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Polish–Soviet War

Polish–Soviet War
Part of Central and Eastern European military campaigns that included the Western Front of the Russian Civil War, Ukrainian War of Independence, Lithuanian Wars of Independence and Latvian War of Independence

Top left: Polish FT-17 tanks of the 1st Tank Regiment during the Battle of Dyneburg, January 1920
Below left: Polish troops enter Kiev, May 1920
Top right: Polish Schwarzlose M.07/12 machine gun nest during the Battle of Radzymin, August 1920
Middle: Polish defences with a M1895/14 machine gun position near Miłosna, during the Battle of Warsaw, August 1920
Bottom left: Russian prisoners following the Battle of Warsaw
Bottom right: Polish defences in Belarus during the Battle of the Niemen River, September 1920
Date1918/1919[c] – 18 March 1921
(2 years, 1 month and 4 days)
Location
Result Polish victory
Territorial
changes
Belligerents
Commanders and leaders
Strength
Early 1919: ~50,000[5]
Summer 1920:
800,000–950,000[6]
5 million reservists,
Ukrainian Galician Army(about 1000 soldiers),
Socialist Soviet Republic of Lithuania and Belorussia
Early 1919: ~80,000[7]
Summer 1920:
348,286 troops on front,[8] about 700,000 reservists
approx. 1,000,000[9]
Ukraine: 20,000[10]
Russian volunteers: 20,000[10]
Casualties and losses
Total reported: 140,000–145,000 (unknown wounded not included)
c. 60,000 dead[11]
c. 80,000–85,000 captured[12]
Total reported: 212,420
47,551 dead
  • 17,213 KIA
  • 30,338 died of wounds
113,518 wounded
51,351 captured or missing[13][14][15]

The Polish–Soviet War[N 1] (late autumn 1918 / 14 February 1919[3] – 18 March 1921) was fought primarily between the Second Polish Republic and the Russian Soviet Federative Socialist Republic before it became a union republic in the aftermath of World War I and the Russian Revolution, on territories which were previously held by the Russian Empire and the Habsburg Monarchy following the Partitions of Poland.

On 13 November 1918, after the collapse of the Central Powers and the Armistice of 11 November 1918, Vladimir Lenin's Russian Soviet Federative Socialist Republic annulled the Treaty of Brest-Litovsk (which it had signed with the Central Powers in March 1918) and started moving forces in the western direction to recover and secure the Ober Ost regions vacated by the German forces that the Russian state had lost under the treaty. Lenin saw the newly independent Poland (formed in October–November 1918) as the bridge which his Red Army would have to cross to assist other communist movements and to bring about more European revolutions.[16]

At the same time, leading Polish politicians of different orientations pursued the general expectation of restoring the country's pre-1772 borders. Motivated by this idea, Polish Chief of State Józef Piłsudski (in office from 14 November 1918) began moving troops east.

In 1919, while the Soviet Red Army was still preoccupied with the Russian Civil War of 1917–1922, the Polish Army moved into territories regarded by many Poles as Polish "Kresy". That year, they took most of present-day Lithuania and Belarus. By July 1919, Polish forces had taken control of much of Eastern Galicia and had emerged victorious from the Polish–Ukrainian War of November 1918 to July 1919. In the eastern part of Ukraine bordering on Russia, Symon Petliura tried to defend the Ukrainian People's Republic, but as the Bolsheviks gained the upper hand in the Russian Civil War, they advanced westward towards the disputed Ukrainian lands and made Petliura's forces retreat. Reduced to a small amount of territory in the west, Petliura was compelled to seek an alliance with Piłsudski, officially concluded in April 1920.

Piłsudski believed that the best way for Poland to secure favorable borders was by military action and that he could easily defeat the Red Army forces. His Kiev offensive commenced in late April 1920 and resulted in the takeover of Kiev by Polish and allied Ukrainian forces on 7 May. The Soviet armies in the area, which were weaker, had not been decisively defeated, as they avoided major confrontations and withdrew. The offensive received only meager support from the local population and more Ukrainians joined the Red Army than Petliura's forces.

The Red Army responded to the Polish offensive with counterattacks: from 5 June on the southern Ukrainian front and from 4 July on the northern front. On the southern front, the Poles and their allies, equipped with some more advanced weaponry, retreated in an orderly fashion. On the northern front, however, the retreat soon turned into a chaotic and uncoordinated flight.[17] The Soviet operation pushed the Polish forces back westward all the way to Warsaw, the Polish capital, while the Directorate of Ukraine fled to Western Europe. Fears of Soviet troops arriving at the German borders increased the interest and involvement of the Western powers in the war. In mid-summer the fall of Warsaw seemed certain but in mid-August the tide had turned again after the Polish forces achieved an unexpected and decisive victory at the Battle of Warsaw (12 to 25 August 1920). In the wake of the eastward Polish advance that followed, the Soviets sued for peace, and the war ended with a ceasefire on 18 October 1920.

The Peace of Riga, signed on 18 March 1921, divided the disputed territories between Poland and Soviet Russia. The war and the treaty negotiations determined the Polish-Soviet border for the rest of the interwar period. Poland's eastern border was established at about 200 km east of the Curzon Line (a 1920 British proposal for Poland's border, based on the version approved in 1919 by the Entente leaders as the limit of Poland's expansion in the eastern direction). The new Polish-Soviet border divided what are today the countries of Ukraine and Belarus.

The peace negotiations – on the Polish side conducted chiefly by Piłsudski's opponents and against his will – ended with the official recognition of the two new Soviet republics, the Ukrainian SSR and the Byelorussian SSR, which became parties to the treaty. This outcome and the new border agreed on precluded any possibility of the formation of the Intermarium Polish-led federation of states that Piłsudski had envisaged or of meeting his other eastern policy goals.

Names and ending dates

The war is known by several names. "Polish–Soviet War" is the most common but other names include "Russo–Polish War" (or "Polish–Russian War") and "Polish–Bolshevik War".[4] This last term (or just "Bolshevik War" (Polish: Wojna bolszewicka)) is most common in Polish sources. In some Polish sources it is also referred to as the "War of 1920" (Polish: Wojna 1920 roku).[N 2]

The ending year of the conflict is variously given as either 1920 or 1921; this confusion stems from the fact that while the ceasefire came into force on 18 October 1920, the official treaty ending the war was signed on 18 March 1921. While the events of late 1918 and 1919 can be described as a border conflict and only in spring 1920 were both sides engaged in an all-out war, the warfare that took place in late April 1920 was an escalation of the fighting that had begun a year and a half earlier.[2]

Background

 
Partitions of Poland–Lithuania in 1795: the coloured territories show the extent of the Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth just before the First Partition. The land absorbed by the Kingdom of Prussia is in blue (north-west), by the Austrian Habsburg monarchy in green (south) and by the Russian Empire in red (east).

The war's main territories of contention lie in what is now Ukraine and Belarus. Until the mid-13th century, they formed part of the medieval state of Kievan Rus'. After a period of internal wars and the 1240 Mongol invasion, the lands became objects of expansion for the Kingdom of Poland and for the Grand Duchy of Lithuania. In the first half of the 14th century, the Principality of Kiev and the land between the Dnieper, Pripyat, and Daugava (Western Dvina) rivers became part of the Grand Duchy of Lithuania. In 1352, Poland and Lithuania divided the Kingdom of Galicia–Volhynia between themselves. In 1569, in accordance with the terms of the Union of Lublin between Poland and Lithuania, some of the Ukrainian lands passed to the Polish Crown. Between 1772 and 1795, many of the East Slavic territories became part of the Russian Empire in the course of the Partitions of Poland–Lithuania. In 1795 (the Third Partition of Poland), Poland lost formal independence. After the Congress of Vienna of 1814–1815, much of the territory of the Duchy of Warsaw was transferred to Russian control and became the autonomous Congress Poland (officially the Kingdom of Poland).[18] After young Poles refused conscription to the Imperial Russian Army during the January Uprising of 1863, Tsar Alexander II stripped Congress Poland of its separate constitution, attempted to force general use of the Russian language and took away vast tracts of land from Poles. Congress Poland was incorporated more directly into imperial Russia by being divided into ten provinces, each with an appointed Russian military governor and all under complete control of the Russian Governor-General at Warsaw.[19][20]

In the aftermath of World War I, the map of Central and Eastern Europe changed drastically. The German Empire's defeat rendered obsolete Berlin's plans for the creation of Eastern European German-dominated states (Mitteleuropa), which included another rendition of the Kingdom of Poland. The Russian Empire collapsed, which resulted in the Russian Revolution and the Russian Civil War. The Russian state lost territory due to the German offensive and the Treaty of Brest-Litovsk, signed by the emergent Russian Soviet Federative Socialist Republic. Several nations of the region saw a chance for independence and seized their opportunity to gain it. The defeat of Germany on the Western Front and the withdrawal of the Imperial German Army in the Eastern Front had left Berlin in no position to retaliate against Soviet Russia, which swiftly repudiated the treaty and proceeded to recover many of the former territories of the Russian Empire.[21] However, preoccupied with the civil war, it did not have the resources to react swiftly to the national rebellions.[21]

 
Map of areas where Polish was used as a primary language in 1916 (published in post-1918 Poland)

In November 1918, Poland became a sovereign state. Among the several border wars fought by the Second Polish Republic was the successful Greater Poland uprising (1918–1919) against Weimar Germany. The historic Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth included vast territories in the east. They had been incorporated into the Russian Empire in 1772–1795 and had remained its parts, as the Northwest Territory, until World War I.[22] After the war they were contested by the Polish, Russian, Ukrainian, Belarusian, Lithuanian, and Latvian interests.

In newly independent Poland, politics were strongly influenced by Józef Piłsudski. On 11 November 1918, Piłsudski was made head of Polish armed forces by the Regency Council of the Kingdom of Poland, a body installed by the Central Powers. Subsequently, he was recognized by many Polish politicians as temporary chief of state and exercised in practice extensive powers. Under the Small Constitution of 20 February 1919, he became chief of state. As such, he reported to the Legislative Sejm.[23]

With the collapse of the Russian and German occupying authorities, virtually all of Poland's neighbours began fighting over borders and other issues. The Finnish Civil War, the Estonian War of Independence, the Latvian War of Independence, and the Lithuanian Wars of Independence were all fought in the Baltic Sea region.[24] Russia was overwhelmed by domestic struggles. In early March 1919, the Communist International was established in Moscow. The Hungarian Soviet Republic was proclaimed in March and the Bavarian Soviet Republic in April.[25][26] Winston Churchill, in a conversation with Prime Minister David Lloyd George, commented sarcastically: "The war of giants has ended, the wars of the pygmies begin."[27][28] The Polish–Soviet War was the longest lasting of the international engagements.

 
Territorial establishment of the Second Polish Republic as of March 1919

The territory of what had become Poland had been a major battleground during World War I and the new country lacked political stability. It had won the hard-fought Polish–Ukrainian War against the West Ukrainian People's Republic by July 1919 but had already become embroiled in new conflicts with Germany (the 1919–1921 Silesian Uprisings) and the January 1919 border conflict with Czechoslovakia. Meanwhile, Soviet Russia focused on thwarting the counterrevolution and the 1918–1925 intervention by the Allied powers. The first clashes between Polish and Soviet forces occurred in autumn and winter 1918/1919, but it took a year and a half for a full-scale war to develop.[4]

The Western powers considered any significant territorial expansion of Poland, at the expense of Russia or Germany, to be highly disruptive to the post-World War I order. Among other factors, the Western Allies did not want to give Germany and Russia a reason to conspire together.[29] The rise of the unrecognized Bolshevik regime complicated this rationale.[30]

The Treaty of Versailles, signed on 28 June 1919, regulated Poland's western border.[31] The Paris Peace Conference (1919–1920) had not made a definitive ruling in regard to Poland's eastern border but on 8 December 1919, the Allied Supreme War Council issued a provisional boundary (its later version would be known as the Curzon Line).[30] It was an attempt to define the areas that had an "indisputably Polish ethnic majority".[31][32][33] The permanent border was contingent on the Western powers' future negotiations with White Russia, presumed to prevail in the Russian Civil War.[30] Piłsudski and his allies blamed Prime Minister Ignacy Paderewski for this outcome and caused his dismissal. Paderewski, embittered, withdrew from politics.[33]

 
Vladimir Lenin in 1919

The leader of Russia's new Bolshevik government, Vladimir Lenin, aimed to regain control of the territories abandoned by Russia in the Treaty of Brest-Litovsk in March 1918 (the treaty was annulled by Russia on 13 November 1918)[34] and to set up Soviet governments in the emerging countries in the western parts of the former Russian Empire. The more ambitious goal was to also reach Germany, where he expected a socialist revolution to break out. By the end of summer 1919, the Soviets had taken over most of eastern and central Ukraine (formerly parts of the Russian Empire) and driven the Directorate of Ukraine from Kiev. In February 1919, they set up the Socialist Soviet Republic of Lithuania and Belorussia (Litbel). It is however unlikely that the Soviet forced plannes further incursions westward.[35]

From late 1919, Lenin, encouraged by the Red Army's civil war victories over the White Russian forces and their Western allies, began to envision the future of world revolution with greater optimism. The Bolsheviks proclaimed the need for the dictatorship of the proletariat and agitated for a worldwide communist community. They intended to link the revolution in Russia with a communist Revolutions and interventions in Hungary (1918–1920) they had hoped for and to assist other communist movements in Europe. To be able to provide direct physical support to revolutionaries in the West, the Red Army would have to cross the territory of Romania.[36]

According to the historian Andrzej Chwalba, however, the scenario was different in late 1919 and winter–spring 1920. The Soviets, facing decreasing revolutionary fervor in Europe and having to deal with Russia's own problems, attempted to make peace with its neighbors, including Poland.[37]

 
Józef Piłsudski in 1919

According to Aviel Roshwald, (Piłsudski) "hoped to incorporate most of the territories of the defunct Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth into the future Polish state by structuring it as the Polish-led, multinational federation."[38] Piłsudski had wanted to break up the Russian Empire and set up the Intermarium federation of various different states: Poland, Lithuania, Belarus, Ukraine and other Central and East European countries that emerged from the crumbling empires after World War I. In Piłsudski's vision, Poland would replace a truncated and vastly reduced Russia as the great power of Eastern Europe. His plan excluded negotiations prior to military victory.[39][40][41][42][43][44] He had hoped that the new Poland-led union would become a counterweight to any potential imperialist intentions of Russia or Germany.[45] Piłsudski believed that there could be no independent Poland without a Ukraine free of Russian control, thus his main interest was in splitting Ukraine from Russia.[46][47] He used military force to expand the Polish borders in Galicia and Volhynia and crush a Ukrainian attempt at self-determination in the disputed territories east of the Curzon Line, which contained a significant Polish minority.[16] On 7 February 1919, Piłsudski spoke on the subject of Poland's future frontiers:

"At the moment Poland is essentially without borders and all that we can gain in this regard in the west depends on the Entente – on the extent to which it may wish to squeeze Germany. In the east, it's a different matter; there are doors here that open and close and it depends on who forces them open and how far".[48][49]

Polish military forces had thus set out to expand far in the eastern direction. As Piłsudski imagined,

"Closed within the boundaries of the 16th century, cut off from the Black Sea and Baltic Sea, deprived of land and mineral wealth of the South and South-east, Russia could easily move into the status of second-grade power. Poland, as the largest and strongest of the new states, could easily establish a sphere of influence stretching from Finland to the Caucasus".[50]

Piłsudski's concepts appeared more progressive and democratic in comparison with the rival National Democracy's plans,[42][51][52] although both pursued the idea of direct incorporation and Polonization of the disputed eastern lands.[53] However Piłsudski used his "federation" idea instrumentally. As he wrote to his close associate Leon Wasilewski in April 1919, (for now)

"I want to be neither an imperialist nor a federalist. ... Taking into account that, in this God's world, an empty talk of the brotherhood of people and nations as well as the American little doctrines seem to be winning, I gladly side with the federalists".[52]

According to Chwalba, the differences between Piłsudski's vision of Poland and that of his rival National Democratic leader Roman Dmowski were more rhetorical than real. Piłsudski had made many obfuscating statements, but never specifically stated his views regarding Poland's eastern borders or political arrangements he intended for the region.[54]

Preliminary hostilities

From late 1917, Polish revolutionary military units were formed in Russia. They were combined into the Western Rifle Division in October 1918. In summer 1918, a short-lived Polish communist government, led by Stefan Heltman, was created in Moscow. Both the military and civilian structures were meant to facilitate the eventual introduction of communism into Poland in the form of a Polish Soviet Republic.[55]

 
Activists of the Polish Military Organisation in 1917

Given the precarious situation resulting from the withdrawal of German forces from Belarus and Lithuania and the expected arrival of the Red Army there, Polish Self-Defence had been organized in autumn 1918 around major concentrations of Polish population, such as Minsk, Vilnius and Grodno. They were based on the Polish Military Organisation and were recognized as part of the Polish Armed Forces by the decree of Polish Chief of State Piłsudski, issued on 7 December 1918.[56][57]

The German Soldatenrat of Ober Ost declared on 15 November that its authority in Vilnius would be transferred to the Red Army.[34]

In late autumn 1918, the Polish 4th Rifle Division fought the Red Army in Russia. The division operated under the authority of the Polish Army in France and General Józef Haller. Politically, the division fought under the Polish National Committee (KNP), recognized by the Allies as a temporary government of Poland. In January 1919, per Piłsudski's decision, the 4th Rifle Division became part of the Polish Army.[3]

The Polish Self-Defence forces were defeated by the Soviets at a number of locations.[55] Minsk was taken by the Russian Western Army on 11 December 1918.[58] The Socialist Soviet Republic of Byelorussia was declared there on 31 December. After three days of heavy fighting with the Western Rifle Division, the Self-Defence units withdrew from Vilnius on 5 January 1919. Polish–Soviet skirmishes continued in January and February.[56]

