declared the secret protocols to be invalid from the moment that they were signed the Federal Republic of Germany on 1 September 1989 and the Soviet Union on 24 December 1989 262 following an examination of the microfilmed copy of the German originals 263 The Soviet copy of the original document was declassified in 1992 and published in a scientific journal in early 1993 263 In August 2009 in an article written for the Polish newspaper Gazeta Wyborcza Russian Prime Minister Vladimir Putin condemned the Molotov Ribbentrop Pact as immoral 264 265 The new Russian nationalists and revisionists including Russian negationist Aleksandr Dyukov and Nataliya Narotchnitskaya whose book carried an approving foreword by the Russian foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov described the pact as a necessary measure because of the British and French failure to enter into an antifascist pact 257 266 Postwar commentary on motives of Stalin and Hitler Edit Some scholars believe that from the very beginning of the Tripartite negotiations between the Soviet Union Great Britain and France the Soviets clearly required the other parties to agree to a Soviet occupation of Estonia Latvia and Lithuania 50 and for Finland to be included in the Soviet sphere of influence 267 On the timing of German rapprochement many historians agree that the dismissal of Maxim Litvinov whose Jewish ethnicity was viewed unfavourably by Nazi Germany removed an obstacle to negotiations with Germany 70 268 269 270 271 272 273 274 Stalin immediately directed Molotov to purge the ministry of Jews 275 271 276 Given Litvinov s prior attempts to create an anti fascist coalition association with the doctrine of collective security with France and Britain and a pro Western orientation 277 by the standards of the Kremlin his dismissal indicated the existence of a Soviet option of rapprochement with Germany 278 g Likewise Molotov s appointment served as a signal to Germany that the Soviet Union was open to offers 278 The dismissal also signaled to France and Britain the existence of a potential negotiation option with Germany 47 279 One British official wrote that Litvinov s termination also meant the loss of an admirable technician or shock absorber but that Molotov s modus operandi was more truly Bolshevik than diplomatic or cosmopolitan 280 Carr argued that the Soviet Union s replacement of Litvinov with Molotov on 3 May 1939 indicated not an irrevocable shift towards alignment with Germany but rather was Stalin s way of engaging in hard bargaining with the British and the French by appointing a proverbial hard man to the Foreign Commissariat 281 Historian Albert Resis stated that the Litvinov dismissal gave the Soviets freedom to pursue faster German negotiations but that they did not abandon British French talks 282 Derek Watson argued that Molotov could get the best deal with Britain and France because he was not encumbered with the baggage of collective security and could negotiate with Germany 283 Geoffrey Roberts argued that Litvinov s dismissal helped the Soviets with British French talks because Litvinov doubted or maybe even opposed such discussions 284 E H Carr a frequent defender of Soviet policy 285 stated In return for non intervention Stalin secured a breathing space of immunity from German attack 286 According to Carr the bastion created by means of the pact was and could only be a line of defense against potential German attack 286 According to Carr an important advantage was that if Soviet Russia had eventually to fight Hitler the Western Powers would already be involved 286 287 However during the last decades that view has been disputed Historian Werner Maser stated that the claim that the Soviet Union was at the time threatened by Hitler as Stalin supposed is a legend to whose creators Stalin himself belonged 288 In Maser s view neither Germany nor Japan were in a situation of invading the USSR even with the least perspective sic of success