The Polish armed forces were hurriedly formed to fight in several border wars. Two major formations manned the Russian front in February 1919: the northern, led by General Wacław Iwaszkiewicz-Rudoszański, and the southern, under General Antoni Listowski.[55]

Polish–Ukrainian War

On 18 October 1918, the Ukrainian National Council was formed in Eastern Galicia, still part of the Austro-Hungarian Empire; it was led by Yevhen Petrushevych. The establishment of a Ukrainian state there was proclaimed in November 1918; it had become known as the West Ukrainian People's Republic and it claimed Lwów as its capital.[59] Because of Russia-related political considerations, the Ukrainian attempts failed to generate support of the Entente powers.[60]

 
General Józef Haller swearing for the Polish flag when he was nominated to command the Blue Army

Key buildings in Lwów were seized by the Ukrainians on 31 October 1918. On 1 November, Polish residents of the city counterattacked and the Polish–Ukrainian War began.[60] Lwów was under Polish control from 22 November.[61] To Polish politicians, the Polish claim to Lwów and eastern Galicia was indisputable; in April 1919, the Legislative Sejm unanimously declared that all of Galicia should be annexed by Poland.[62] In April to June 1919, the Polish Blue Army of General Józef Haller arrived from France. It consisted of over 67,000 well-equipped and highly trained soldiers.[63] The Blue Army helped drive the Ukrainian forces east past the Zbruch River and decisively contributed to the outcome of the war. The West Ukrainian People's Republic was defeated by mid-July and eastern Galicia had come under Polish administration.[60][61] The destruction of the West Ukrainian Republic confirmed the belief held by many Ukrainians that Poland was the main enemy of their nation.[64]

From January 1919 fighting also took place in Volhynia, where the Poles faced the forces of the Ukrainian People's Republic led by Symon Petliura. The Polish offensive resulted in a takeover of the western part of the province.[49][65] The Polish–Ukrainian warfare there was discontinued from late May, and in early September an armistice was signed.[49][65]

On 21 November 1919, after contentious deliberations, the Allied Supreme War Council mandated Polish control over eastern Galicia for 25 years, with guarantees of autonomy for the Ukrainian population.[61][51] The Conference of Ambassadors, which replaced the Supreme War Council, recognized the Polish claim to eastern Galicia in March 1923.[51][66]

Polish intelligence

Jan Kowalewski, a polyglot and amateur cryptographer, broke the codes and ciphers of the army of the West Ukrainian People's Republic and of General Anton Denikin's White Russian forces.[67][68] In August 1919, he became chief of the Polish General Staff's cryptography section in Warsaw.[69] By early September, he had gathered a group of mathematicians from the University of Warsaw and the University of Lwów (most notably the founders of the Polish School of Mathematics – Stanisław Leśniewski, Stefan Mazurkiewicz and Wacław Sierpiński), who succeeded in breaking the Soviet Russian ciphers as well. During the Polish–Soviet War, the Polish decryption of Red Army radio messages made it possible to use Polish military forces efficiently against Soviet Russian forces and to win many individual battles, most importantly the Battle of Warsaw.[67][68]

War

Early progression of the conflict

 
Five stages in the Polish–Soviet War

On 5 January 1919, the Red Army took Vilnius, which led to the establishment of the Socialist Soviet Republic of Lithuania and Belorussia (Litbel) on 28 February.[22][24] On 10 February, Soviet Russia's People's Commissar for Foreign Affairs Georgy Chicherin wrote to Polish Prime Minister Ignacy Paderewski, proposing resolution of matters of disagreement and establishment of relations between the two states. It was one of the series of notes exchanged by the two governments in 1918 and 1919.[70]

In February, Polish troops marched east to face the Soviets; the new Polish Sejm declared the need to liberate "the northeast provinces of Poland with their capital in Wilno [Vilnius]".[22] After the German World War I troops had been evacuated from the region, the Battle of Bereza Kartuska, a Polish–Soviet skirmish, took place.[71] It occurred during a local Polish offensive action of 13–16 February, led by General Antoni Listowski, near Byaroza, Belarus.[4][2][16][71][72] The event has been presented as the beginning of the war of liberation by the Polish side, or of Polish aggression by the Russian side.[71] By late February, the Soviet westward offensive had come to a halt. As the low-level warfare continued, the Polish units crossed the Neman River, took Pinsk on 5 March and reached the outskirts of Lida; on 4 March, Piłsudski ordered further movement to the east stopped.[73][71] The Soviet leadership had become preoccupied with the issue of providing military assistance to the Hungarian Soviet Republic and with the Siberian offensive of the White Army, led by Alexander Kolchak.[74]

By July 1919 Polish armies eliminated the West Ukrainian People's Republic.[33] Secretly preparing an assault on Soviet-held Vilnius, in early April Piłsudski was able to shift some of the forces used in Ukraine to the northern front. The idea was to create a fait accompli and to prevent the Western powers from granting the territories claimed by Poland to White Russia (the Whites were expected to prevail in the Russian Civil War).[75]

 
Piłsudski in Vilnius

A new Polish offensive started on 16 April.[4][49][75] Five thousand soldiers, led by Piłsudski, headed for Vilnius.[76] Advancing to the east, the Polish forces took Lida on 17 April, Novogrudok on 18 April, Baranavichy on 19 April and Grodno on 28 April.[77] Piłsudski's group entered Vilnius on 19 April and captured the city after two days of fighting.[49][77] The Polish action drove the Litbel government from its proclaimed capital.[22][16]

Upon the taking of Vilnius, in pursuit of his federation objectives, Piłsudski issued a "Proclamation to the inhabitants of the former Grand Duchy of Lithuania" on 22 April. It was sharply criticized by his rival National Democrats, who demanded direct incorporation of the former Grand Duchy lands by Poland and signaled their opposition to Piłsudski's territorial and political concepts. Piłsudski had thus proceeded to restore the historic territories of the Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth by military means, leaving the necessary political determinations for later.[49][75]

On 25 April, Lenin ordered the Western Front commander to reclaim Vilnius as soon as possible. The Red Army formations that attacked the Polish forces were defeated by Edward Rydz-Śmigły's units between 30 April and 7 May.[75][78] While the Poles extended their holdings further, the Red Army, unable to accomplish its objectives and facing intensified combat with the White forces elsewhere, withdrew from its positions.[75]

The Polish "Lithuanian–Belarusian Front" was established on 15 May and placed under command of General Stanisław Szeptycki.[71]

In a statute passed on 15 May, Polish Sejm called for the inclusion of the eastern borderline nations in the Polish state as autonomous entities. It was intended to make a positive impression on the participants at the Paris Peace Conference. At the conference, Prime Minister and Foreign Minister Ignacy Paderewski declared Poland's support for self-determination of the eastern nations, in line with Woodrow Wilson's doctrine and in an effort to secure Western support for Poland's policies in regard to Ukraine, Belarus and Lithuania.[79]

The Polish offensive was discontinued around the line of German trenches and fortifications from World War I, because of high likelihood of Poland's war with Weimar Germany over territorial and other issues. Half of Poland's military strength had been concentrated on the German front by mid-June. The offensive in the east was resumed at the end of June, following the Treaty of Versailles. The treaty, signed and ratified by Germany, preserved the status quo in western Poland.[80]

On the southern front in Volhynia, in May and in July the Polish forces confronted the Red Army, which was in process of pushing Petliura's Ukrainian units out of the contested territories. The rural Orthodox population there was hostile to the Polish authorities and actively supported the Bolsheviks.[65] Also in Podolia and near the eastern reaches of Galicia, the Polish armies kept slowly advancing to the east until December. They crossed the Zbruch River and displaced Soviet forces from a number of localities.[65]

 
Piłsudski in Minsk

The Polish forces took Minsk on 8 August.[4][81] The Berezina River was reached on 18 August.[81] On 28 August, tanks were deployed for the first time and the town of Babruysk was captured.[4][81] By 2 September, Polish units reached the Daugava River.[4] Barysaw was taken on 10 September and parts of Polotsk on 21 September.[81] By mid-September, the Poles secured the region along the Daugava from the Dysna River to Daugavpils.[4] The frontline had also extended south, cutting through Polesia and Volhynia;[75][81] along the Zbruch River it reached the Romanian border.[75] A Red Army assault between the Daugava and Berezina Rivers was repelled in October and the front had become relatively inactive with sporadic encounters only, as the line designated by Piłsudski to be the goal of the Polish operation in the north was reached.[75][81]

In autumn 1919, the Sejm voted to incorporate into Poland the conquered territories up to the Daugava and Berezina Rivers, including Minsk.[82]

The Polish successes in summer 1919 resulted from the fact that the Soviets prioritized the war with the White forces, which was more crucial for them. The successes created an illusion of Polish military prowess and Soviet weakness.[83] As Piłsudski put it, "I am not worried about the strength of Russia; if I wanted to, I could go now, say to Moscow, and no one would be able to resist my power ...".[84] The offensive was restrained in late summer by Piłsudski, because he did not want to improve the strategic situation of the advancing Whites.[83]

In early summer 1919, the White movement had gained the initiative and its forces, commanded by Anton Denikin and known as the Volunteer Army, marched on Moscow. Piłsuski refused to join the Allied intervention in the Russian Civil War because he considered the Whites more threatening to Poland than the Bolsheviks.[49][85] Piłsudski's adversarial relationship with tsarist Russia went back to the earlier stages of his career. He engaged in warfare with Soviet Russia from the beginning of his tenure as Polish commander-in-chief.[86] Based on this experience, he underestimated the strength of the Bolsheviks.[85] Piłsudski also thought he could get a better deal for Poland from the Bolsheviks than from the Whites,[87] who represented, in his opinion, the old Russian imperial policies, hostile to strong Poland and Ukraine independent from Russia, Piłsudski's main objectives.[88] The Bolsheviks had proclaimed the partitions of Poland to be invalid and declared their support for self-determination of the Polish nation.[89][90] Piłsudski thus speculated that Poland would be better off with the internationalist Bolsheviks, who were also alienated from the Western powers, than with the restored Russian Empire, its traditional nationalism, and its partnership with Western politics.[64][87][91] By his refusal to join the attack on Lenin's struggling government, he ignored strong pressure from the Triple Entente leaders and possibly saved the Bolshevik government in summer to fall 1919,[92] although a full-scale attack by the Poles to support Denikin would not have been possible.[93] Mikhail Tukhachevsky later commented on the likely disastrous consequences for the Bolsheviks if the Polish government undertook military cooperation with Denikin at the time of his advance on Moscow.[94] In a book he later published, Denikin pointed at Poland as the savior of the Bolshevik power.[95]

 
Polish-held territory in December 1919

Denikin twice appealed to Piłsudski for help, in summer and in autumn 1919. According to Denikin, "The defeat of the south of Russia will make Poland face the power that will become a calamity for the Polish culture and will threaten the existence of the Polish state". According to Piłsudski, "The lesser evil is to facilitate a White Russia's defeat by Red Russia. ... With any Russia, we fight for Poland. Let all that filthy West talk all they want; we're not going to be dragged into and used for the fight against the Russian revolution. Quite to the contrary, in the name of permanent Polish interests, we want to make it easier for the revolutionary army to act against the counter-revolutionary army."[94] On 12 December, the Red Army pushed Denikin out of Kiev.[94]

The self-perceived interests of Poland and White Russia were irreconcilable. Piłsudski wanted to break up Russia and create a powerful Poland. Denikin, Alexander Kolchak and Nikolai Yudenich wanted territorial integrity for the "one, great and indivisible Russia".[95] Piłsudski held the Bolshevik military forces in low regard and thought of Red Russia as easy to defeat. The victorious in the civil war communists were going to be pushed far to the east and deprived of Ukraine, Belarus, the Baltic lands, and the southern Caucasus; they would no longer constitute a threat to Poland.[95]

From the beginning of the conflict, many peace initiatives had been declared by the Polish and Russian sides, but they were intended as cover or stalling for time, as each side concentrated on military preparations and moves.[25] One series of Polish-Soviet negotiations commenced in Białowieża after the termination of the summer 1919 military activities; they were moved in early November 1919 to Mikashevichy.[83][94] Piłsudski's associate Ignacy Boerner [pl] met there with Lenin's emissary Julian Marchlewski. Buoyed by their armies' successes in the Russian Civil War, the Soviet government rejected the tough Polish armistice conditions in December. Piłsudski broke off the Mikashevichy talks two days after the Soviet takeover of Kiev, but major military operations had not been resumed.[83][94] Early in the talks, Boerner informed Marchlewski that Poland had no intention of renewing its offensive; it allowed the Soviets to move forty-three thousand troops from the Polish front to fight Denikin.[83][96]

 
Polish soldiers enter Daugavpils, January 1920

The only exception to the Polish policy of front stabilization since autumn 1919 was the winter attack on Daugavpils.[97] Rydz-Śmigły's previous attempts to capture the city in summer and early autumn had been unsuccessful.[97] A secret political and military pact regarding a common attack on Daugavpils was signed between representatives of Poland and the Latvian Provisional Government on 30 December. On 3 January 1920, Polish and Latvian forces (30,000 Poles and 10,000 Latvians) commenced a joint operation against the surprised enemy. The Bolshevik 15th Army withdrew and had not been pursued; the fighting terminated on 25 January.[97] The taking of Daugavpils was accomplished primarily by the 3rd Legions Infantry Division under Rydz-Śmigły.[49][98] Afterwards, the town and its vicinity were handed over to the Latvians.[49][97][99][100] The outcome of the campaign disrupted communications between Lithuanian and Russian forces.[97] A Polish garrison was stationed in Daugavpils until July 1920. Simultaneously, the Latvian authorities pursued peace negotiations with the Soviets, which resulted in the signing of a preliminary armistice. Piłsudski and the Polish diplomacy were not notified and had not been aware of this development.[97]

The fighting in 1919 resulted in the formation of a very long frontline, which, according to the historian Eugeniusz Duraczyński, favored Poland at this stage.[85]

In late 1919 and early 1920, Piłsudski undertook his gargantuan task of breaking up Russia and creating the Intermarium bloc of countries.[101][102] Given the refusal of Lithuania and other eastern Baltic region countries to participate in the project, he set his sights on Ukraine.[99][101]

Abortive peace process

 
Georgy Chicherin (left) with Maxim Litvinov in 1920

In late autumn 1919, to many Polish politicians it appeared that Poland had achieved strategically desirable borders in the east and therefore fighting the Bolsheviks should be terminated and peace negotiations should commence. The pursuit of peace also dominated popular sentiments and anti-war demonstrations had taken place.[103]

The leadership of Soviet Russia confronted at that time a number of pressing internal and external problems. In order to effectively address the difficulties, they wanted to stop the warfare and offer peace to their neighbors, hoping to be able to come out of the international isolation they had been subjected to. Courted by the Soviets, the potential allies of Poland (Lithuania, Latvia, Romania, or the South Caucasus states) were unwilling to join a Polish-led anti-Soviet alliance. Faced with the diminishing revolutionary fervor in Europe, the Soviets were inclined to delay their hallmark project, a Soviet republic of Europe, to some indefinite future.[104]

The peace offers sent to Warsaw by Russia's Foreign Secretary Georgy Chicherin and other Russian governing institutions between late December 1919 and early February 1920 had not been responded to. The Soviets proposed a favorable for Poland troop demarcation line consistent with the current military frontiers, leaving permanent border determinations for later.[105]

While the Soviet overtures generated considerable interests on the parts of the socialist, agrarian and nationalist political camps, the attempts of the Polish Sejm to prevent further warfare turned futile. Piłsudski, who ruled over the military and to a considerable degree over the weak civilian government, prevented any movement toward peace. By late February, he directed the Polish representatives to engage in pretended negotiations with the Soviets. Piłsudski and his collaborators stressed what they saw as the increasing with time Polish military advantage over the Red Army and their belief that the state of war had created highly favorable conditions for Poland's economic development.[106]

On 4 March 1920, General Władysław Sikorski initiated a new offensive in Polesia; the Polish forces had driven a wedge between Soviet forces to the north (Belarus) and south (Ukraine). The Soviet counter-offensive in Polesia and Volhynia was pushed back.[99]

Polish–Russian peace negotiations in March 1920 produced no results. Piłsudski was not interested in a negotiated solution to the conflict. Preparations for a large-scale resumption of hostilities were being finalized and the newly declared (over the protest of a majority of parliamentary deputies) marshal and his circle expected the planned new offensive to lead to the fulfillment of Piłsudski's federalist ideas.[83][107]

On 7 April, Chicherin accused Poland of rejecting the Soviet peace offer and notified the Allies of the negative developments, urging them to prevent the forthcoming Polish aggression. The Polish diplomacy claimed the necessity to counteract the immediate threat of a Soviet assault in Belarus, but the Western opinion, to whom the Soviet arguments seemed reasonable, rejected the Polish narrative.[108] The Soviet forces on the Belarusian front were weak at the time and the Bolsheviks had no plans for an offensive action.[106]

Piłsudski's alliance with Petliura

 
Józef Piłsudski (right in the train) and Symon Petliura, 16 May 1920

Having resolved Poland's armed conflicts with the emerging Ukrainian states to Poland's satisfaction, Piłsudski was able to work on a Polish–Ukrainian alliance against Russia.[109][110] On 2 December 1919, Andriy Livytskyi and other Ukrainian diplomats declared their readiness to give up the Ukrainian claims to eastern Galicia and western Volhynia, in return for Poland's recognition of the independence of the Ukrainian People's Republic (UPR).[110] The Treaty of Warsaw, Piłsudski's agreement with Hetman Symon Petliura, the exiled Ukrainian nationalist leader, and two other members of the Directorate of Ukraine, was signed on 21 April 1920.[111][112] It appeared to be Piłsudski's major success, potentially signifying the beginning of a successful implementation of his long-held designs. Petliura, who formally represented the government of the Ukrainian People's Republic, which had de facto been defeated by the Bolsheviks, fled with some Ukrainian troops to Poland, where he found political asylum. His control extended only to a sliver of land near the Polish-controlled areas.[113] Petliura had therefore little choice but to accept the Polish offer of alliance, largely on Polish terms, as determined by the outcome of the recent warfare between the two nations.[114]

By concluding an agreement with Piłsudski, Petliura accepted the Polish territorial gains in western Ukraine and the future Polish–Ukrainian border along the Zbruch River. In exchange for renouncing the Ukrainian territorial claims, he was promised independence for Ukraine and Polish military assistance in reinstating his government in Kiev.[16][101] Given the powerful opposition against Piłsudski's eastern policy in war-tired Poland, the negotiations with Petliura were conducted in secrecy and the text of the 21 April agreement remained secret. Poland recognized in it Ukraine's right to parts of the former Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth (before 1772) east of the Zbruch.[49] A military convention was added on 24 April; it placed Ukrainian units under Polish command.[111] By 1 May, a Polish–Ukrainian trade agreement was negotiated. It had not been signed, to prevent its far-ranging provisions anticipating exploitation of Ukraine by Poland from being revealed and from causing catastrophic damage to Petliura's political reputation.[115]

 
Petliura (right) with Polish General Antoni Listowski

For Piłsudski, the alliance gave his campaign for the Intermarium federation an actual starting point and potentially the most important federation partner, satisfied his demands regarding parts of Polish eastern border relevant to the proposed Ukrainian state and laid a foundation for a Polish-dominated Ukrainian state between Russia and Poland.[114] According to Richard K. Debo, while Petliura could not contribute real strength to the Polish offensive, for Piłsudski the alliance provided some camouflage for the "naked aggression involved".[114] For Petliura, it was the final chance to preserve the Ukrainian statehood and at least a theoretical independence of the Ukrainian heartlands, despite his acceptance of the loss of West Ukrainian lands to Poland.