which must not have been known to Stalin 289 Carr further stated that for a long time the primary motive of Stalin s sudden change of course was assumed to be the fear of German aggressive intentions 290 On the other hand Soviet born Australian historical writer Alex Ryvchin characterized the pact as a Soviet deal with the devil which contained a secret protocol providing for the remaining independent states of East Central Europe to be treated as courses on some debauched degustation menu for two of the greatest monsters in history 291 Many Polish newspapers published numerous articles claiming that Russia must apologise to Poland for the pact 292 Two weeks after Soviet armies had entered the Baltic states Berlin requested Finland to permit the transit of German troops and five weeks later Hitler issued a secret directive to take up the Russian problem to think about war preparations a war whose objective would include establishment of a Baltic confederation 293 A number of German historians have debunked the claim that Operation Barbarossa was a preemptive strike such as Andreas Hillgruber Rolf Dieter Muller and Christian Hartmann but they also acknowledge that the Soviets were aggressive to their neighbors 294 295 296 Remembrance and response EditThe pact was a taboo subject in the postwar Soviet Union 297 In December 1989 the Congress of People s Deputies of the Soviet Union condemned the pact and its secret protocol as legally deficient and invalid 298 In modern Russia the pact is often portrayed positively or neutrally by the pro government propaganda for example Russian textbooks tend to describe the pact as a defensive measure not as one aiming at territorial expansion 297 In 2009 Russian President Vladimir Putin stated that there are grounds to condemn the Pact 299 but in 2014 described it as necessary for Russia s survival 300 301 Accusations that cast doubt on the positive portrayal of the USSR s role in World War II have been seen as highly problematic for the modern Russian state which sees Russia s victory in the war as one of the most venerated pillars of state ideology which legitimises the current government and its policies 302 303 In 2009 the European Parliament proclaimed 23 August the anniversary of the Molotov Ribbentrop Pact as the European Day of Remembrance for Victims of Stalinism and Nazism to be commemorated with dignity and impartiality 304 In connection with the Molotov Ribbentrop Pact the Organization for Security and Co operation in Europe parliamentary resolution condemned both communism and fascism for starting World War II and called for a day of remembrance for victims of both Stalinism and Nazism on 23 August 305 In response to the resolution Russian lawmakers threatened the OSCE with harsh consequences 305 306 A similar resolution was passed by the European Parliament a decade later blaming the 1939 Molotov Ribbentrop pact for the outbreak of war in Europe and again leading to criticism by Russian authorities 302 303 307 During the re ignition of Cold War tensions in 1982 the US Congress during the Reagan administration established Baltic Freedom Day to be remembered every 14 June in the United States 308 See also EditMolotov Ribbentrop Pact Edit Baltic Way protest marking the 50th anniversary of the Molotov Ribbentrop Pact Gestapo NKVD conferences Molotov Ribbentrop Pact negotiations Timeline of the Molotov Ribbentrop Pact Walter Krivitsky Soviet defector who revealed plans of the non aggression pact before World War II Related Edit German Soviet Axis talks German Soviet military parade in Brest Litovsk Italo Soviet Pact Nazi Soviet population transfers Soviet Japanese Neutrality Pact Stalin s alleged speech of 19 August 1939Notes Edit Russian Pakt Molotova Ribbentropa Russian Dogovor o Nenapadenii mezhdu Germaniej i Soyuzom Sovetskih Socialisticheskih Respublik To 53 million ℛℳ in German imports 0 9 of Germany s total imports and 6 3 of Russia s total exports and 34 million ℛℳ in German exports 0 6 of Germany s total exports and 4 6 of Russia s total imports in 1938 23 On 28 July Molotov sent a political instruction to the Soviet ambassador in Berlin that marked the start of secret Soviet German political negotiations 76 The actual number of deported in the period of 1939 1941 remains unknown and various estimates vary from 350 000 202 to over 2 million mostly World War II estimates by the underground The earlier number is based on records made by the NKVD and does not include roughly 180 000 prisoners of war who were also in Soviet captivity Most modern historians estimate the number of all people deported from areas taken by Soviet Union during that period at between 800 000 and 1 500 000 203 204 for example RJ Rummel gives the number of 1 200 000 million 205 Tony Kushner and Katharine Knox give 1 500 000 206 Having been banned in Stockholm it continued to be published in Zurich 215 According to Paul Flewers Stalin s address to the eighteenth congress of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union on 10 March 1939 discounted any idea of German designs on the Soviet Union Stalin had intended To be cautious and not allow our country to be drawn into conflicts by warmongers who are accustomed to have others pull the chestnuts out of the fire for them This was intended to warn the Western powers that they could not necessarily rely upon the support of the Soviet Union 213 References Edit Zabecki David 2014 Germany at war 400 years of military history Santa Barbara California ABC CLIO LLC p 536 ISBN 978 1 59884 981 3 Faksimile Nichtangriffsvertrag zwischen Deutschland und der Union der Sozialistischen Sowjetrepubliken 23 August 1939 Bayerische Staatsbibliothek BSB Munchen 1000dokumente de Retrieved 14 March 2020 Ronen Yael 19 May 2011 Transition from Illegal Regimes under International Law Cambridge University Press pp xix ISBN 978 1 139 49617 9 Schwendemann Heinrich 1995 German Soviet Economic Relations at the Time of the Hitler Stalin pact 1939 1941 Cahiers du Monde russe 36 1 2 161 178 doi 10 3406 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request of the German Air forces Chief of Staff the Germans wanted the radio station in Minsk when it is idle to start a continuous broadcast needed for urgent aeronautical experiments This translation should contain the embedded call signs Richard Wilhelm 1 0 and in addition to that to broadcast the word Minsk as frequent as possible The Molotov s resolution on that document authorised broadcasting of the word Minsk only Seven Years War Time 2 October 1939 The cartoon is a parody of Dr Livingstone I presume Henry Morton Stanley s supposed greeting to Livingstone in November 1871 Artistic reconstructions of that event see relevant articles showed them raising their hats to one another in greeting Service 2003 p 256 Roberts 2006 p 43 Zaloga Steven J 2002 Poland 1939 Botley UK Osprey p 80 ISBN 9781846035623 The Russian Betrayal The New York Times 18 September 1939 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved 11 February 2020 Nekrich Ulam amp Freeze 1997 p 130 a b Nekrich Ulam amp Freeze 1997 p 131 Sudol 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16 January 2009 Retrieved 23 January 2009 Piper Franciszek Meyer Fritjof 2002 Die Zahl der Opfer von Auschwitz Neue Erkentnisse durch neue Archivfunde Osteuropa review article in German PL Auschwitz 52 Jg 5 631 41 Archived from the original on 21 May 2011 Vladimir Beshanov 2008 Czerwony Blitzkrieg in Polish PL Inicjal pp 250 62 ISBN 978 83 926205 2 5 a b Wasserstein Bernard 2007 Barbarism and Civilization A History of Europe in Our Time Oxford University Press p 305 ISBN 978 0 19 873074 3 Represje 1939 41 Aresztowani na Kresach Wschodnich Repressions 1939 41 Arrested on the Eastern Borderlands in Polish PL Osrodek Karta Archived from the original on 10 December 2006 Retrieved 15 November 2006 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help Rieber pp 14 32 37 sfn