The British and the French did not recognize the UPR and blocked its admission to the League of Nations in autumn 1920. The treaty with the Ukrainian republic did not generate any international support for Poland. It caused new tensions and conflicts, especially within the Ukrainian movements that aimed for the country's independence.[116]

Regarding the deal they had concluded, both leaders encountered strong opposition in their respective countries. Piłsudski faced stiff opposition from Roman Dmowski's National Democrats, who opposed Ukrainian independence.[109] To protest the alliance and the upcoming war over Ukraine, Stanisław Grabski resigned the chairmanship of the foreign affairs committee in the Sejm, where the National Democrats were a dominant force (their approval would be needed to finalize any future political settlement).[101][109] Petliura was criticized by many Ukrainian politicians for entering a pact with the Poles and for abandoning western Ukraine (after the destruction of the West Ukrainian People's Republic, western Ukraine was – from their point of view – occupied by Poland).[117][118][109]

During their occupation of the territory meant for the UPR, Polish officials engaged in forced requisitions, some of which were intended for troop supply, but also in extensive looting of Ukraine and its people. It ranged from activities approved and promoted at the highest level, such as the widespread theft of trains loaded with goods, to plunder perpetrated by Polish soldiers in Ukrainian countryside and cities. In his 29 April and 1 May letters to General Kazimierz Sosnkowski and Prime Minister Leopold Skulski, Piłsudski emphasized that the railroad booty had been enormous, but he could not divulge further because the appropriations took place in violation of Poland's treaty with Ukraine.[119]

The alliance with Petliura gave Poland 15,000 allied Ukrainian troops at the beginning of the Kiev campaign,[120] which increased to 35,000 by recruitment and from Soviet deserters during the war.[120] According to Chwalba, 60,000 Polish soldiers and 4,000 Ukrainians took part in the original offensive; there were only 22,488 Ukrainian soldiers on the Polish food ration list as of 1 September 1920.[121]

From Kiev offensive to armistice

Polish forces

 
Polish officers on the southern front in 1920

The Polish Army was made up of soldiers who had served in the armies of the partitioning empires (especially professional officers), as well as many new enlistees and volunteers. The soldiers had come from different armies, formations, backgrounds and traditions. While veterans of Piłsudski's Polish Legions and the Polish Military Organisation formed a privileged stratum, integrating the Greater Poland Army and the Blue Army into the national force presented many challenges.[122] The unification of the Greater Poland Army led by General Józef Dowbor-Muśnicki (a highly regarded force of 120,000 soldiers), and the Blue Army led by General Józef Haller, with the main Polish Army under Piłsudski, had been finalized on 19 October 1919 in Kraków, in a symbolic ceremony.[123]

Within the young Polish state whose continuous existence was uncertain, members of many groups resisted conscription. For example, Polish peasants and small town dwellers, Jews, or Ukrainians from Polish-controlled territories tended to avoid service in Polish armed forces for different reasons. The Polish military was overwhelmingly ethnically Polish and Catholic.[124] The intensifying desertion problem in summer 1920 led to the introduction of death penalty for desertion in August. The summary military trials and the executions often took place on the same day.[125]

Female soldiers functioned as members of the Voluntary Legion of Women; they were normally assigned auxiliary duties.[126] A system of military training for officers and soldiers was established with significant help from the French Military Mission to Poland.[127]

The Polish Air Force had about two thousand planes, mostly old. 45% of them had been captured from the enemy. Only two hundred could be airborne at any given time. They were used for various purposes including combat, but mostly for reconnaissance.[128] 150 French pilots and navigators flew as part of the French Mission.[129]

According to Norman Davies, estimating the strength of the opposing sides is difficult and even generals often had incomplete reports of their own forces.[130]

The Polish forces grew from approximately 100,000 by the end of 1918 to over 500,000 in early 1920 and 800,000 in the spring of that year.[131][132] Before the Battle of Warsaw, the army reached the total strength of about one million soldiers, including 100,000 volunteers.[9]

 
Polish fighters of the Kościuszko Squadron

The Polish armed forces were aided by military members of Western missions, especially the French Military Mission. Poland was supported, in addition to the allied Ukrainian forces (over twenty thousand soldiers),[133] by Russian and Belarusian units and volunteers of many nationalities.[129] Twenty American pilots served in the Kościuszko Squadron. Their contributions in spring and summer 1920 on the Ukrainian front were considered to be of critical importance.[134]

Russian anti-Bolshevik units fought on the Polish side. About one thousand White soldiers fought in summer 1919.[135] The largest Russian formation was sponsored by the Russian Political Committee represented by Boris Savinkov and commanded by General Boris Permikin.[111][135] The "3rd Russian Army" reached over ten thousand battle-ready soldiers and in early October 1920 was dispatched to the front to fight on the Polish side; they did not engage in combat because of the armistice that took effect at that time.[135] Six thousand soldiers fought valiantly on the Polish side in the "Cossack" Russian units from 31 May 1920.[135] Various smaller Belarusian formations fought in 1919 and 1920. However, the Russian, Cossack and Belarusian military organizations had their own political agendas and their participation has been marginalized or omitted in the Polish war narrative.[135]

Soviet losses and the spontaneous enrollment of Polish volunteers allowed rough numerical parity between the two armies;[49] by the time of the Battle of Warsaw, the Poles may have had gained a slight advantage in numbers and logistics.[136] One of the major formations on the Polish side was the First Polish Army.

Red Army

 
Mikhail Kalinin and Leon Trotsky greet Red Army troops

In early 1918, Lenin and Leon Trotsky embarked on the rebuilding of the Russian armed forces. The new Red Army was established by the Council of People's Commissars (Sovnarkom) on 28 January, to replace the demobilized Imperial Russian Army. Trotsky became commissar of war on 13 March and Georgy Chicherin took over Trotsky's previous job as foreign minister. On 18 April, the Commissar Bureau was created; it initiated the practice of assigning political commissars to military formations.[137] One million German soldiers occupied the western Russian Empire, but on 1 October, after the first indications of German defeat in the West, Lenin ordered general conscription with the intention of building a multi-million member army. While over 50,000 former tsarist officers had joined the White Army, 75,000 of them ended up in the Red Army by summer 1919.[138]

The Revolutionary Military Council of the Russian Republic was established in September 1918. It was chaired by Trotsky. Trotsky lacked military experience or expertise, but knew how to mobilize troops and was a master of war propaganda. Revolutionary war councils of particular fronts and armies were placed under the council of the republic. The system was intended as implementation of the concept of collective leadership and management of military affairs.[139]

The Red Army's chief commander, from July 1919, was Sergey Kamenev; he was installed by Joseph Stalin. Kamenev's Field Staff was led by former tsarist generals. His every decision had to be approved by the Military Council. The actual command center was placed in an armored train, used by Trotsky to travel around the front areas and coordinate military activity.[139]

Hundreds of thousands of recruits deserted from the Red Army, which resulted in 600 public executions in the second half of 1919. The army, however, conducted operations on several fronts and had remained an effective fighting force.[140]

Officially, there were five million soldiers in the Red Army as of 1 August 1920, but only 10 or 12 percent of them could be counted as the actual fighting force. Female volunteers served in combat on the same basis as men, also in Semyon Budyonny's 1st Cavalry Army. The Red Army was particularly weak in the areas of logistics, supplies, and communication. Great quantities of Western arms had been captured from the White and Allied forces and domestic production of military equipment kept increasing throughout the war. Still, the stocks were often critically short. As in the Polish Army, boots had been in short supply and many fought barefoot. There were relatively few Soviet airplanes (220 at the most at the Western Front)[141] and the Polish air formations soon came to dominate the air space.[142]

 
Semyon Budyonny

When the Poles launched their Kiev offensive, the Russian Southwestern Front had about 83,000 Soviet soldiers, including 29,000 front-line troops. The Poles had some numerical superiority, which was estimated from 12,000 to 52,000 personnel.[130] During the Soviet counter-offensive in mid-1920, on all fronts, the Soviets numbered about 790,000, at least 50,000 more than the Poles. Mikhail Tukhachevsky estimated that he had 160,000 combat ready soldiers, while Piłsudski estimated Tukhachevsky's forces at 200,000–220,000.[143]

In 1920, the Red Army personnel numbered 402,000 on the Soviet Western Front and 355,000 on the Southwestern Front in Galicia, according to Davies.[143] Grigori F. Krivosheev gives 382,071 personnel for the Western Front and 282,507 for the Southwestern Front between July and August.[144]

After the reorganization of the Western Rifle Division in mid-1919, there were no separate Polish units within the Red Army. Within both the Western and the Southwestern Fronts, besides Russian units, there had been separate Ukrainian, Latvian, and German–Hungarian units. In addition, many communists of various nationalities, for example the Chinese, fought in integrated units. The Lithuanian Army supported the Soviet forces to some degree.[111]

Among the commanders leading the Red Army offensive were Semyon Budyonny, Leon Trotsky, Sergey Kamenev, Mikhail Tukhachevsky (the new commander of the Western Front), Alexander Yegorov (the new commander of the Southwestern Front), and Hayk Bzhishkyan.

Logistics and plans

Logistics were very bad for both armies and were supported by whatever equipment was left over from World War I or could be captured. The Polish Army, for example, used guns made in five countries and rifles manufactured in six, each of which used different ammunition.[145] The Soviets had at their disposal many military depots that were left by the German armies after their withdrawal in 1918–1919, and modern French armaments that were captured in great numbers from the White Russians and the Allied expeditionary forces during the Russian Civil War. Still, they suffered a shortage of arms, as both the Red Army and the Polish forces were grossly underequipped by Western standards.[145]

 
Tadeusz Rozwadowski

However, the Red Army had at its disposal an extensive arsenal as well as fully functional armament industry concentrated in Tula, both inherited from tsarist Russia.[146][147] In contrast, the partitioning powers had all deliberately avoided industrializing ethnically Polish territories, let alone permit the establishment of any meaningful armaments industry within them. As a result, there were no firearm factories in Poland and everything, including rifles and ammunition, had to be imported.[146] Gradual progress in the area of military manufacturing had been made and after the war there were in Poland 140 industrial establishments producing military items.[148]

The Polish–Soviet War was fought not by trench warfare but by maneuverable formations. The total front was 1500 km (over 900 mi) long and was manned by relatively small amounts of troops.[146] Around the time of the Battle of Warsaw and afterwards, the Soviets suffered from overly long transportation lines and had been unable to supply their forces in a timely manner.[146]

By early 1920, the Red Army had been very successful against the White movement.[43] In January 1920, the Soviets began concentrating forces on the Polish northern front, along the Berezina River.[72] British Prime Minister David Lloyd George ordered the Baltic Sea blockade of Soviet Russia lifted. Estonia signed with Russia the Treaty of Tartu on 3 February, recognizing the Bolshevik government. European arms merchants proceeded with supplying the Soviets with items needed by the military, for which the Russian government paid with gold and valuables taken from the imperial stock and confiscated from individuals.[140]

From early 1920, both the Polish and Soviet sides had prepared for decisive confrontations. However, Lenin and Trotsky had not yet been able to dispose of all the White forces, including especially the army of Pyotr Wrangel, threatening them from the south. Piłsudski, unconstrained by such limitations, was able to attack first.[85] Convinced that the Whites were no longer a threat to Poland, he resolved to take care of the remaining enemy, the Bolsheviks.[112] The plan for the Kiev offensive was to beat the Red Army on Poland's southern flank and to install the pro-Polish Petliura government in Ukraine.[16]

Victor Sebestyen, author of a 2017 biography of Lenin, wrote: "The newly independent Poles started the war. With England and France's backing, they invaded Ukraine in spring 1920." Some Allied leaders had not supported Poland, including former British Prime Minister H. H. Asquith, who called the Kiev offensive "a purely aggressive adventure, a wanton enterprise". Sebestyen characterized Piłsudski as a "Polish nationalist, not a socialist".[149]

Kiev offensive

 
Polish Kiev offensive at its height, June 1920

On 17 April 1920, the Polish General Staff ordered the armed forces to assume attack positions. The Red Army, which had been regrouping since 10 March, was not fully ready for combat.[150] The main goal of the military operation was to create a Ukrainian state, formally independent but under Polish patronage, which would separate Poland from Russia.[16][150]

On 25 April, the southern group of Polish armies under Piłsudski's command commenced an offensive in the direction of Kiev.[150] The Polish forces were assisted by thousands of Ukrainian soldiers under Petliura, who represented the Ukrainian People's Republic.[120][151]

Alexander Yegorov, commander of the Russian Southwestern Front, had at his disposal the 12th and 14th Armies. They faced the invading force, but were small (15,000 battle-ready soldiers), weak, poorly equipped and had been distracted by peasant rebellions in Russia. Yegorov's armies had been gradually reinforced since the Soviets had found out of the Polish war preparations.[152]

 
Vladimir Lenin, Chairman of the Council of People's Commissars of Soviet Russia, delivers a speech to motivate troops to fight in the Polish–Soviet War on 5 May 1920

On 26 April, in his "Call to the People of Ukraine", Piłsudski told his intended audience that "the Polish Army would only stay as long as necessary until a legal Ukrainian government took control over its own territory". However, although many Ukrainians were anti-communist, many were anti-Polish and resented the Polish advance.[16][117]

The well-equipped and highly mobile Polish 3rd Army under Rydz-Śmigły quickly overpowered the Red Army in Ukraine.[153] The Soviet 12th and 14th Armies had for the most part declined to engage in combat and suffered limited losses; they withdrew or were pushed past the Dnieper River.[101][150][154] On 7 May, the combined Polish–Ukrainian forces, led by Rydz-Śmigły, encountered only token resistance as they entered Kiev, mostly abandoned by the Soviet military.[16][150]

 
Polish troops in Kiev

The Soviets proceeded with their first counteroffensive using the Western Front forces. Following the order of Trotsky, Mikhail Tukhachevsky launched an offensive on the Belarusian front before the (planned by the Polish command) arrival of Polish troops from the Ukrainian front. On 14 May, his forces attacked the somewhat weaker Polish armies there and penetrated the Polish-held areas (territories between the Daugava and the Berezina Rivers) to the depth of 100 km. After two Polish divisions arrived from Ukraine and the new Reserve Army was assembled, Stanisław Szeptycki, Kazimierz Sosnkowski and Leonard Skierski led a Polish counteroffensive from 28 May. The result was the Polish recovery of the bulk of the lost territory. From 8 June, the front had stabilised near the Avuta River and remained inactive until July.[155][156]

This Polish thrust into Ukraine was met with Red Army counterattacks from 29 May.[4] By that time, Yegorov's Southwestern Front had been considerably reinforced and he initiated an assault maneuver in the Kiev area.[150]

Semyon Budyonny's 1st Cavalry Army (Konarmia) conducted repeated attacks and broke the Polish–Ukrainian front on 5 June.[4] The Soviets deployed mobile cavalry units to disrupt the Polish rearguard and target communications and logistics.[150] By 10 June, the Polish armies were in retreat along the entire front. Following Piłsudski's order, Rydz-Śmigły, with the Polish and Ukrainian troops under his command, abandoned Kiev (the city was not being attacked) to the Red Army.[150][157]

Soviet victories

 
Russian volunteers about to be sent to the Polish front

On 29 April 1920, the Central Committee of the Bolshevik Communist Party of Russia appealed for volunteers for the war with Poland, to defend the Russian republic against a Polish usurpation. The first units of the volunteer army departed Moscow and headed for the front on 6 May.[158] On 9 May, the Soviet newspaper Pravda printed an article "Go West!" (Russian: На Запад!): "Through the corpse of White Poland lies the way to the World Inferno. On bayonets, we will carry happiness and peace to working humanity".[159] On 30 May 1920 General Aleksei Brusilov, the last tsarist commander-in-chief, published in Pravda an appeal "To all former officers, wherever they may be", encouraging them to forgive past grievances and join the Red Army.[160] Brusilov considered it a patriotic duty of all Russian officers to enlist with the Bolshevik government, which he thought to be defending Russia against foreign invaders.[112] Lenin understood the importance of the appeal to Russian nationalism. The Soviet counteroffensive was indeed boosted by Brusilov's involvement: 14,000 officers and over 100,000 soldiers of lower ranks enlisted in or returned to the Red Army; thousands of civilian volunteers contributed to the war effort as well.[161]