error no target CITEREFRieber help Okupacja Sowiecka w Polsce 1939 41 Internetowa encyklopedia PWN in Polish Retrieved 14 March 2006 Wierzbicki Marek Pluzanski Tadeusz M March 2001 Wybiorcze traktowanie zrodel Tygodnik Solidarnosc 2 Glowacki Albin September 2003 Chmielowiec Piotr ed Formy skala i konsekwencje sowieckich represji wobec Polakow w latach 1939 1941 Okupacja sowiecka ziem polskich 1939 1941 in Polish Rzeszow Warsaw Instytut Pamieci Narodowej ISBN 83 89078 78 3 Archived from the original on 3 October 2003 Rummel RJ 1990 Lethal Politics Soviet Genocide and Mass Murder Since 1917 p 132 ISBN 978 1 4128 2750 8 Kushner Tony Knox Katharine 1999 Refugees in an Age of Genocide p 219 ISBN 978 0 7146 4783 8 Davies Norman 1982 God s Playground A History of Poland Vol 2 1795 to the Present Oxford Oxford University Press pp 449 55 ISBN 0 19 925340 4 Wegner 1997 p 78 a b c Ericson 1999 pp 150 3 a b c Johari JC 2000 Soviet Diplomacy 1925 41 Vol 1925 27 Anmol pp 134 7 ISBN 81 7488 491 2 a b Friedrich Otto 1997 City of Nets A Portrait of Hollywood in the 1940s reprint ed Berkeley Los Angeles University of California Press p 24 ISBN 0 520 20949 4 a b c d Cohen Yohanon 1989 Small Nations in Times of Crisis and Confrontation SUNY Press p 110 ISBN 0 7914 0018 2 a b Flewers Paul 1995 From the Red Flag to the Union Jack The Rise of Domestic Patriotism in the Communist Party of Great Britain What Next Archived from the original on 23 February 2006 Retrieved 14 February 2006 Stalin was publicly making the none too subtle implication that some form of deal between the Soviet Union and Germany could not be ruled out a b Jackson Julian 2001 France The Dark Years 1940 1944 Oxford University Press pp 18 114 15 ISBN 0 19 820706 9 Som von Aussen Sozmit DE FES Sozialistische Mitteilungen 8 DE FES 1940 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help Hofer Walther 2007 Die Entfesselung des Zweiten Weltkrieges Lit pp 224 5 ISBN 978 3 8258 0383 4 Die Welt February 1940 Nekrich Ulam amp Freeze 1997 pp 128 9 Pietrow Ennker Bianka 2000 Stalinistische Aussen und Deutschlandpolitik 1939 1941 In Pietrow Ennker Bianka ed Praventivkrieg Der Deutsche Angriff auf die Sowjetunion 3 ed Frankfurt am Main Fischer p 85 ISBN 978 3 596 14497 6 a b c d e Shirer 1990 pp 668 9 Philbin 1994 pp 130 42 Kennan George 1961 Russian and the West under Lenin and Stalin NY Mentor pp 318 9 Cartier Raymond 1962 Hitler et ses Genereaux Hitler and his Generals in French Paris J ai Lu A Faiard p 233 Sontag RJ Beddie JS eds 1948 Nazi Soviet Relations 1939 1941 Washington DC State Department p 151 a b Philbin 1994 pp 48 59 Philbin 1994 p 60 a b Shirer 1990 p 720 a b Roberts 2006 p 59 Roberts 2006 p 58 Brackman 2001 p 341 Nekrich Ulam amp Freeze 1997 pp 202 5 Roberts 2006 p 63 a b Roberts 2006 p 66 Ericson 1999 pp 129 30 Weeks Albert L 2003 Stalin s Other War Soviet Grand Strategy 1939 1941 Rowman amp Littlefield pp 74 5 ISBN 0 7425 2192 3 Roberts 2006 p 67 Ferguson Niall 12 June 2005 Stalin s Intelligence Review of books by Murphy Pleshakov and Service The New York Times Retrieved 27 March 2010 Roberts 2006 pp 67 68 Roberts 2006 p 69 Roberts 2006 pp 116 117 Roberts 2006 p 85 Ericson 1999 pp 202 205 a b Dreifeilds Juris 1996 Latvia in Transition Cambridge University Press pp 34 5 ISBN 0 521 55537 X Eckert 2012 pp 62 67 Record Group 84 POLAD Classified General Correspondence 1945 49 National Archives and Record Administration Box 100 Archive Location 350 57 18 02 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help Stokes Richard L 22 May 1946 Secret Soviet Nazi Pacts on Eastern Europe Aired Purported Texts on Agreed Spheres of Influence Produced at Nuernberg but Not Admitted at Trial St Louis Post Dispatch p 1 Retrieved 24 May 2019 Stalin Hitler Plot to Divide Europe Told U S Discloses Top Secret Documents Dealing With Plans Los Angeles Times United Press 22 January 1948 p 1 Retrieved 24 May 2019 Eckert 2012 p 94 Biskupski amp Wandycz 2003 p 147 Modern views on the Nazi Soviet pact News BBC 26 August 2009 Retrieved 27 March 2010 Remembrance and Solidarity Studies in 20th Century European History PDF Issue 1 Number 1 European Network Remembrance and Solidarity December 2012 p 18 Archived from the original PDF file direct download on 29 September 2013 Retrieved 24 August 2014 a b Nekrich Ulam amp Freeze 1997 pp 202 205 Taubert Fritz 2003 The Myth of Munich Oldenbourg Wissenschaftsverlag p 318 ISBN 3 486 56673 3 Henig Ruth Beatrice 2005 The Origins of the Second World War 1933 41 Routledge pp 67 68 ISBN 0 415 33262 1 Vedomosti Sezda narodnyh deputatov SSSR i Verhovnogo Soveta SSSR text of the declaration in Russian 29 RU Law mix 1989 St 579 Archived from the original on 23 December 2010 Retrieved 15 November 2010 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help Borejsza Jerzy W Ziemer Klaus Hulas Magdalena 2006 Totalitarian and Authoritarian Regimes in Europe Berghahn p 521 a b Russian historians defend the Molotov Ribbentrop Pact Archived from the original on 8 December 2015 Retrieved 22 January 2015 Parfitt Tom 6 November 2014 Vladimir Putin says there was nothing wrong with Soviet Union s pact with Adolf Hitler s Nazi Germany Daily Telegraph Retrieved 20 May 2015 Timothy Snyder NYreview of books putin nostalgia hitler stalin The great press conference of Vladimir Putin Bolshaya press konferenciya Vladimira Putina President of Russia 19 December 2019 in Russian Ivan Beliayev Putin and pigs social networks about interest of the president to history Putin i svini socseti o strannom interese prezidenta k istorii Radio Free Europe Radio Liberty 26 December 2019 in Russian Loeber Dietrich A Consequences of The Molotov Ribbentrop Pact for Lithuania of Today International Law Aspects PDF LFPR Archived from the original PDF on 30 May 2009 Retrieved 7 November 2009 a b Boris Havkin Boris Xavkin 2007 Inhalt ForuumRuss 1 2006 K istorii publikacii sovetskih tekstov sovetsko germanskih sekretnyh dokumentov 1939 1941 gg Forum novejshej vostochnoevropejskoj istorii i kultury Russkoe izdanie in Russian 1 DE KU Eichstaett a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help Putin condemns Nazi Soviet pact BBC News 31 August 2009 Retrieved 31 August 2009 Tom Parfitt 6 November 2014 Vladimir Putin says there was nothing wrong with Soviet Union s pact with Adolf Hitler s Nazi Germany Telegraph Retrieved 6 November 2014 The Russian president made the comments at a meeting with young historians in Moscow during which he urged them to examine the lead up to the war among other subjects how does Parfitt know that Which young historicans Where in Moscow Nick Holdsworth in Moscow 18 October 2008 Stalin planned to send a million troops to stop Hitler if Britain and France agreed According to retired Russian foreign intelligence service Major General Lev Sotskov Stalin was prepared to move more than a million Soviet troops to the German border across sovereign Poland to deter Hitler s aggression just before the Second World War Salmon Patrick 2002 Scandinavia and the Great Powers 1890 1940 Cambridge University Press Israeli Viktor Levonovich 2003 On the Battlefields of the Cold War A Soviet Ambassador s Confession Penn State Press p 10 ISBN 0 271 02297 3 Shirer 1990 pp 480 1 Ulam 1989 p 508 a b Herf Jeffrey 2006 The Jewish Enemy Nazi Propaganda During World War II and the Holocaust Harvard University Press pp 97 98 ISBN 0 674 02175 4 Osborn Patrick R 2000 Operation Pike Britain Versus the Soviet Union 1939 1941 Greenwood p xix ISBN 0 313 31368 7 Levin Nora 1988 The Jews in the Soviet Union Since 1917 Paradox of Survival NYU Press p 330 ISBN 0 8147 5051 6 Litvinov was referred to by the German radio as Litvinov Finkelstein was dropped in favor of Vyascheslav Molotov The eminent Jew as Churchill put it the target of German antagonism was flung aside like a broken tool The Jew Litvinov was gone and Hitler s dominant prejudice placated Roberts 1992b Introduction Perhaps the only thing that can be salvaged