 
Soviet offensive successes, early August 1920

The 3rd Army and other Polish formations avoided destruction in the course of their long retreat from the Kiev frontier, but remained tied down in western Ukraine. They could not support the Polish northern front and reinforce, as planned by Piłsudski, the defences at the Avuta River.[162]

Poland's 320 km (200 mi) long northern front was manned by a thin line of 120,000 troops, backed by some 460 artillery pieces, with no strategic reserves. This approach to holding ground harked back to the World War I practice of establishing a fortified line of defense. The Polish–Soviet front, however, bore little resemblance to that war's conditions, as it was weakly manned, supported with inadequate artillery, and had almost no fortifications. Such arrangement allowed the Soviets to attain numerical superiority at strategically crucial locations.[162]

Against the Polish line, the Red Army gathered its Western Front led by Tukhachevsky. Its numbers exceeded 108,000 infantry and 11,000 cavalry, supported by 722 artillery pieces and 2,913 machine guns.[162]

According to Chwalba, Tukhachevsky's 3rd, 4th, 15th and 16th Armies had a total of 270,000 soldiers and a 3:1 advantage over the Poles in the area of the Western Front's attack.[17]

 
Hayk Bzhishkyan

A stronger and better prepared Soviet second northern offensive was launched on 4 July along the SmolenskBrest axis and crossed the Avuta and the Berezina Rivers.[4][158][162] Important role was played by the 3rd Cavalry Corps, known as the "assault army" and led by Hayk Bzhishkyan. On the first day of fighting, the Polish first and second lines of defense were overpowered and on 5 July the Polish forces commenced a full and quick retreat along the entire front. The combat strength of the First Polish Army was reduced by 46% during the first week of fighting. The retreat soon turned into a chaotic and disorganized flight.[17]

On 9 July, Lithuania's talks with the Soviets commenced. The Lithuanians launched a series of attacks against the Poles and disorganized the planned relocation of Polish forces.[163] Polish troops withdrew from Minsk on 11 July.[150]

Along the line of old German trenches and fortifications from World War I, only Lida was defended for two days.[164] Bzhishkyan's units together with Lithuanian forces captured Vilnius on 14 July.[150][162] To the south, in eastern Galicia, Budyonny's cavalry approached Brody, Lwów and Zamość. It had become clear to the Poles that the Soviet objectives were not limited to countering the effects of the Kiev offensive but that Poland's independent existence was at stake.[165]

The Soviet armies moved toward the west at a remarkable speed. Carrying out a bold maneuver, Bzhishkyan took Grodno on 19 July; the strategically important and easy to defend Osowiec Fortress was captured by Bzhishkyan's 3rd Cavalry Corps on 27 July.[164] Białystok fell on 28 July and Brest on 29 July.[166] A Polish counteroffensive Piłsudski aimed for was thwarted by the unexpected fall of Brest.[150] The Polish high command attempted to defend the Bug River line, reached by the Russians on 30 July, but the quick loss of the Brest Fortress forced a cancellation of Piłsudski's plans.[164] On the same day Polish forces delayed the Soviet offensive in the Battle of Żabinka.[167] After crossing the Narew River on 2 August, the Western Front was only about 100 km (62 mi) from Warsaw.[162]

By that time, however, Polish resistance intensified. The shortened front facilitated greater concentrations of Polish troops involved in defensive operations; they were being constantly reinforced due to the closeness of Polish population centers and the influx of volunteers. Polish supply lines had become short, while the opposite was true regarding the enemy logistics. As General Sosnkowski was able to generate and energize 170,000 new Polish soldiers within a few weeks, Tukhachevsky noted that instead of quickly concluding their mission as expected, his force encountered determined resistance.[168]

 
Volunteers from Lwów serving in the Polish Army's 2nd Death's Squadron

The Southwestern Front pushed the Polish forces out of most of Ukraine. Stalin thwarted Sergey Kamenev's orders and directed the formations under Budyonny's command to close on Zamość and Lwów, the largest city in eastern Galicia and garrison of the Polish 6th Army.[169][170] The protracted Battle of Lwów began in July 1920. Stalin's action was detrimental to the situation of the forces of Tukhachevsky in the north, since Tukhachevsky needed relief from Budyonny near Warsaw, where in August decisive battles were fought. Instead of performing a concentric attack on Warsaw, the two Soviet fronts were getting further apart.[146][170] Piłsudski used the resulting void to launch his counteroffensive on 16 August, during the Battle of Warsaw.[146]

Fighting the Battle of Brody and Berestechko (29 July–3 August), the Polish forces attempted to stop Budyonny's advance on Lwów, but the effort was terminated by Piłsudski, who mustered two divisions to take part in the approaching struggle for the Polish capital.[171][172]

On 1 August 1920, Polish and Soviet delegations met at Baranavichy and exchanged notes, but their armistice talks produced no results.[173]

Diplomatic front

 
Polish propaganda poster with the caption: "Beat the Bolshevik"

The Western Allies were critical of Polish politics and unhappy with Poland's refusal to cooperate with the Allied intervention in the Russian Civil War, but they supported the Polish forces fighting the Red Army nevertheless, shipping to Poland armaments, extending credits and supporting the country politically. France was especially disappointed, but also particularly interested in defeating the Bolsheviks, so Poland was a natural ally in this respect. British politicians represented a gamut of opinions on the Polish–Russian issue, but many were highly critical of Polish policies and actions. In January 1920, the United States Secretary of War Newton D. Baker accused Poland of conducting imperial politics at the expense of Russia. In early spring 1920 the Allies, irritated by the Polish conduct, considered the idea of transferring the lands east of the Bug River to Allied control, under auspices of the League of Nations.[30]

In autumn 1919, the British government of Prime Minister David Lloyd George agreed to provide arms for Poland. On 17 May 1920, following the Polish takeover of Kiev, the cabinet spokesman asserted in the House of Commons that "no assistance has been or is being given to the Polish government".[112]

The initial success of the Kiev offensive caused enormous euphoria in Poland and Piłsudski's leading role was recognized by most politicians.[49] However, with the tide turning against Poland, Piłsudski's political power weakened, and that of his opponents, including Roman Dmowski, rose. The government of Leopold Skulski, Piłsudski's ally, resigned in early June. After protracted bickering, an extra-parliamentary government of Władysław Grabski was appointed on 23 June 1920.[174]

The Western Allies were worried by the progress of the Bolshevik armies but blamed Poland for the situation. The conduct of Polish leaders was adventurous in their opinion and amounted to foolishly playing with fire. It could lead to the destruction of the work of the Paris Peace Conference. Western societies wanted peace and good relations with Russia.[175]

 
Russian Bolshevik propaganda poster

As the Soviet armies advanced, the Soviet leadership's confidence soared. In a telegram, Lenin exclaimed, "We must direct all our attention to preparing and strengthening the Western Front. A new slogan must be announced: Prepare for war against Poland".[176] The Soviet communist theorist Nikolai Bukharin, writing for the newspaper Pravda, wished for the resources to carry the campaign beyond Warsaw, "right up to London and Paris".[177] According to General Tukhachevsky's exhortation, "Over the corpse of White Poland lies the path to world conflagration ... On to ... Warsaw! Forward!"[112] As the victory seemed more certain to them, Stalin and Trotsky engaged in political intrigues and argued about the direction of main Soviet offensive.[9][178]

At the height of the Polish–Soviet conflict, Jews were subjected to antisemitic violence by Polish forces, who considered them a potential threat and often accused of supporting the Bolsheviks.[179][180] The perpetrators of the pogroms that took place were motivated by Żydokomuna accusations.[181] During the Battle of Warsaw, the Polish authorities interned Jewish soldiers and volunteers and sent them to an internment camp.[182][183]

 
Trotsky on an anti-Soviet Polish poster titled "Bolshevik freedom" which depicts him on a pile of skulls and holding a bloody knife, during the Polish–Soviet War of 1920. Small caption in the lower right corner reads:
The Bolsheviks promised:
We'll give you peace
We'll give you freedom
We'll give you land
Work and bread
Despicably they cheated
They started a war
With Poland
Instead of freedom they brought
The fist
Instead of land – confiscation
Instead of work – misery
Instead of bread – famine.

To counter the immediate Soviet threat, national resources were urgently mobilized in Poland and competing political factions declared unity. On 1 July, the Council of Defense of the State was appointed.[49][174] On 6 July, Piłsudski was outvoted in the council, which resulted in the trip of Prime Minister Grabski to the Spa Conference in Belgium made to request Allied assistance for Poland and their mediation in setting up peace negotiations with Soviet Russia.[184][185] The Allied representatives made a number of demands as conditions for their involvement.[186] On 10 July,[184] Grabski signed an agreement containing several terms as required by the Allies: Polish forces would withdraw to the border intended to delineate Poland's eastern ethnographic frontier and published by the Allies on 8 December 1919; Poland would participate in a subsequent peace conference; and the questions of sovereignty over Vilnius, Eastern Galicia, Cieszyn Silesia and Danzig would be left up to the Allies.[185][186] Promises of possible Allied help in mediating the Polish–Soviet conflict were made in exchange.[185][186]

On 11 July 1920, the British Foreign Secretary George Curzon sent a telegram to Georgy Chicherin.[186][187] It requested the Soviets to halt their offensive at what had since become known as the Curzon Line and to accept it as a temporary border with Poland (along the Bug and San Rivers)[33] until a permanent border could be established in negotiations.[16][186] Talks in London with Poland and the Baltic states were proposed. In case of a Soviet refusal, the British threatened to assist Poland with unspecified measures.[188][189] Roman Dmowski's reaction was that Poland's "defeat was greater than the Poles had realized".[186] In the Soviet response issued on 17 July, Chicherin rejected the British mediation and declared willingness to negotiate only directly with Poland.[16][184] Both the British and the French reacted with more definitive promises of help with military equipment for Poland.[190]

The Second Congress of the Communist International deliberated in Moscow between 19 July and 7 August 1920. Lenin spoke of the increasingly favorable odds for the accomplishment of the World Proletarian Revolution, which would lead to the World Soviet Republic; the delegates eagerly followed daily reports from the front.[184] The congress issued an appeal to workers in all countries, asking them to forestall their governments' efforts to aid "White" Poland.[191]

Piłsudski lost another vote at the Defense Council and on 22 July the government dispatched a delegation to Moscow to ask for armistice talks. The Soviets claimed interest in peace negotiations only, the subject the Polish delegation was not authorized to discuss.[184]

 
Polrewkom

Sponsored by the Soviets, the Provisional Polish Revolutionary Committee (Polrewkom) was formed on 23 July to organise the administration of Polish territories captured by the Red Army.[16][49][184] The committee was led by Julian Marchlewski; Feliks Dzierżyński and Józef Unszlicht were among its members.[184] They found little support in Soviet-controlled Poland.[117] On 30 July in Białystok, the Polrewkom decreed the end of the Polish "gentrybourgeoisie" government. At Polrewkom's Białystok rally on 2 August, its representatives were greeted on behalf of Soviet Russia, the Bolshevik party and the Red Army by Mikhail Tukhachevsky.[191] The Galician Revolutionary Committee (Galrewkom) was established already on 8 July.[192]

 
Polish propaganda poster. The text reads: "To arms! Save the fatherland! Remember well our future fate."

On 24 July, the all-party Polish Government of National Defense under Wincenty Witos and Ignacy Daszyński was established.[49][64][191] It eagerly adopted a radical program of land reform meant to counter Bolshevik propaganda (the scope of the promised reform was greatly reduced once the Soviet threat had receded).[64] The government attempted to conduct peace negotiations with Soviet Russia; a new Polish delegation tried to cross the front and establish contact with the Soviets from 5 August.[191] On 9 August, General Kazimierz Sosnkowski became Minister of Military Affairs.[193]

Piłsudski was severely criticized by politicians ranging from Dmowski to Witos. His military competence and judgement were questioned and he displayed signs of mental instability. However, a majority of members of the Council of National Defense, which was asked by Piłsudski to rule on his fitness to lead the military, quickly expressed their "full confidence". Dmowski, disappointed, resigned his membership in the council and left Warsaw.[194]

Poland suffered from sabotage and delays in deliveries of war supplies when Czechoslovak and German workers refused to transit such materials to Poland.[16] After 24 July in Danzig, given the Germany-instigated strike of seaport workers, the British official and Allied representative Reginald Tower, having consulted the British government, used his soldiers to unload commodities heading for Poland.[191][195] On 6 August, the British Labour Party printed in a pamphlet that British workers would not take part in the war as Poland's allies. In 1920 London dockworkers refused to allow a ship bound for Poland until the weapons were off-loaded. The Trades Union Congress, the Parliamentary Labour Party, and the National Executive Committee also all threatened a general strike if the British Armed Forces directly intervened in Poland.[196] The French Section of the Workers' International declared in its newspaper L'Humanité: "Not a man, not a sou, not a shell for the reactionary and capitalist Poland. Long live the Russian Revolution! Long live the Workers' International!".[162] Weimar Germany, Austria and Belgium banned transit of materials destined for Poland through their territories.[191] On 6 August the Polish government issued an "Appeal to the World", which disputed the charges of Polish imperialism and stressed Poland's belief in self-determination and the dangers of a Bolshevik invasion of Europe.[197]

 
Antisemitic portrayal of a Bolshevik

Hungary offered to send a 30,000 cavalry corps to Poland's aid, but President [[Tomáš Masaryk]] and Foreign Minister Edvard Beneš of Czechoslovakia were opposed to assisting Poland and the Czechoslovak government refused to allow them through.[191] On 9 August 1920, Czechoslovakia declared neutrality regarding the Polish–Soviet War.[193] Significant amounts of military and other badly needed supplies from Hungary did arrive in Poland.[146][198] The leading Polish commander Tadeusz Rozwadowski spoke of the Hungarians in September 1920: "You were the only nation that really wanted to help us".[198]

The Soviets presented their armistice conditions to the Allies on 8 August in Britain. Sergey Kamenev issued assurances of Soviet recognition of Poland's independence and right to self-determination, but the conditions he presented amounted to demands for surrender of the Polish state. Prime Minister David Lloyd George and the British House of Commons approved the Soviet demands as just and reasonable and the British ambassador in Warsaw presented the United Kingdom's categorical advice on that matter to Foreign Minister Eustachy Sapieha. On 14 August, the Polish delegation finally went to Tukhachevsky's headquarters in Minsk for the official peace talks. Severe conditions for peace were presented to them by Georgy Chicherin on 17 August. Decisive battles were already taking place on the outskirts of Warsaw.[199] Most foreign deputations and Allied missions had left the Polish capital and went to Poznań.[170]

In summer 1919, Lithuania had been engaged in territorial disputes and armed skirmishes with Poland over the city of Vilnius and the areas around Sejny and Suwałki.[22] Piłsudski's attempt to take control of Lithuania by engineering a coup in August 1919 contributed to worsening of the relations.[22][200] The Soviet and Lithuanian governments signed on 12 July 1920 the Soviet–Lithuanian Peace Treaty; it recognised Vilnius and extended territories as parts of a proposed Greater Lithuania.[201][202] The treaty contained a secret clause that allowed Soviet forces unrestricted movement in Lithuania during any Soviet war with Poland, which led to questions regarding Lithuanian neutrality during the ongoing Polish–Soviet War.[203][204] The Lithuanians also provided the Soviets with logistic support.[204] Following the treaty, the Red Army occupied Vilnius; the Soviets returned the city to Lithuanian control just before it was recaptured by Polish forces in late August.[22] The Soviets had also encouraged their own communist government, the Litbel, and planned a Soviet-sponsored Lithuanian regime when they win the war with Poland.[201][205][206] The Soviet–Lithuanian Treaty was a Soviet diplomatic victory and Polish defeat; it had, as predicted by the Russian diplomat Adolph Joffe, a destabilizing effect on Poland's internal politics.[201]

 
The Interallied Mission to Poland

The French Military Mission to Poland of four hundred members arrived in 1919. It consisted mostly of French officers but included also a few British advisers led by Adrian Carton de Wiart. In summer 1920, there were one thousand officers and soldiers in the mission, under General Paul Prosper Henrys.[129] Members of the French Mission, through the training programs they conducted and frontline involvement, contributed to battle readiness of Polish forces.[129] The French officers included Captain Charles de Gaulle.[129] During the Polish–Soviet War he won the Virtuti Militari, Poland's highest military decoration. In France, de Gaulle had enlisted in General Józef Haller's "Blue Army". The army's transit to Poland in 1919 was facilitated by France.[49] Blue Army troops were mostly of Polish origin but included also international volunteers who had been under French command during World War I. In 1920, France was reluctant to aid Poland in Poland's war with Soviet Russia. Only after the Soviet armistice conditions were presented on 8 August, France declared, through its representative in Warsaw, the intention to support Poland morally, politically and materially in its fight for independence.[191]

 
Maxime Weygand

On 25 July 1920, the expanded Interallied Mission to Poland arrived in Warsaw.[207] Led by the British diplomat Edgar Vincent, it included the French diplomat Jean Jules Jusserand and Maxime Weygand, chief of staff to Marshal Ferdinand Foch, the supreme commander of the victorious Entente. The Allied politicians expected to assume control over Poland's foreign affairs and military policies, with Weygand becoming top military commander in the war. It was not allowed and General Weygand accepted an advisory position.[207] The dispatch of the Allied mission to Warsaw was a proof that the West had not given up on Poland and gave the Poles a reason to believe that not all was lost.[208] The mission members made a significant contribution to the war effort. However, the crucial Battle of Warsaw was fought and won primarily by the Poles. Many in the West erroneously believed that it was the timely arrival of the Allies that had saved Poland; Weygand occupied the central role in the myth that was created.[16][209]