from the wreckage of the orthodox interpretation of Litvinov s dismissal is some notion that by appointing Molotov foreign minister Stalin was preparing for the contingency of a possible deal with Hitler In view of Litvinov s Jewish heritage and his militant anti Nazism that is not an unreasonable supposition But it is a hypothesis for which there is as yet no evidence Moreover we shall see that what evidence there is suggests that Stalin s decision was determined by a quite different set of circumstances and calculations Resis 2000 p 35 Moss Walter 2005 A History of Russia Since 1855 Anthem p 283 ISBN 1 84331 034 1 Gorodetsky Gabriel 1994 Soviet Foreign Policy 1917 1991 A Retrospective Routledge p 55 ISBN 0 7146 4506 0 a b Resis 2000 p 51 Resis 2000 pp 33 56 Watson 2000 p 699 Carr 1979 pp 129 130 Resis 2000 p 33 By replacing Litvinov with Molotov Stalin significantly increased his options in foreign policy Litvinov s dismissal served as a warning to London and Paris that Moscow had a third option rapprochement with Germany After Litvinov s dismissal the pace of Soviet German contacts quickened This did not however mean that Moscow had abandoned the search for collective security now exemplified by the Soviet draft triple alliance Meanwhile Molotov s appointment served as an additional signal to Berlin that Moscow was open to offers The signal worked the warning did not Watson 2000 pp 695 722 The choice of Molotov reflected not only the appointment of a nationalist and one of Stalin s leading lieutenants a Russian who was not a Jew and who could negotiate with Nazi Germany but also someone unencumbered with the baggage of collective security who could obtain the best deal with Britain and France if they could be forced into an agreement Roberts 1992b pp 639 57 the foreign policy factor in Litvinov s downfall was the desire of Stalin and Molotov to take charge of foreign relations in order to pursue their policy of a triple alliance with Britain and France a policy whose utility Litvinov doubted and may even have opposed or obstructed Deutscher Tamara 1983 EH Carr a Personal Memoir New Left Review 137 79 83 a b c Carr 1979 p page needed Taylor 1961 pp 262 3 Maser 1994 p 64 Maser 1994 p 42 Carr 1949a pp 3 17 Ryvchin Alex 4 August 2022 Understanding the Russo Ukrainian War Through the Prism of Russian History Israel Journal of Foreign Affairs 16 2 184 187 doi 10 1080 23739770 2022 2105487 ISSN 2373 9770 S2CID 251353823 Sudakov Dmitry 2 September 2009 Putin Did Not Even Think to Apologize to Poland for Molotov Ribbentrop Pact Pravda ru Halder Franz 1962 Generaloberst Halder Kriegstagebuch Vol II Stuttgart pp 31 2 Hillgruber Andreas 1981 Germany and the Two World Wars Harvard University Press p 86 ISBN 978 0 674 35322 0 Hartmann Christian 2011 Operation Barbarossa Nazi Germany s War in the East 1941 1945 Oxford University Press p 24 ISBN 978 0 19 870170 5 OCLC 1005849626 Muller Rolf Dieter Ueberschar Gerd R 2002 Hitler s war in the east 1941 1945 a critical assessment New York Berghahn pp 39 40 ISBN 978 1 84545 501 9 OCLC 836636715 a b Andrew Jack 15 December 2005 Inside Putin s Russia Can There Be Reform without Democracy Oxford University Press p 37 ISBN 978 0 19 029336 9 Upheaval in the East Soviet Congress Condemns 39 Pact That Led to Annexation of Baltics The New York Times 25 December 1989 Putin Condemns 1939 Soviet Treaty With Nazis Voice of America 2 November 2009 Fiona Hill Clifford G Gaddy 2 February 2015 Mr Putin Operative in the Kremlin Brookings Institution Press p 366 ISBN 978 0 8157 2618 0 Yevhen Mahda 1 May 2018 Russia s hybrid aggression lessons for the world Russia s hybrid aggression lessons for the world TOV Kalamar p 87 ISBN 978 966 97478 6 0 a b Shevchenko Vitaly 26 December 2019 Why is Putin angry at Poland BBC Retrieved 1 January 2020 a b Putin fires fresh salvo on Molotov Ribbentrop pact this time singling out Poland DW 24 December 2019 DW COM Retrieved 1 January 2020 On European conscience and