As Polish–French cooperation continued, French weaponry, including infantry armament, artillery and Renault FT tanks, were shipped to Poland to reinforce its military. On 21 February 1921, France and Poland agreed to a formal military alliance.[210] During the Polish-Soviet negotiations, Polish Ministry of Foreign Affairs paid particular attention to keeping the Allies informed of their course and making them feel co-responsible for the outcome.[211]

The Soviet emphasis had gradually shifted from promoting world revolution to dismantling the Treaty of Versailles system, which, in Lenin's words, was the treaty of the "triumphant world imperialism".[212] Lenin made remarks to that effect during the 9th Conference of the Russian Communist Party RKP(b), convened on 22–25 September 1920.[16][212] He repeatedly referred to the Soviet military defeat, for which he indirectly held himself largely responsible. Trotsky and Stalin blamed each other for the war's outcome. Stalin sharply rebutted Lenin's accusations regarding Stalin's judgement ahead of the Battle of Warsaw.[212] As Lenin saw it, the conquest of Warsaw, not very important in itself, would have allowed the Soviets to demolish the Versailles European order.[213]

Before the battle

 
Soviet delegates arrive for armistice negotiations before the Battle of Warsaw, August 1920

According to the plan of the commander-in-chief of the Red Army Kamenev as of 20 July 1920, two Soviet fronts, Western and Southwestern, were going to execute a concentric attack on Warsaw. However, after consulting Tukhachevsky, the Western Front commander, Kamenev concluded that the Western Front alone could manage the occupation of Warsaw.[169]

 
Mikhail Tukhachevsky

Tukhachevsky's intention was to destroy the Polish armies in the region of Warsaw. His plan was to have one of his armies attack the Polish capital from the east, while three other were to force their way across the Vistula further north, between Modlin and Toruń. Parts of this formation were going to be used to outflank Warsaw from the west. He issued orders to this effect on 8 August.[214] It had soon become apparent to Tukhachevsky that his designs were not producing the desired result.[170]

The Southwestern Front was given the task of attacking Lwów. Accordingly (and in agreement with his own previously expressed views) Stalin, member of the Revolutionary Council of the Southwestern Front, directed Budyonny to unleash an assault on Lwów, aimed at taking the city (Budyonny's 1st Cavalry Army and other Southwestern Front forces were originally supposed to head north in the direction of Brest, to execute, together with Tukhachevsky's armies, an assault on Warsaw). Budyonny's forces fought in the vicinity of Lwów until 19 August. In the meantime, already on 11 August, Kamenev ordered the 1st Cavalry Army and the 12th Army of the Southwestern Front to proceed in the northwestern direction toward the Western Front area to fight there under Tukhachevsky's command. Kamenev repeated his order on 13 August, but Budyonny, following Stalin's directives, refused to obey. On 13 August, Tukhachevsky in vain pleaded with Kamenev to expedite the redirecting of both Southwestern armies to his area of combat. Such circumstances led to a Soviet disadvantage as the crucial Battle of Warsaw was about to unfold.[169][215]

Trotsky interpreted Stalin's actions as insubordination, but the historian Richard Pipes asserts that Stalin "almost certainly acted on Lenin's orders" in not moving the forces toward Warsaw.[216] According to Stalin's biographer Duraczyński, Stalin, despite his devotion to Lenin, displayed a great deal of initiative and boldness. Unlike other Soviet officials, including Lenin, he had not become euphoric about the Soviet victories. However, he insisted on the exceptional importance of the activities of the Southwestern Front, which turned out to be costly for the Soviets.[169]

Stalin may have been motivated by the letter Lenin wrote to him on 23 July. Regarding the defeat of the Polish armies as already practically accomplished, the Soviet leader suggested a redirection of main Soviet efforts toward the south-west, into Romania, Hungary, Austria, and ultimately Italy. Stalin agreed and he saw the conquest of Lwów on the way as fitting well with the overall scheme.[215]

Tukhachevsky later blamed Stalin for his defeat at the Battle of Warsaw.[217][218][219]

Piłsudski had his counteroffensive plan figured by 6 August. He resolved to reinforce the Warsaw and Modlin region, tie-up the Soviet assault forces there, and then use the divisions taken from the front and others in a risky maneuver of attacking the rear of Tukhachevsky's forces from the Wieprz River area. The Soviets found a copy of Piłsudski's order, but Tukhachevsky thought it to be a hoax. In the final parade Piłsudski received before the attack, about half of his worn out and undersupplied soldiers marched barefoot.[170]

Battle of Warsaw

 
Władysław Sikorski and the 5th Army Staff in August 1920

In August 1919, Polish military intelligence first decrypted the Red Army's radio messages.[146][220][221][222] From the spring of 1920, the Polish high command had been aware of current Soviet moves and plans, which may have had decisively influenced the outcome of the war.[146][221]

On 8 August 1920, Tukhachevsky ordered some of the Soviet forces to cross the Vistula River in the area of Toruń and Płock.[193] The 4th Army and the formations under Hayk Bzhishkyan's command were supposed to take Warsaw from the west, while the main attack came from the east. On 19 August, after intense fighting, the Soviets were repelled from Płock and Włocławek. Bzhishkyan's corps came close to crossing the Vistula, but ended up retreating toward East Prussia.[192][223] Of the four Soviet armies attacking from the east, none had been able to force its way across the river.[224]

On 10 August, Polish Chief of staff Tadeusz Rozwadowski, who co-authored the offensive concept,[225] ordered a two-pronged attack, from the Wkra and the Wieprz Rivers.[193]

Piłsudski, still harshly criticized, submitted a letter of resignation as commander-in-chief to Prime Minister Witos on 12 August. Witos refused to consider the resignation and kept the matter to himself.[194]

 
Polish infantry at the Battle of Warsaw

On 12 August, Tukhachevsky's 16th and 3rd Armies commenced their assault on Warsaw from the east.[226] The Polish 1st Army under General Franciszek Latinik retreated at first, but having received reinforcements stopped the enemy at the Battle of Radzymin and on 15 August initiated offensive actions of its own.[227][226] The pitched Battle of Ossów, fought on 13–14 August at a nearby location, became the first clear Polish victory in the Warsaw area.[227]

The Polish 5th Army, under General Władysław Sikorski, counterattacked on 14 August from the area of the Modlin Fortress and crossed the Wkra River. It faced the combined forces of the Soviet 3rd and 15th Armies, which were numerically and materially superior. The attack split the Soviet front into two parts.[226] The Soviet advance toward Warsaw and Modlin was halted and had soon turned into a retreat, which contributed to the success of the drive by the main Polish formation coming from the Wieprz River area under Piłsudski's command.[49]

By 16 August, the Polish counteroffensive had been joined by Piłsudski's group coming from the Wieprz, south-east of Warsaw.[226] The weak Mozyr Group, which was supposed to protect the link between the Soviet fronts, was destroyed. The Poles continued their northward offensive and reached the rear of Tukhachevsky's forces.[226] The Soviet armies were unable to communicate; Tukhachevsky and Kamenev became disoriented and issued orders not relevant to the situation.[223] A rapid pursuit of the Russians followed and continued to the East Prussian border and to the Neman River.[226] Of the four armies of the Western Front, two disintegrated; the 4th Army with a cavalry corps crossed into East Prussia, where they were interned.[226]

 
Polish soldiers display captured Soviet standards after the Battle of Warsaw

Tukhachevsky, at his headquarters in Minsk, on 18 August belatedly ordered the remnants of his forces to regroup.[228] He hoped to straighten the front line, halt the Polish attack and regain the initiative, but it was too late and on 19 August he directed his armies to retreat over the entire front.[162][228]

In order to reorganize the Polish forces ahead of new operations, the chase after the retreating Russians was stopped on 25 August.[229] A large portion of the defeated Soviet troops had been taken prisoner (over 50,000) or interned in Prussia (45,000).[49][229] Twelve of the twenty two Soviet divisions survived.[229] Rydz-Śmigły's formations manned the new frontline, which ran from Brest to Grodno.[226] The victory allowed the Poles to regain the initiative and undertake further military offensive.[49]

The outcome of the struggle for the Polish capital saddened the leadership in Moscow, as well as communists and their sympathizers all over the world. Clara Zetkin spoke of the flower of revolution having been frozen.[229]

To diminish Piłsudski's military achievement and his role in the saving of Warsaw, at the instigation of his Polish detractors, the Battle of Warsaw had been referred to as the "Miracle on the Vistula",[230] and the phrase has since remained in Catholic and popular use in Poland.[9][192] The "miracle" was attributed to the Virgin Mary.[230]

According to Piłsudski and his people, on the other hand, the miracle was performed solely by the marshal. After the May Coup of 1926, the possibly indispensable contributions of Sikorski or Rozwadowski would never be mentioned in school textbooks or official accounts. The myth of the great marshal was propagated and became dominant through the Sanation politics of remembrance. In the West, it was mostly Maxime Weygand who had been assigned a veni, vidi, vici kind of role, even though Weygand himself had honestly denied having such an impact.[231]

Conclusion of military campaigns

 
Polish cavalry at the Battle of the Niemen River

The progress of the Soviet forces on the southern front in Ukraine was slower than in the north. The losses suffered by Budyonny's 1st Cavalry Army at the Battle of Brody and Berestechko delayed its advance on Lwów. On 16 August, the army got going and soon reported being 15 km from the center of the city.[232]

On 17 August, at the Battle of Zadwórze, a Polish battalion sacrificed itself to stop Budyonny.[4][233] On 20 August, Budyonny's cavalry belatedly terminated its attacks in the Lwów area in order to come to the aid of Soviet forces retreating from Warsaw.[228][232] 1st Army units moved on Zamość on 29 August but the town was successfully defended by Polish and Ukrainian troops [pl].[4][232] On 31 August, the much reduced 1st Cavalry Army was defeated by Polish cavalry under Colonel Juliusz Rómmel at the Battle of Komarów near Hrubieszów.[232] It was the largest battle of Polish cavalry since 1831.[234][232] The remains of Budyonny's army retreated towards Volodymyr on 6 September and on 29 September were withdrawn from the Polish front.[4][235][232]

Heading east into Volhynia, the Polish 3rd Army under Sikorski crossed the Bug River and on 13 September took Kovel.[234][232] The Polish 6th Army under Haller, together with the Ukrainian People's Army, launched their offensive from eastern Galicia.[232] By the end of September, the front reached the Pinsk–SarnyKhmelnytskyiYampil line. In October, Juliusz Rómmel's cavalry corps arrived at Korosten, Ukraine.[226]

 
Austin-Putilov armored car, captured from the Russians and renamed as Poznańczyk

The immediate Soviet threat having been repelled, the Council of National Defense voted to continue the Polish offensive. By 15 September, forces were assembled for the "Niemen operation". At that time, the Polish armies had an advantage over the Soviet Western Front in manpower (209,000 to 145,000 soldiers) and armaments.[236]

From 26 August Tukhachevsky established a new frontline,[236] running from the Polish–Lithuanian border area in the north to Polesia, centered on the Neman and Svislach Rivers line.[236] The Soviet commander utilized a three-week lull in the fighting to reorganize and reinforce his battered forces,[226] expected to be ready to attack by the end of September.[236] The Poles struck already on 20 September and soon became engaged in the Battle of the Niemen River, the second greatest battle of the campaign.[226] After heavy fighting, they secured Grodno on 26 September.[235] Rydz-Śmigły led from there an outflanking maneuver, as a result of which Lida was taken and the Red Army's rear destabilized. Polish frontal attacks followed, the Soviet units disintegrated and rapidly retreated.[226] After the battle, the Soviet forces lost the ability to effectively resist and the Poles unleashed a continuous pursuit.[226] The Polish units reached the Daugava River and in mid-October entered Minsk.[49][235]

In the south, Petliura's Ukrainian forces defeated the Bolshevik 14th Army and took control of the left bank of the Zbruch River on 18 September. In October, they moved east to the YaruhaSharhorodBarLityn line.[237] They now numbered 23,000 soldiers and controlled territories immediately to the east of the Polish-controlled areas.[133] They had planned an offensive in Ukraine for 11 November but were attacked by the Bolsheviks on 10 November. By 21 November, after several battles, they were driven into Polish-controlled territory.[237]

From the order "At the end of the war" issued on 18 October 1920 by Józef Pilsudski:[238]

Soldiers! You have spent two long years, the first years of the existence of a free Poland, in hard work and bloody drudgery. You have ended the war with magnificent victories, and the enemy, broken by you, has finally agreed to sign the first and main principles of the longed-for peace. Soldiers! Not in vain and not in vain has your toil been in vain. Modern Poland owes its existence to the magnificent victories of the Western powers over the partitioning states. But from the very first moment of the life of a free Poland, many covetous hands were stretched out towards her, many efforts were directed towards keeping her in a state of powerlessness, so that, if she did exist, she would be a plaything in the hands of others, a passive field for the intrigues of the whole world. The Polish nation took up arms, made a tremendous effort, creating a numerous and strong army. On my shoulders, as Commander-in-Chief, and in your hands, as defenders of the Fatherland, the nation has placed the heavy task of securing Poland's existence, gaining for it respect and importance in the world, and giving it full independent control of its destiny. Our task is coming to an end. It has not been easy. Poland, devastated by a war waged on Polish soil not of her will, was poor. At times, soldiers, tears sprang to my eyes, when I saw among the ranks of the troops led by me, your barefooted, battered feet, which had already crossed immeasurable distances, when I saw the dirty rags covering your body, when I had to tear off your meagre soldier's rations and often demand that you go into bloody battle hungry and cold. The work was hard, and it was reliable, as thousands of soldiers' graves and crosses scattered across the lands of the former Republic of Poland, from the distant Dnieper to the native Vistula, will testify. For your work and perseverance, for your sacrifice and blood, for your courage and daring, I thank you, soldiers, on behalf of the whole nation and our Homeland. [...] A soldier who has done so much for Poland will not go unrewarded. The grateful Homeland will not forget him. [I have already proposed to the government that part of the conquered land should become the property of those who made it Polish, having ground it with Polish blood and immeasurable toil. [...] Soldiers! You have made Poland strong, confident and free. You can be proud and satisfied with the fulfilment of your duty. A country that in two years can produce such a soldier as you are can look to the future with confidence. [...] Józef Piłsudski First Marshal of Poland and Commander-in-Chief".

Peace negotiations

 
Signing of the Peace of Riga

Peace negotiations commenced in Minsk in mid-August 1920.[226] Initially, the Soviets made harsh demands on the Polish side; their implementation would turn Poland into a Soviet-dependent state. After the Battle of Warsaw defeat, Adolph Joffe became chief Soviet negotiator and the original Soviet conditions for an armistice were withdrawn. The negotiations were moved to Riga on 21 September.[49][239][240][241] As winter approached and there had not been a military resolution to the conflict (the Red Army, despite many defeats, had not been destroyed), both sides decided to stop fighting.[240][241] The Polish Council of National Defense ruled, against the insistence of Piłsudski and his supporters, that Poland could not afford to continue fighting the war. "Poland must conclude a peace even without guarantees of its durability" – declared Foreign Minister Eustachy Sapieha. Limited continuation of the current offensive was allowed (until the armistice) to improve Poland's bargaining position.[241] The Soviets, in addition to their battlefield losses, were pressured by events that necessitated the use of their military elsewhere, such as developments in the Turkish–Armenian War, Pyotr Wrangel's White Army still occupying the Crimea, or peasant rebellions in Russia.[242]

The Preliminary Treaty of Peace and Armistice Conditions was signed on 12 October and the armistice went into effect on 18 October.[4][243] Ratifications were exchanged at Liepāja on 2 November. The peace treaty negotiations ensued and were concluded, between Poland on one side and Soviet Ukraine, Soviet Russia and Soviet Belarus on the other, on 18 March 1921.[9][240] The Peace of Riga, signed on that day, determined the Polish–Soviet border and divided the disputed territories in Belarus and Ukraine between Poland and the Soviet Union (soon to be officially established).[4][244][245] The treaty also regulated various other aspects of Polish–Soviet relations.[226] It complemented the Treaty of Versailles and laid foundations for the relatively peaceful coexistence in Eastern Europe that lasted less than two decades.[146]

The armistice preliminary stipulations required foreign allied forces to leave Poland.[226] Signing the treaty with the Soviet republics, Poland had to rescind its recognition of Petliura's Ukrainian People's Republic and other Russian, Ukrainian and Belarusian "White" governments and organizations; the allied military units of the three nationalities present in Poland were disbanded.[9] The Ukrainian People's Army crossed the armistice line and fought the Red Army for a month. Its remnants returned into the Polish territory, where they were interned.[226]

The Peace of Riga was approved by the All-Russian Central Executive Committee on 14 April 1921, by the Polish Sejm on 15 April, and by the Central Executive Committee of Soviet Ukraine on 17 April. Until late summer 1939, the Soviet Union refrained from officially questioning the Riga treaty settlement, but it had been understood that the Soviet policy objective was to have it overturned.[246][247]

During the Polish–Soviet War, about 100,000 people were killed. A complicated problem of prisoners of war was left to be resolved. On both sides, great destruction and economic losses, as well as deep psychological trauma resulted. Piłsudski's goal of separating Ukraine from Russia was not accomplished and the compromise Polish–Soviet border attained indicated future instability.[9][248]