totalitarianism resolution European Parliament 2 April 2009 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help a b Russia scolds OSCE for equating Hitler and Stalin Reuters 4 July 2009 Retrieved 20 August 2009 Resolution on Stalin riles Russia BBC 3 July 2009 Retrieved 20 August 2009 Russia Slams EU Resolution Stating Nazi Soviet Pact Paved Way For WWII RadioFreeEurope RadioLiberty Retrieved 1 January 2020 A joint resolution designating Baltic Freedom Day The Library of Congress 9 June 1982 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help permanent dead link permanent dead link Sources EditBendersky Joseph W 2000 A History of Nazi Germany 1919 1945 Rowman amp Littlefield ISBN 0 8304 1567 X Biskupski Mieczyslaw B Wandycz Piotr Stefan 2003 Ideology Politics and Diplomacy in East Central Europe Boydell amp Brewer ISBN 1 58046 137 9 Brackman Roman 2001 The Secret File of Joseph Stalin A Hidden Life Frank Cass ISBN 0 7146 5050 1 Carley Michael J 1993 End of the Low Dishonest Decade Failure of the Anglo Franco Soviet Alliance in 1939 Europe Asia Studies 45 2 303 341 doi 10 1080 09668139308412091 JSTOR 152863 Carr Edward Hallett 1949a From Munich to Moscow I Soviet Studies Taylor amp Francis 1 1 3 17 doi 10 1080 09668134908409726 JSTOR 148803 Carr Edward Hallett 1949b From Munich to Moscow II Soviet Studies 1 2 93 105 doi 10 1080 09668134908409737 JSTOR 148585 Carr Edward Hallett 1979 1951 German Soviet Relations between the Two World Wars 1919 1939 New York NY Arno Press Chubaryan Alexander O Shukman Harold 2002 Stalin and the Soviet Finnish war 1939 40 London Frank Cass ISBN 0 7146 5203 2 Cyprian Tadeusz Sawicki Jerzy 1961 Nazi Rule in Poland 1939 1945 Polonia a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help Datner Szymon 1962 Crimes Committed by the Wehrmacht during the September Campaign and the Period of Military Government Poznan a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help Datner S Gumkowski J Leszczynski K 1962 Genocide 1939 1945 Wydawnictwo Zachodnie a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help Davies N 1986 God s Playground Vol II Oxford University Press ISBN 0 19 821944 X Eckert Astrid M 2012 The Struggle for the Files The Western Allies and the Return of German Archives after the Second World War Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 88018 3 Edwards Robert 2006 White Death Russia s War on Finland 1939 40 London Weidenfeld amp Nicolson ISBN 978 0 297 84630 7 Engle Edwards Paananen Lauri 1985 1973 The Winter War The Russo Finnish Conflict 1939 40 US Westview ISBN 0 8133 0149 1 Ericson Edward E 1999 Feeding the German Eagle Soviet Economic Aid to Nazi Germany 1933 1941 Greenwood ISBN 0 275 96337 3 Fest Joachim C 2002 Hitler Houghton Mifflin Harcourt ISBN 0 15 602754 2 Fisher David Read Anthony 1999 The Deadly Embrace Hitler Stalin and the Nazi Soviet Pact 1939 1941 W W Norton amp Co Garlinski Jozef 1987 Poland in the Second World War Hippocrene Books ISBN 0 333 39258 2 Goldman Stuart D 2012 Nomonhan 1939 The Red Army s Victory That Shaped World War II Naval Institute Press ISBN 978 1 61251 098 9 Halecki O 1983 A History of Poland Routledge amp Kegan ISBN 0 7102 0050 1 Hehn Paul N 2005 A Low Dishonest Decade The Great Powers Eastern Europe and the Economic Origins of World War II 1930 1941 Continuum International Publishing Group ISBN 0 8264 1761 2 Kershaw Ian 2001 Hitler 1936 1945 Nemesis W W Norton ISBN 978 0 393 32252 1 OCLC 244169429 Leskinen Jari Juutilainen Antti eds 1999 Talvisodan pikkujattilainen in Finnish Werner Soderstrom Osakeyhtio ISBN 951 0 23536 9 Lewkowicz Nicolas 2018 The United States the Soviet Union and the geopolitical implications of the origins of the Cold War New York Anthem Press ISBN 9781783087990 Maser Werner 1994 Der Wortbruch Hitler Stalin und der Zweite Weltkrieg Munchen Olzog ISBN 3 7892 8260 X Montefiore Simon Sebag 2005 2003 Stalin The Court of the Red Tsar 5th ed Great Britain Phoenix ISBN 0 7538 1766 7 Moorhouse Roger 2014 The Devils Alliance Hitler s Pact with Stalin 1939 1941 The Bodley Head ISBN 978 1 84792 205 2 Nekrich Aleksandr Moiseevich Ulam Adam Bruno Freeze Gregory L 1997 Pariahs Partners Predators German Soviet Relations 1922 1941 Columbia University Press ISBN 0 231 10676 9 Philbin Tobias R III 1994 The Lure of Neptune German Soviet Naval Collaboration and Ambitions 1919 1941 University of South Carolina Press ISBN 0 87249 992 8 Piotrowski Tadeusz 2007 Poland s Holocaust McFarland ISBN 978 0 7864 0371 4 Resis Albert 2000 The Fall of Litvinov Harbinger of the German Soviet Non Aggression Pact Europe Asia Studies Taylor amp Francis 52 1 33 56 doi 10 1080 09668130098253 JSTOR 153750 S2CID 153557275 Roberts Geoffrey 1992a The Soviet Decision for a Pact with Nazi Germany Soviet Studies 55 2 57 78 doi 10 1080 09668139208411994 JSTOR 152247 Roberts Geoffrey October 1992b The Fall of Litvinov A Revisionist View Journal of Contemporary History 27 4 639 57 doi 10 1177 002200949202700405 JSTOR 260946 S2CID 159859306 Roberts Geoffrey 1992 Infamous Encounter The Merekalov Weizsacker Meeting of 17 April 1939 The Historical Journal 35 4 921 6 doi 10 1017 S0018246X00026224 JSTOR 2639445 S2CID 154228049 Roberts Geoffrey 1995 Soviet Policy and the Baltic States 1939 1940 A Reappraisal Diplomacy and Statecraft 6 3 695 722 doi 10 1080 09592299508405982 Roberts Geoffrey 2006 Stalin s Wars From World War to Cold War 1939 1953 Yale University Press ISBN 0 300 11204 1 Service Robert 2003 1997 A History of Modern Russia Penguin books ISBN 978 0 14 101121 9 Shirer William L 1990 1959 The Rise and Fall of the Third Reich A History of Nazi Germany Simon amp Schuster ISBN 0 671 72868 7 Taylor AJP 1961 The Origins of the Second World War London Simon amp Schuster ISBN 978 0 684 82947 0 Trotter William R 2002 1991 The Winter war The Russo Finnish War of 1939 40 5th ed London Aurum Press ISBN 978 1 85410 881 4 First published as A Frozen Hell The Russo Finnish Winter War of 1939 40 Chapel Hill NC Algonquin Books 1991 ISBN 1 56512 249 6 OCLC 58499386 Turtola Martti 1999 Kansainvalinen kehitys Euroopassa ja Suomessa 1930 luvulla In Leskinen Jari Juutilainen Antti eds Talvisodan pikkujattilainen Ulam Adam Bruno 1989 Stalin The Man and His Era Beacon Press ISBN 0 8070 7005 X Vizulis Izidors 1990 The Molotov Ribbentrop Pact of 1939 The Baltic Case Praeger ISBN 0 275 93456 X Wegner Bernd ed 1997 From Peace to War Germany Soviet Russia and the World 1939 1941 Providence and Oxford Berghahn Books ISBN 978 1 57181 882 9 Watson Derek 2000 Molotov s Apprenticeship in Foreign Policy The Triple Alliance Negotiations in 1939 Europe Asia Studies 52 4 695 722 doi 10 1080 713663077 JSTOR 153322 S2CID 144385167 Watt DC 1989 How War Came the Immediate Origins of the Second World War 1938 1939 London ISBN 978 0 394 57916 0 Watt Richard M 1979 Bitter Glory Poland amp Its Fate 1918 1939 NY Simon amp Schuster ISBN 0 7818 0673 9 External links EditMolotov Ribbentrop Pact at Wikipedia s sister projects Definitions from Wiktionary Media from Commons News from Wikinews Quotations from Wikiquote Texts from Wikisource Textbooks from Wikibooks Resources from Wikiversity Originals of the treaty and protocols from the archives of the Russian Foreign Ministry published by History Foundation in Russia in May 2019 Text of the pact Nazi Soviet Relations 1939 1941 Leonas Cerskus The Story of Lithuanian soldier Modern History Sourcebook a collection of public domain and copy permitted texts in modern European and World history has scanned photocopies of original documents The Meaning of the Soviet German Non Aggression Pact Molotov speech to the Supreme Soviet on August 31 1939 Italy and the Nazi Soviet Pact of August 23 1939 International Conference and booklet on the Molotov Ribbentrop Pact Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Molotov Ribbentrop Pact amp oldid 1144114174, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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