Russia

 
Adolph Joffe

Thousands of peasant disturbances and rebellions took place in Russia between 1917 and 1921. The Pitchfork uprising of February–March 1920 greatly distracted the Soviet leadership and negatively affected their military preparedness in Ukraine and Belarus before the Polish Kiev offensive. Lenin considered the peasant resistance to grain requisitions and other privations of war communism more threatening to Soviet Russia than the White movement. The last and possibly the greatest of peasant uprisings was the Tambov Rebellion of 1920–1921.[242] Acute food shortages reached also Moscow and Saint Petersburg and contributed to the outbreak of the Kronstadt rebellion in March 1921.[249]

Soviet Russia was unable to accomplish many of the political objectives of its war with Poland. Despite the support of Weimar Germany, it could not destroy the Versailles-imposed European system and the two powers had to wait for another opportunity to redress their grievances.[13]

The Polish delegation at the Riga peace talks, led by Jan Dąbski, concentrated on an armistice line and the future border. For the Soviets, these were secondary concerns. The statehood status of the Ukrainian and Belarusian Soviet republics was of utmost importance and their recognition was the most fateful concession the Polish negotiators had made.[211]

The Anglo-Soviet Trade Agreement, signed on 16 March 1921, was the first of a series of such international treaties. It broke diplomatic isolation of Soviet Russia. The resulting influx of foreign arms and equipment contributed to the success of the offensive against the partisans in the Tambov province, executed by Tukhachevsky and completed by July.[249]

The grain requisition practices were eventually replaced by the New Economic Policy, announced by Lenin on 23 March 1921.[249] It represented a partial compromise with capitalism.[64]

On 16 April 1922, Russia and Germany signed the Treaty of Rapallo. Diplomatic relations were established and the Russian negotiators obtained favorable resolution of their financial concerns.[250]

After the Peace of Riga, Soviet Russia withdrew behind its cordon sanitaire. Its leaders abandoned in reality the cause of the international revolution. The result was the Stalinist "socialism in one country" pursuit. The Soviet Union entered a period of intensive industrialization, to eventually become the second greatest industrial power in the world.[213]

Poland

 
Stanisław Grabski

Their losses during and after the Battle of Warsaw made the Soviets offer the Polish peace delegation substantial territorial concessions, including Minsk and other areas occupied by Polish forces.[22] Polish resources were also exhausted and Polish public opinion wanted a settlement.[16][244] Piłsudski and his camp were opposed to the peace process and wanted the warfare to continue to make a realization of the Intermarium concept possible.[9] Fulfilment of Piłsudski's territorial and political ideas was precluded already on 11 September 1920, when the Defense Council voted on Poland's border expectations. Despite the positive outcome of the Battle of Warsaw, Piłsudski's political position remained weak and he was unable to prevent developments that meant ruin to his long-held vision of a grand Polish-led alliance.[211]

The negotiations were controlled by Dmowski's National Democrats. The National Democrats wanted to directly incorporate into the Polish state the lands they found desirable.[54] The Sejm was controlled by Dmowski's allies, whose ideas on the nature of the Polish state and the arrangement of its borders had since permanently prevailed.[22]

Because of the failed Kiev Expedition, Piłsudski had lost his ability to act as the main player, to manipulate people and events in Polish politics. The consensus on his dominant role was gone. As a consequence, he was allowed to win the war, but the conditions of peace were determined already by his opponents.[251]

 
Poland after the Peace of Riga with the pre-partition borders of the Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth also indicated

The National Democrats, led at the Riga talks by Stanisław Grabski,[22] wanted only the territory they viewed as "ethnically or historically Polish" (had Polish-dominated cities) or, in their opinion, could be Polonised.[244][252] In the east, Polish culture was weakly represented even in the cities, except for a few in the western part of the disputed territories, and Grabski refrained from seeking a border along the so-called Dmowski's Line, previously promoted by his movement.[253] Despite the Red Army's defeat and the willingness of the chief Soviet negotiator, Adolph Joffe, to concede most of the areas occupied by Polish troops,[244][254] the National Democratic politics allowed the Soviets to regain some of the territories acquired by the Polish armies during the campaign.[254] The National Democrats worried that Poland would not be able to control overly extended territories, dominated by national minorities; Grabski wanted lands where Poles could predominate.[22] Among the territories evacuated by the Polish Army were Minsk in the north and Kamianets-Podilskyi and other areas east of the Zbruch River in the south.[226] The "Grabski Corridor", a strip of land inserted to separate Lithuania from Russia and connect Poland to Latvia, made Piłsudski's so-called Żeligowski's Mutiny and the Polish annexation of the Vilnius area possible.[211] The National Democrats were also conscious of the weakening of their electoral position that would result from annexing more territories dominated by non-Polish ethnic groups.[64] The failed federalist orientation was represented at Riga by Piłsudski's associate, Leon Wasilewski.[22]

In the long run, the National Democrats' scheme had not quite worked, because "the Riga settlement created a Poland which was too westerly to be a federation, but not westerly enough to remain a national state".[255] Poland ended up with the largest total percentage of ethnic minorities of any unitary state in interwar Europe (only about two thirds of Polish citizens considered themselves ethnically Polish or of Polish nationality).[256] Still, the refusal of the easternmost areas considered was beneficial to the National Democrats' electoral prospects.[255] The resolution of the war had thus dealt a death blow to the Intermarium project.[16] One consequence of the outcome of the Polish–Soviet War was that Poland's elites acquired an exaggerated perspective of the country's military capabilities.[64] This point of view was not shared by Western observers, who stressed that Poland was able to defend itself only because of the financial, logistic and material support from the Allies.[13] 99,000 Polish soldiers died or went missing and the country suffered enormous other losses and destruction.[13]

Ukraine

The Peace of Riga partitioned Ukraine and gave a portion of its territory to Poland (eastern Galicia and most of Volhynia) and the other portion to the Soviets.[244] The Ukrainian Soviet Republic and the Byelorussian Soviet Republic were recognized by Poland.[244] Historian Timothy Snyder writes: "That the Soviet Union established in 1922 included a Ukrainian SSR was the most important consequence of the attempts to establish an independent Ukrainian state in 1918–1920."[244]

The Treaty of Warsaw between Poland and the Directorate of Ukraine had been invalidated. The Riga treaty violated the spirit of Poland's prior alliance with the Ukrainian People's Republic.[114][244] From the beginning of the talks, the Polish side de facto recognized the Ukrainian SSR and the armistice agreement stipulated termination of support for foreign forces allied against the other side.[257] Members of the Ukrainian faction that accepted the alliance with Poland and fought within that alliance were now interned by the Polish authorities.[244] The peace negotiations and their outcome were condemned and bitterly criticized by Ukrainian politicians and military leaders.[257] As Polish democracy was "alien, unrepresentative, and eventually curtailed",[66] great resentment had been generated in the remaining interwar years because of repressive policies of Polish governments towards Ukrainians living in post-Riga Poland.[258]

In the 1920s, the Soviet policy was to help create a modern Ukrainian culture. Ukrainian intellectuals, co-opted by the communist party, were encouraged to create in the Ukrainian language and the result was cultural revival and a period of great productivity. Children were educated and most books and newspapers were published in the native language. The Ukrainian Autocephalous Orthodox Church was established. The liberal policies ended under Stalin's rule, when the new church was banned and the Ukrainian intelligentsia destroyed in massive purges.[66]

Given the circumstances, in the 1930s Poland's eastern Galicia had become the center of Ukrainian political and cultural activity. Despite the atrocities that took place in Soviet Ukraine, Poland was regarded by Ukrainian activists as the principal enemy. They felt disappointed by the failed alliance and the Peace of Riga and were annoyed by daily domination of the Polish authorities and local Polish elites. Many perceived the Soviet Union primarily as the creator of a Ukrainian state, the Ukrainian SSR.[66]

Belarus

On 11 July 1920, Soviet forces entered Minsk and on 1 August the Byelorussian Soviet Socialist Republic was officially established. Belarus, like Ukraine, was partitioned between Poland and the Soviet Union after the Peace of Riga. The policies of the Byelorussian Soviet Republic were determined by Moscow.[259]

Unlike in the cases of Lithuania and Ukraine, Piłsudski or his allies had not proposed a Belarusian state associated with Poland until the Riga talks, when they wanted to claim Minsk as capital of a Belarusian People's Republic in that role.[260]

Like the Ukrainian Petliura's forces, in Belarus the Volunteer Allied Army under General Stanisław Bułak-Bałachowicz attacked the Soviets after the armistice. Bułak-Bałachowicz's troops commenced their offensive on 5 November and after temporary successes had to retreat back into Polish-controlled territory on 28 November. The Belarusian soldiers were also interned by the Polish authorities.[257]

Belarusian activists regarded the Peace of Riga results as a tragic betrayal. Without Minsk, Polish Belarusians were reduced to being a mostly rural, marginalized group. To many of them, the Soviet republic to the east seemed an attractive alternative. In 1922, the Soviet Union was established as a formal federation of republics. Its policy called for an eventual extension of the Byelorussian SSR, to include the Belarusian lands under Polish administration. The Communist Party of Western Belorussia, established in Poland, was under Soviet control. The territory of the Byelorussian SSR was extended to the east in 1923, 1924 and 1926 by lands taken from the Russian Republic. In contrast to the repressive Polish policies, in the 1920s the Soviet Union supported Belarusian culture; several major national institutions and thousands of Belarusian schools had been established. However, the official Belarusian progress was mostly destroyed under Stalin in the 1930s.[261]

Belarusian activists held a Congress of Representatives in Prague in the fall of 1921, to discuss the Peace of Riga and its consequences for Belarus. Vera Maslovskaya was sent there as the delegate of the Białystok area, and she proposed a resolution to fight for the unification of Belarus. She sought independence of all Belarusian lands and denounced the partition. Though the convention did not adopt a proposal instituting armed conflict, it passed Maslovskaya's proposal, which led to immediate retaliation from the Polish authorities. They infiltrated the underground network fighting for Belarusian unification and arrested the participants. Maslovskaya was arrested in 1922 and tried in 1923, along with 45 other participants, mostly peasants.[262][263] Among the arrested were also a sister and brother of Maslovskaya and several teachers and professionals. Maslovskaya accepted all responsibility for the underground organisation, but specifically stated that she was guilty of no crime, having acted only to protect the interests of Belarus against foreign occupiers, in a political and not military action. Unable to prove that the leaders had participated in armed rebellion, the court found them guilty of political crimes and sentenced to six years in prison.[264]

Lithuania

Pressured by the Entente powers, Poland and Lithuania signed the Suwałki Agreement on 7 October 1920; the armistice line left Vilnius on the Lithuanian side of the border. However, Polish military activities, especially the so-called Żeligowski's Mutiny launched two days after the Suwałki Agreement, allowed Poland to capture the Vilnius Region, where a Polish-dominated Governance Committee of Central Lithuania was formed.[22][24] On 8 January 1922, the Polish military enforced local legislative elections, but they were boycotted by Jews, Belarusians and Lithuanians.[255] The resulting Vilnius assembly voted for the incorporation of "Central Lithuania" into Poland on 20 February 1922 and Polish Sejm approved the annexation on 24 March.[24][59][265] The Western powers condemned the Polish actions but on 15 March 1923 the Conference of Ambassadors, convinced of the desirability of geographical separation of Lithuania from the Soviet Union, approved Poland's eastern borders, as already determined by the League of Nations in early February (the Soviet Union rejected the granting of Vilnius to Poland).[24][246] Lithuania refused to comply; the events and the incorporation worsened Polish–Lithuanian relations for decades to come.[24] According to Alfred E. Senn, even though Lithuania lost territory to Poland, it was only the Polish victory against the Soviets in the Polish–Soviet War that derailed the Soviet plans for westward expansion and gave Lithuania the period of interwar independence.[206]

Latvia

Latvia's fighting with the Bolsheviks ended with the Latvian–Soviet Peace Treaty on 11 August 1920. The Peace of Riga negotiations followed; it established a Polish-Latvian border in the area of Daugavpils. That same year Latvia passed a comprehensive land reform and in 1922 introduced a democratic constitution. The Warsaw Accord was signed by foreign ministers of Latvia, Estonia, Finland and Poland on 17 March 1922. However, the Treaty of Rapallo, signed on 16 April 1922, effectively placed the Baltic states in the German and Soviet spheres of influence.[24]

Prisoners, war crimes and other controversies

 
Red Army soldiers as prisoners of war

According to sources quoted by Chwalba, of the 80–85 thousand Soviet prisoners of war, 16–20 thousand died in Polish captivity. Of the 51 thousand Polish prisoners, 20 thousand died. The practice of disproportionate killing of Polish commissioned officers continued into World War II, when a series of executions known as the Katyn massacre took place.[266]

The war and its aftermath resulted in controversies, such as the situation of prisoners of war in Poland and in Soviet Russia and Lithuania,[15][267] treatment of the civilian population,[268] or the behaviour of some commanders, including Semyon Budyonny,[269] Hayk Bzhishkyan,[269] Stanisław Bułak-Bałachowicz,[270][271] and Vadim Yakovlev.[272] The reported pogroms of Jews by the Polish military caused the United States to send a commission, led by Henry Morgenthau, to investigate the matter.[273]

Development of a military strategy

The Polish–Soviet War influenced the Polish military doctrine; under Piłsudski's leadership, it emphasized the mobility of elite cavalry units.[16] It also influenced Charles de Gaulle, who was an instructor in the Polish Army with a rank of major and fought in several of the battles, including the Battle of Warsaw.[49] He and Sikorski correctly predicted, based on their experiences during the war, the importance of maneuver and mechanization in the next war. Although they had failed to convince their respective military establishments to heed those lessons during the interwar period, during World War II, they rose to the command of their respective armed forces in exile.[274]

Aftermath and legacy

 
Graves of Polish soldiers killed during the Battle of Warsaw, Powązki Military Cemetery

Despite the final retreat of Soviet forces and the annihilation of three Soviet field armies, historians do not universally agree on the question of victory. Lenin spoke of a great military defeat suffered by Soviet Russia.[212] Sebestyen wrote: "The Poles heavily defeated and embarrassed the Soviet state – one of Lenin's biggest setbacks."[275] The conflict, however, is also viewed as military victory for Poland coupled with political defeat. In the Peace of Riga, Poland formally gave up its ambitions of helping build independent Ukraine and Belarus. Western Ukraine and western Belarus became parts of Poland, which recognized the two countries (geographically, their central and eastern parts) as states and dependencies of Moscow.[247] The countries envisioned by Piłsudski as members of Poland-led Intermarium federation had instead, under Lenin and Stalin, become incorporated into the Soviet Union.

In the autumn of 1920, both combatants had realized that they could not win a decisive military victory. Internally, the newly reestablished Polish state had proved its viability, as an overwhelming majority of its people contributed to the defense of the country and turned out insensitive to Bolshevik appeals for joining the revolution.[230] As for the main protagonists, neither one was able to accomplish his principal objective.[230] For Piłsudski, it was to recreate in some form the Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth.[230][276] For Lenin, to cause the downfall of capitalist edifice in Europe by facilitating revolutionary processes in key states of the Western Europe.[230]

Russian and Polish historians tend to assign victory to their respective countries. Outside assessments vary mostly between calling the result a Polish victory or inconclusive. The Poles claimed a successful defence of their state, but the Soviets claimed a repulse of the Polish invasion of Ukraine and Belarus, which they viewed as a part of the Allied intervention in the Russian Civil War. Some British and American military historians argue that the Soviet failure to destroy the Polish Army ended Soviet ambitions for international revolution.[117][277][278]

Andrzej Chwalba lists a number of ways in which the Polish military victory in reality turned out being a loss (the fundamental status quo – Poland's sovereign existence – had been preserved). The perception of Poland as the aggressor damaged the country's reputation. Historians and publicists, in the West as well as in the East, have presented the country's eastern policy in negative terms, as irresponsible and adventurous.[251] In 1920 and its aftermath, likely hundreds of thousands of people died without any territorial or political gain for Poland.[279]

After signing the armistice with Poland in October 1920, the Soviets transferred troops toward Crimea and attacked the Isthmus of Perekop. Pyotr Wrangel's White Army was ultimately defeated there. By 14 November, 83,000 soldiers and civilians had been evacuated aboard French and Russian ships to Istanbul (the British government refused to provide any assistance), while 300,000 White collaborators were left behind.[242] The Red Army then diverted its troops into the Tambov region of central Russia to crush an anti-Bolshevik peasant uprising.[280]

In September 1926, the Soviet–Lithuanian Non-Aggression Pact was signed. The Soviets renewed their recognition of the Lithuanian claim to the Vilnius area.[202] In 1939, after the Soviet invasion of Poland, Stalin gave Vilnius to Lithuania. In 1940, Lithuania was incorporated into the Soviet Union as a Soviet republic. This arrangement, interrupted by the German occupation of Lithuania in 1941–44, had lasted until the restoration of Lithuanian independent state in 1990.[281] Under the Lithuanian Soviet Socialist Republic, Vilnius became a city dominated by ethnic Lithuanians.[282]

After the Soviet invasion of Poland of September 1939, the partition of Belarus and Ukraine ended on Soviet terms. After Operation Barbarossa and occupation by Nazi Germany, the Soviet Union returned in 1944 and the two Soviet republics permanently reclaimed what had been Polish "Kresy" from 1920 to 1939. Since the post-World War II adjustments, the borders of the republics had remained stable, except for the 1954 transfer of Crimea from the Russian SFSR to the Ukrainian SSR. The Soviet republics' borders had been preserved as borders of independent Belarus and Ukraine following the dissolution of the Soviet Union.

In 1943, during the course of World War II, the subject of Poland's eastern borders was reopened and was discussed at the Tehran Conference. Winston Churchill argued in favour of the 1920 Curzon Line rather than the Peace of Riga borders, and an agreement among the Allies to that effect was reached at the Yalta Conference in 1945.[283] The Western Allies, despite having alliance treaties with Poland and despite the Polish contribution to the war, left Poland within the Soviet sphere of influence. The Allies allowed Poland to be compensated for the territorial losses in the east with the bulk of the former eastern territories of Germany. The post-war arrangement imposed had become known to many Poles as the Western betrayal.[284]

From the end of World War II until 1989, the communists held power in Poland, and the Polish–Soviet War was omitted or minimised in Polish and other Soviet Bloc countries' history books, or was presented as a foreign intervention during the Russian Civil War.[285]

Polish Lieutenant Józef Kowalski was the last living veteran of the war. He was awarded the Order of Polonia Restituta on his 110th birthday by President Lech Kaczyński of Poland.[286] He died on 7 December 2013 aged 113.

List of battles

See also

Notes

  1. ^ Battle of Daugavpils
  2. ^ a b Volunteers
  3. ^ There is disagreement over the dates of the war. The Encyclopædia Britannica begins its "Russo-Polish War" article with the date range 1919–1920 but then states, "Although there had been hostilities between the two countries during 1919, the conflict began when the Polish head of state Józef Piłsudski formed an alliance with the Ukrainian nationalist leader Symon Petlyura (21 April 1920) and their combined forces began to overrun Ukraine, occupying Kiev on 7 May." Some Western historians, including Norman Davies, consider mid-February 1919 the beginning of the war.[2] However, military confrontations between forces that can be considered officially Polish and the Red Army were already happening by late autumn 1918 and in January 1919.[3] The city of Vilnius, for example, was taken by the Soviets on 5 January 1919.[4]
  1. ^ Other names:
    • Polish: Wojna polsko-bolszewicka, wojna polsko-sowiecka, wojna polsko-rosyjska 1919–1921, wojna polsko-radziecka (Polish–Bolshevik War, Polish–Soviet War, Polish–Russian War 1919–1921)
    • Russian: Советско-польская война (Sovetsko-polskaya voyna, Soviet-Polish War), Польский фронт (Polsky front, Polish Front)
  2. ^ For example: 1) Cisek 1990 Sąsiedzi wobec wojny 1920 roku. Wybór dokumentów.
    2) Szczepański 1995 Wojna 1920 roku na Mazowszu i Podlasiu
    3) Sikorski 1991 Nad Wisłą i Wkrą. Studium do polsko–radzieckiej wojny 1920 roku

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polish, soviet, this, article, long, read, navigate, comfortably, when, this, added, readable, prose, size, words, consider, splitting, content, into, articles, condensing, adding, subheadings, please, discuss, this, issue, article, talk, page, october, 2023, . This article may be too long to read and navigate comfortably When this tag was added its readable prose size was 18 000 words Consider splitting content into sub articles condensing it or adding subheadings Please discuss this issue on the article s talk page October 2023 This article is about the conflict of 1918 1921 For other Russo Polish conflicts see Polish Russian Wars Polish Soviet WarPart of Central and Eastern European military campaigns that included the Western Front of the Russian Civil War Ukrainian War of Independence Lithuanian Wars of Independence and Latvian War of IndependenceTop left Polish FT 17 tanks of the 1st Tank Regiment during the Battle of Dyneburg January 1920Below left Polish troops enter Kiev May 1920Top right Polish Schwarzlose M 07 12 machine gun nest during the Battle of Radzymin August 1920Middle Polish defences with a M1895 14 machine gun position near Milosna during the Battle of Warsaw August 1920Bottom left Russian prisoners following the Battle of WarsawBottom right Polish defences in Belarus during the Battle of the Niemen River September 1920Date1918 1919 c 18 March 1921 2 years 1 month and 4 days LocationCentral and Eastern EuropeResultPolish victoryTerritorialchangesPoland retained control of modern day Western Ukraine and Western Belarus Kresy in interwar Poland Soviet forces retained control of modern day Eastern Ukraine and Eastern BelarusBelligerents Russian SFSR Ukrainian SSR Byelorussian SSR Polrewkom Poland Ukraine 1920 Belarus 1920 Latvia 1920 a Support France Hungary Romania 1 United Kingdom b United States b Commanders and leadersVladimir Lenin Leon Trotsky Sergey Kamenev Joseph Stalin Mikhail Tukhachevsky Semyon Budyonny August Kork Hayk Bzhishkyan Nikolai Sollogub Alexander Yegorov Aleksandr Vasilevsky Felix DzerzhinskyJozef Pilsudski Jozef Haller Franciszek Latinik T Jordan Rozwadowski Wladyslaw Sikorski Kazimierz Sosnkowski Leonard Skierski Edward Rydz Smigly Stanislaw Szeptycki Symon Petliura S Bulak Balachowicz Janis PurinsStrengthEarly 1919 50 000 5 Summer 1920 800 000 950 000 6 5 million reservists Ukrainian Galician Army about 1000 soldiers Socialist Soviet Republic of Lithuania and BelorussiaEarly 1919 80 000 7 Summer 1920 348 286 troops on front 8 about 700 000 reservists approx 1 000 000 9 Ukraine 20 000 10 Russian volunteers 20 000 10 Casualties and lossesTotal reported 140 000 145 000 unknown wounded not included c 60 000 dead 11 c 80 000 85 000 captured 12 Total reported 212 42047 551 dead17 213 KIA30 338 died of wounds113 518 wounded51 351 captured or missing 13 14 15 The Polish Soviet War N 1 late autumn 1918 14 February 1919 3 18 March 1921 was fought primarily between the Second Polish Republic and the Russian Soviet Federative Socialist Republic before it became a union republic in the aftermath of World War I and the Russian Revolution on territories which were previously held by the Russian Empire and the Habsburg Monarchy following the Partitions of Poland On 13 November 1918 after the collapse of the Central Powers and the Armistice of 11 November 1918 Vladimir Lenin s Russian Soviet Federative Socialist Republic annulled the Treaty of Brest Litovsk which it had signed with the Central Powers in March 1918 and started moving forces in the western direction to recover and secure the Ober Ost regions vacated by the German forces that the Russian state had lost under the treaty Lenin saw the newly independent Poland formed in October November 1918 as the bridge which his Red Army would have to cross to assist other communist movements and to bring about more European revolutions 16 At the same time leading Polish politicians of different orientations pursued the general expectation of restoring the country s pre 1772 borders Motivated by this idea Polish Chief of State Jozef Pilsudski in office from 14 November 1918 began moving troops east In 1919 while the Soviet Red Army was still preoccupied with the Russian Civil War of 1917 1922 the Polish Army moved into territories regarded by many Poles as Polish Kresy That year they took most of present day Lithuania and Belarus By July 1919 Polish forces had taken control of much of Eastern Galicia and had emerged victorious from the Polish Ukrainian War of November 1918 to July 1919 In the eastern part of Ukraine bordering on Russia Symon Petliura tried to defend the Ukrainian People s Republic but as the Bolsheviks gained the upper hand in the Russian Civil War they advanced westward towards the disputed Ukrainian lands and made Petliura s forces retreat Reduced to a small amount of territory in the west Petliura was compelled to seek an alliance with Pilsudski officially concluded in April 1920 Pilsudski believed that the best way for Poland to secure favorable borders was by military action and that he could easily defeat the Red Army forces His Kiev offensive commenced in late April 1920 and resulted in the takeover of Kiev by Polish and allied Ukrainian forces on 7 May The Soviet armies in the area which were weaker had not been decisively defeated as they avoided major confrontations and withdrew The offensive received only meager support from the local population and more Ukrainians joined the Red Army than Petliura s forces The Red Army responded to the Polish offensive with counterattacks from 5 June on the southern Ukrainian front and from 4 July on the northern front On the southern front the Poles and their allies equipped with some more advanced weaponry retreated in an orderly fashion On the northern front however the retreat soon turned into a chaotic and uncoordinated flight 17 The Soviet operation pushed the Polish forces back westward all the way to Warsaw the Polish capital while the Directorate of Ukraine fled to Western Europe Fears of Soviet troops arriving at the German borders increased the interest and involvement of the Western powers in the war In mid summer the fall of Warsaw seemed certain but in mid August the tide had turned again after the Polish forces achieved an unexpected and decisive victory at the Battle of Warsaw 12 to 25 August 1920 In the wake of the eastward Polish advance that followed the Soviets sued for peace and the war ended with a ceasefire on 18 October 1920 The Peace of Riga signed on 18 March 1921 divided the disputed territories between Poland and Soviet Russia The war and the treaty negotiations determined the Polish Soviet border for the rest of the interwar period Poland s eastern border was established at about 200 km east of the Curzon Line a 1920 British proposal for Poland s border based on the version approved in 1919 by the Entente leaders as the limit of Poland s expansion in the eastern direction The new Polish Soviet border divided what are today the countries of Ukraine and Belarus The peace negotiations on the Polish side conducted chiefly by Pilsudski s opponents and against his will ended with the official recognition of the two new Soviet republics the Ukrainian SSR and the Byelorussian SSR which became parties to the treaty This outcome and the new border agreed on precluded any possibility of the formation of the Intermarium Polish led federation of states that Pilsudski had envisaged or of meeting his other eastern policy goals Contents 1 Names and ending dates 2 Background 2 1 Preliminary hostilities 2 2 Polish Ukrainian War 2 3 Polish intelligence 3 War 3 1 Early progression of the conflict 3 2 Abortive peace process 3 3 Pilsudski s alliance with Petliura 3 4 From Kiev offensive to armistice 3 4 1 Polish forces 3 4 2 Red Army 3 4 3 Logistics and plans 3 4 4 Kiev offensive 3 4 5 Soviet victories 3 4 6 Diplomatic front 3 4 7 Before the battle 3 4 8 Battle of Warsaw 3 4 9 Conclusion of military campaigns 4 Peace negotiations 4 1 Russia 4 2 Poland 4 3 Ukraine 4 4 Belarus 4 5 Lithuania 4 6 Latvia 5 Prisoners war crimes and other controversies 6 Development of a military strategy 7 Aftermath and legacy 8 List of battles 9 See also 10 Notes 11 References 11 1 Bibliography 12 Further reading 12 1 Non English 12 1 1 Polish 12 1 2 Russian 13 External linksNames and ending datesThe war is known by several names Polish Soviet War is the most common but other names include Russo Polish War or Polish Russian War and Polish Bolshevik War 4 This last term or just Bolshevik War Polish Wojna bolszewicka is most common in Polish sources In some Polish sources it is also referred to as the War of 1920 Polish Wojna 1920 roku N 2 The ending year of the conflict is variously given as either 1920 or 1921 this confusion stems from the fact that while the ceasefire came into force on 18 October 1920 the official treaty ending the war was signed on 18 March 1921 While the events of late 1918 and 1919 can be described as a border conflict and only in spring 1920 were both sides engaged in an all out war the warfare that took place in late April 1920 was an escalation of the fighting that had begun a year and a half earlier 2 BackgroundMain article Causes of the Polish Soviet War nbsp Partitions of Poland Lithuania in 1795 the coloured territories show the extent of the Polish Lithuanian Commonwealth just before the First Partition The land absorbed by the Kingdom of Prussia is in blue north west by the Austrian Habsburg monarchy in green south and by the Russian Empire in red east The war s main territories of contention lie in what is now Ukraine and Belarus Until the mid 13th century they formed part of the medieval state of Kievan Rus After a period of internal wars and the 1240 Mongol invasion the lands became objects of expansion for the Kingdom of Poland and for the Grand Duchy of Lithuania In the first half of the 14th century the Principality of Kiev and the land between the Dnieper Pripyat and Daugava Western Dvina rivers became part of the Grand Duchy of Lithuania In 1352 Poland and Lithuania divided the Kingdom of Galicia Volhynia between themselves In 1569 in accordance with the terms of the Union of Lublin between Poland and Lithuania some of the Ukrainian lands passed to the Polish Crown Between 1772 and 1795 many of the East Slavic territories became part of the Russian Empire in the course of the Partitions of Poland Lithuania In 1795 the Third Partition of Poland Poland lost formal independence After the Congress of Vienna of 1814 1815 much of the territory of the Duchy of Warsaw was transferred to Russian control and became the autonomous Congress Poland officially the Kingdom of Poland 18 After young Poles refused conscription to the Imperial Russian Army during the January Uprising of 1863 Tsar Alexander II stripped Congress Poland of its separate constitution attempted to force general use of the Russian language and took away vast tracts of land from Poles Congress Poland was incorporated more directly into imperial Russia by being divided into ten provinces each with an appointed Russian military governor and all under complete control of the Russian Governor General at Warsaw 19 20 In the aftermath of World War I the map of Central and Eastern Europe changed drastically The German Empire s defeat rendered obsolete Berlin s plans for the creation of Eastern European German dominated states Mitteleuropa which included another rendition of the Kingdom of Poland The Russian Empire collapsed which resulted in the Russian Revolution and the Russian Civil War The Russian state lost territory due to the German offensive and the Treaty of Brest Litovsk signed by the emergent Russian Soviet Federative Socialist Republic Several nations of the region saw a chance for independence and seized their opportunity to gain it The defeat of Germany on the Western Front and the withdrawal of the Imperial German Army in the Eastern Front had left Berlin in no position to retaliate against Soviet Russia which swiftly repudiated the treaty and proceeded to recover many of the former territories of the Russian Empire 21 However preoccupied with the civil war it did not have the resources to react swiftly to the national rebellions 21 nbsp Map of areas where Polish was used as a primary language in 1916 published in post 1918 Poland In November 1918 Poland became a sovereign state Among the several border wars fought by the Second Polish Republic was the successful Greater Poland uprising 1918 1919 against Weimar Germany The historic Polish Lithuanian Commonwealth included vast territories in the east They had been incorporated into the Russian Empire in 1772 1795 and had remained its parts as the Northwest Territory until World War I 22 After the war they were contested by the Polish Russian Ukrainian Belarusian Lithuanian and Latvian interests In newly independent Poland politics were strongly influenced by Jozef Pilsudski On 11 November 1918 Pilsudski was made head of Polish armed forces by the Regency Council of the Kingdom of Poland a body installed by the Central Powers Subsequently he was recognized by many Polish politicians as temporary chief of state and exercised in practice extensive powers Under the Small Constitution of 20 February 1919 he became chief of state As such he reported to the Legislative Sejm 23 With the collapse of the Russian and German occupying authorities virtually all of Poland s neighbours began fighting over borders and other issues The Finnish Civil War the Estonian War of Independence the Latvian War of Independence and the Lithuanian Wars of Independence were all fought in the Baltic Sea region 24 Russia was overwhelmed by domestic struggles In early March 1919 the Communist International was established in Moscow The Hungarian Soviet Republic was proclaimed in March and the Bavarian Soviet Republic in April 25 26 Winston Churchill in a conversation with Prime Minister David Lloyd George commented sarcastically The war of giants has ended the wars of the pygmies begin 27 28 The Polish Soviet War was the longest lasting of the international engagements nbsp Territorial establishment of the Second Polish Republic as of March 1919The territory of what had become Poland had been a major battleground during World War I and the new country lacked political stability It had won the hard fought Polish Ukrainian War against the West Ukrainian People s Republic by July 1919 but had already become embroiled in new conflicts with Germany the 1919 1921 Silesian Uprisings and the January 1919 border conflict with Czechoslovakia Meanwhile Soviet Russia focused on thwarting the counterrevolution and the 1918 1925 intervention by the Allied powers The first clashes between Polish and Soviet forces occurred in autumn and winter 1918 1919 but it took a year and a half for a full scale war to develop 4 The Western powers considered any significant territorial expansion of Poland at the expense of Russia or Germany to be highly disruptive to the post World War I order Among other factors the Western Allies did not want to give Germany and Russia a reason to conspire together 29 The rise of the unrecognized Bolshevik regime complicated this rationale 30 The Treaty of Versailles signed on 28 June 1919 regulated Poland s western border 31 The Paris Peace Conference 1919 1920 had not made a definitive ruling in regard to Poland s eastern border but on 8 December 1919 the Allied Supreme War Council issued a provisional boundary its later version would be known as the Curzon Line 30 It was an attempt to define the areas that had an indisputably Polish ethnic majority 31 32 33 The permanent border was contingent on the Western powers future negotiations with White Russia presumed to prevail in the Russian Civil War 30 Pilsudski and his allies blamed Prime Minister Ignacy Paderewski for this outcome and caused his dismissal Paderewski embittered withdrew from politics 33 nbsp Vladimir Lenin in 1919The leader of Russia s new Bolshevik government Vladimir Lenin aimed to regain control of the territories abandoned by Russia in the Treaty of Brest Litovsk in March 1918 the treaty was annulled by Russia on 13 November 1918 34 and to set up Soviet governments in the emerging countries in the western parts of the former Russian Empire The more ambitious goal was to also reach Germany where he expected a socialist revolution to break out By the end of summer 1919 the Soviets had taken over most of eastern and central Ukraine formerly parts of the Russian Empire and driven the Directorate of Ukraine from Kiev In February 1919 they set up the Socialist Soviet Republic of Lithuania and Belorussia Litbel It is however unlikely that the Soviet forced plannes further incursions westward 35 From late 1919 Lenin encouraged by the Red Army s civil war victories over the White Russian forces and their Western allies began to envision the future of world revolution with greater optimism The Bolsheviks proclaimed the need for the dictatorship of the proletariat and agitated for a worldwide communist community They intended to link the revolution in Russia with a communist Revolutions and interventions in Hungary 1918 1920 they had hoped for and to assist other communist movements in Europe To be able to provide direct physical support to revolutionaries in the West the Red Army would have to cross the territory of Romania 36 According to the historian Andrzej Chwalba however the scenario was different in late 1919 and winter spring 1920 The Soviets facing decreasing revolutionary fervor in Europe and having to deal with Russia s own problems attempted to make peace with its neighbors including Poland 37 nbsp Jozef Pilsudski in 1919According to Aviel Roshwald Pilsudski hoped to incorporate most of the territories of the defunct Polish Lithuanian Commonwealth into the future Polish state by structuring it as the Polish led multinational federation 38 Pilsudski had wanted to break up the Russian Empire and set up the Intermarium federation of various different states Poland Lithuania Belarus Ukraine and other Central and East European countries that emerged from the crumbling empires after World War I In Pilsudski s vision Poland would replace a truncated and vastly reduced Russia as the great power of Eastern Europe His plan excluded negotiations prior to military victory 39 40 41 42 43 44 He had hoped that the new Poland led union would become a counterweight to any potential imperialist intentions of Russia or Germany 45 Pilsudski believed that there could be no independent Poland without a Ukraine free of Russian control thus his main interest was in splitting Ukraine from Russia 46 47 He used military force to expand the Polish borders in Galicia and Volhynia and crush a Ukrainian attempt at self determination in the disputed territories east of the Curzon Line which contained a significant Polish minority 16 On 7 February 1919 Pilsudski spoke on the subject of Poland s future frontiers At the moment Poland is essentially without borders and all that we can gain in this regard in the west depends on the Entente on the extent to which it may wish to squeeze Germany In the east it s a different matter there are doors here that open and close and it depends on who forces them open and how far 48 49 Polish military forces had thus set out to expand far in the eastern direction As Pilsudski imagined Closed within the boundaries of the 16th century cut off from the Black Sea and Baltic Sea deprived of land and mineral wealth of the South and South east Russia could easily move into the status of second grade power Poland as the largest and strongest of the new states could easily establish a sphere of influence stretching from Finland to the Caucasus 50 Pilsudski s concepts appeared more progressive and democratic in comparison with the rival National Democracy s plans 42 51 52 although both pursued the idea of direct incorporation and Polonization of the disputed eastern lands 53 However Pilsudski used his federation idea instrumentally As he wrote to his close associate Leon Wasilewski in April 1919 for now I want to be neither an imperialist nor a federalist Taking into account that in this God s world an empty talk of the brotherhood of people and nations as well as the American little doctrines seem to be winning I gladly side with the federalists 52 According to Chwalba the differences between Pilsudski s vision of Poland and that of his rival National Democratic leader Roman Dmowski were more rhetorical than real Pilsudski had made many obfuscating statements but never specifically stated his views regarding Poland s eastern borders or political arrangements he intended for the region 54 Preliminary hostilities From late 1917 Polish revolutionary military units were formed in Russia They were combined into the Western Rifle Division in October 1918 In summer 1918 a short lived Polish communist government led by Stefan Heltman was created in Moscow Both the military and civilian structures were meant to facilitate the eventual introduction of communism into Poland in the form of a Polish Soviet Republic 55 nbsp Activists of the Polish Military Organisation in 1917Given the precarious situation resulting from the withdrawal of German forces from Belarus and Lithuania and the expected arrival of the Red Army there Polish Self Defence had been organized in autumn 1918 around major concentrations of Polish population such as Minsk Vilnius and Grodno They were based on the Polish Military Organisation and were recognized as part of the Polish Armed Forces by the decree of Polish Chief of State Pilsudski issued on 7 December 1918 56 57 The German Soldatenrat of Ober Ost declared on 15 November that its authority in Vilnius would be transferred to the Red Army 34 In late autumn 1918 the Polish 4th Rifle Division fought the Red Army in Russia The division operated under the authority of the Polish Army in France and General Jozef Haller Politically the division fought under the Polish National Committee KNP recognized by the Allies as a temporary government of Poland In January 1919 per Pilsudski s decision the 4th Rifle Division became part of the Polish Army 3 The Polish Self Defence forces were defeated by the Soviets at a number of locations 55 Minsk was taken by the Russian Western Army on 11 December 1918 58 The Socialist Soviet Republic of Byelorussia was declared there on 31 December After three days of heavy fighting with the Western Rifle Division the Self Defence units withdrew from Vilnius on 5 January 1919 Polish Soviet skirmishes continued in January and February 56 The Polish armed forces were hurriedly formed to fight in several border wars Two major formations manned the Russian front in February 1919 the northern led by General Waclaw Iwaszkiewicz Rudoszanski and the southern under General Antoni Listowski 55 Polish Ukrainian War Main article Polish Ukrainian War On 18 October 1918 the Ukrainian National Council was formed in Eastern Galicia still part of the Austro Hungarian Empire it was led by Yevhen Petrushevych The establishment of a Ukrainian state there was proclaimed in November 1918 it had become known as the West Ukrainian People s Republic and it claimed Lwow as its capital 59 Because of Russia related political considerations the Ukrainian attempts failed to generate support of the Entente powers 60 nbsp General Jozef Haller swearing for the Polish flag when he was nominated to command the Blue ArmyKey buildings in Lwow were seized by the Ukrainians on 31 October 1918 On 1 November Polish residents of the city counterattacked and the Polish Ukrainian War began 60 Lwow was under Polish control from 22 November 61 To Polish politicians the Polish claim to Lwow and eastern Galicia was indisputable in April 1919 the Legislative Sejm unanimously declared that all of Galicia should be annexed by Poland 62 In April to June 1919 the Polish Blue Army of General Jozef Haller arrived from France It consisted of over 67 000 well equipped and highly trained soldiers 63 The Blue Army helped drive the Ukrainian forces east past the Zbruch River and decisively contributed to the outcome of the war The West Ukrainian People s Republic was defeated by mid July and eastern Galicia had come under Polish administration 60 61 The destruction of the West Ukrainian Republic confirmed the belief held by many Ukrainians that Poland was the main enemy of their nation 64 From January 1919 fighting also took place in Volhynia where the Poles faced the forces of the Ukrainian People s Republic led by Symon Petliura The Polish offensive resulted in a takeover of the western part of the province 49 65 The Polish Ukrainian warfare there was discontinued from late May and in early September an armistice was signed 49 65 On 21 November 1919 after contentious deliberations the Allied Supreme War Council mandated Polish control over eastern Galicia for 25 years with guarantees of autonomy for the Ukrainian population 61 51 The Conference of Ambassadors which replaced the Supreme War Council recognized the Polish claim to eastern Galicia in March 1923 51 66 Polish intelligence Jan Kowalewski a polyglot and amateur cryptographer broke the codes and ciphers of the army of the West Ukrainian People s Republic and of General Anton Denikin s White Russian forces 67 68 In August 1919 he became chief of the Polish General Staff s cryptography section in Warsaw 69 By early September he had gathered a group of mathematicians from the University of Warsaw and the University of Lwow most notably the founders of the Polish School of Mathematics Stanislaw Lesniewski Stefan Mazurkiewicz and Waclaw Sierpinski who succeeded in breaking the Soviet Russian ciphers as well During the Polish Soviet War the Polish decryption of Red Army radio messages made it possible to use Polish military forces efficiently against Soviet Russian forces and to win many individual battles most importantly the Battle of Warsaw 67 68 WarEarly progression of the conflict nbsp Five stages in the Polish Soviet WarOn 5 January 1919 the Red Army took Vilnius which led to the establishment of the Socialist Soviet Republic of Lithuania and Belorussia Litbel on 28 February 22 24 On 10 February Soviet Russia s People s Commissar for Foreign Affairs Georgy Chicherin wrote to Polish Prime Minister Ignacy Paderewski proposing resolution of matters of disagreement and establishment of relations between the two states It was one of the series of notes exchanged by the two governments in 1918 and 1919 70 In February Polish troops marched east to face the Soviets the new Polish Sejm declared the need to liberate the northeast provinces of Poland with their capital in Wilno Vilnius 22 After the German World War I troops had been evacuated from the region the Battle of Bereza Kartuska a Polish Soviet skirmish took place 71 It occurred during a local Polish offensive action of 13 16 February led by General Antoni Listowski near Byaroza Belarus 4 2 16 71 72 The event has been presented as the beginning of the war of liberation by the Polish side or of Polish aggression by the Russian side 71 By late February the Soviet westward offensive had come to a halt As the low level warfare continued the Polish units crossed the Neman River took Pinsk on 5 March and reached the outskirts of Lida on 4 March Pilsudski ordered further movement to the east stopped 73 71 The Soviet leadership had become preoccupied with the issue of providing military assistance to the Hungarian Soviet Republic and with the Siberian offensive of the White Army led by Alexander Kolchak 74 By July 1919 Polish armies eliminated the West Ukrainian People s Republic 33 Secretly preparing an assault on Soviet held Vilnius in early April Pilsudski was able to shift some of the forces used in Ukraine to the northern front The idea was to create a fait accompli and to prevent the Western powers from granting the territories claimed by Poland to White Russia the Whites were expected to prevail in the Russian Civil War 75 nbsp Pilsudski in VilniusA new Polish offensive started on 16 April 4 49 75 Five thousand soldiers led by Pilsudski headed for Vilnius 76 Advancing to the east the Polish forces took Lida on 17 April Novogrudok on 18 April Baranavichy on 19 April and Grodno on 28 April 77 Pilsudski s group entered Vilnius on 19 April and captured the city after two days of fighting 49 77 The Polish action drove the Litbel government from its proclaimed capital 22 16 Upon the taking of Vilnius in pursuit of his federation objectives Pilsudski issued a Proclamation to the inhabitants of the former Grand Duchy of Lithuania on 22 April It was sharply criticized by his rival National Democrats who demanded direct incorporation of the former Grand Duchy lands by Poland and signaled their opposition to Pilsudski s territorial and political concepts Pilsudski had thus proceeded to restore the historic territories of the Polish Lithuanian Commonwealth by military means leaving the necessary political determinations for later 49 75 On 25 April Lenin ordered the Western Front commander to reclaim Vilnius as soon as possible The Red Army formations that attacked the Polish forces were defeated by Edward Rydz Smigly s units between 30 April and 7 May 75 78 While the Poles extended their holdings further the Red Army unable to accomplish its objectives and facing intensified combat with the White forces elsewhere withdrew from its positions 75 The Polish Lithuanian Belarusian Front was established on 15 May and placed under command of General Stanislaw Szeptycki 71 In a statute passed on 15 May Polish Sejm called for the inclusion of the eastern borderline nations in the Polish state as autonomous entities It was intended to make a positive impression on the participants at the Paris Peace Conference At the conference Prime Minister and Foreign Minister Ignacy Paderewski declared Poland s support for self determination of the eastern nations in line with Woodrow Wilson s doctrine and in an effort to secure Western support for Poland s policies in regard to Ukraine Belarus and Lithuania 79 The Polish offensive was discontinued around the line of German trenches and fortifications from World War I because of high likelihood of Poland s war with Weimar Germany over territorial and other issues Half of Poland s military strength had been concentrated on the German front by mid June The offensive in the east was resumed at the end of June following the Treaty of Versailles The treaty signed and ratified by Germany preserved the status quo in western Poland 80 On the southern front in Volhynia in May and in July the Polish forces confronted the Red Army which was in process of pushing Petliura s Ukrainian units out of the contested territories The rural Orthodox population there was hostile to the Polish authorities and actively supported the Bolsheviks 65 Also in Podolia and near the eastern reaches of Galicia the Polish armies kept slowly advancing to the east until December They crossed the Zbruch River and displaced Soviet forces from a number of localities 65 nbsp Pilsudski in MinskThe Polish forces took Minsk on 8 August 4 81 The Berezina River was reached on 18 August 81 On 28 August tanks were deployed for the first time and the town of Babruysk was captured 4 81 By 2 September Polish units reached the Daugava River 4 Barysaw was taken on 10 September and parts of Polotsk on 21 September 81 By mid September the Poles secured the region along the Daugava from the Dysna River to Daugavpils 4 The frontline had also extended south cutting through Polesia and Volhynia 75 81 along the Zbruch River it reached the Romanian border 75 A Red Army assault between the Daugava and Berezina Rivers was repelled in October and the front had become relatively inactive with sporadic encounters only as the line designated by Pilsudski to be the goal of the Polish operation in the north was reached 75 81 In autumn 1919 the Sejm voted to incorporate into Poland the conquered territories up to the Daugava and Berezina Rivers including Minsk 82 The Polish successes in summer 1919 resulted from the fact that the Soviets prioritized the war with the White forces which was more crucial for them The successes created an illusion of Polish military prowess and Soviet weakness 83 As Pilsudski put it I am not worried about the strength of Russia if I wanted to I could go now say to Moscow and no one would be able to resist my power 84 The offensive was restrained in late summer by Pilsudski because he did not want to improve the strategic situation of the advancing Whites 83 In early summer 1919 the White movement had gained the initiative and its forces commanded by Anton Denikin and known as the Volunteer Army marched on Moscow Pilsuski refused to join the Allied intervention in the Russian Civil War because he considered the Whites more threatening to Poland than the Bolsheviks 49 85 Pilsudski s adversarial relationship with tsarist Russia went back to the earlier stages of his career He engaged in warfare with Soviet Russia from the beginning of his tenure as Polish commander in chief 86 Based on this experience he underestimated the strength of the Bolsheviks 85 Pilsudski also thought he could get a better deal for Poland from the Bolsheviks than from the Whites 87 who represented in his opinion the old Russian imperial policies hostile to strong Poland and Ukraine independent from Russia Pilsudski s main objectives 88 The Bolsheviks had proclaimed the partitions of Poland to be invalid and declared their support for self determination of the Polish nation 89 90 Pilsudski thus speculated that Poland would be better off with the internationalist Bolsheviks who were also alienated from the Western powers than with the restored Russian Empire its traditional nationalism and its partnership with Western politics 64 87 91 By his refusal to join the attack on Lenin s struggling government he ignored strong pressure from the Triple Entente leaders and possibly saved the Bolshevik government in summer to fall 1919 92 although a full scale attack by the Poles to support Denikin would not have been possible 93 Mikhail Tukhachevsky later commented on the likely disastrous consequences for the Bolsheviks if the Polish government undertook military cooperation with Denikin at the time of his advance on Moscow 94 In a book he later published Denikin pointed at Poland as the savior of the Bolshevik power 95 nbsp Polish held territory in December 1919Denikin twice appealed to Pilsudski for help in summer and in autumn 1919 According to Denikin The defeat of the south of Russia will make Poland face the power that will become a calamity for the Polish culture and will threaten the existence of the Polish state According to Pilsudski The lesser evil is to facilitate a White Russia s defeat by Red Russia With any Russia we fight for Poland Let all that filthy West talk all they want we re not going to be dragged into and used for the fight against the Russian revolution Quite to the contrary in the name of permanent Polish interests we want to make it easier for the revolutionary army to act against the counter revolutionary army 94 On 12 December the Red Army pushed Denikin out of Kiev 94 The self perceived interests of Poland and White Russia were irreconcilable Pilsudski wanted to break up Russia and create a powerful Poland Denikin Alexander Kolchak and Nikolai Yudenich wanted territorial integrity for the one great and indivisible Russia 95 Pilsudski held the Bolshevik military forces in low regard and thought of Red Russia as easy to defeat The victorious in the civil war communists were going to be pushed far to the east and deprived of Ukraine Belarus the Baltic lands and the southern Caucasus they would no longer constitute a threat to Poland 95 From the beginning of the conflict many peace initiatives had been declared by the Polish and Russian sides but they were intended as cover or stalling for time as each side concentrated on military preparations and moves 25 One series of Polish Soviet negotiations commenced in Bialowieza after the termination of the summer 1919 military activities they were moved in early November 1919 to Mikashevichy 83 94 Pilsudski s associate Ignacy Boerner pl met there with Lenin s emissary Julian Marchlewski Buoyed by their armies successes in the Russian Civil War the Soviet government rejected the tough Polish armistice conditions in December Pilsudski broke off the Mikashevichy talks two days after the Soviet takeover of Kiev but major military operations had not been resumed 83 94 Early in the talks Boerner informed Marchlewski that Poland had no intention of renewing its offensive it allowed the Soviets to move forty three thousand troops from the Polish front to fight Denikin 83 96 nbsp Polish soldiers enter Daugavpils January 1920The only exception to the Polish policy of front stabilization since autumn 1919 was the winter attack on Daugavpils 97 Rydz Smigly s previous attempts to capture the city in summer and early autumn had been unsuccessful 97 A secret political and military pact regarding a common attack on Daugavpils was signed between representatives of Poland and the Latvian Provisional Government on 30 December On 3 January 1920 Polish and Latvian forces 30 000 Poles and 10 000 Latvians commenced a joint operation against the surprised enemy The Bolshevik 15th Army withdrew and had not been pursued the fighting terminated on 25 January 97 The taking of Daugavpils was accomplished primarily by the 3rd Legions Infantry Division under Rydz Smigly 49 98 Afterwards the town and its vicinity were handed over to the Latvians 49 97 99 100 The outcome of the campaign disrupted communications between Lithuanian and Russian forces 97 A Polish garrison was stationed in Daugavpils until July 1920 Simultaneously the Latvian authorities pursued peace negotiations with the Soviets which resulted in the signing of a preliminary armistice Pilsudski and the Polish diplomacy were not notified and had not been aware of this development 97 The fighting in 1919 resulted in the formation of a very long frontline which according to the historian Eugeniusz Duraczynski favored Poland at this stage 85 In late 1919 and early 1920 Pilsudski undertook his gargantuan task of breaking up Russia and creating the Intermarium bloc of countries 101 102 Given the refusal of Lithuania and other eastern Baltic region countries to participate in the project he set his sights on Ukraine 99 101 Abortive peace process nbsp Georgy Chicherin left with Maxim Litvinov in 1920In late autumn 1919 to many Polish politicians it appeared that Poland had achieved strategically desirable borders in the east and therefore fighting the Bolsheviks should be terminated and peace negotiations should commence The pursuit of peace also dominated popular sentiments and anti war demonstrations had taken place 103 The leadership of Soviet Russia confronted at that time a number of pressing internal and external problems In order to effectively address the difficulties they wanted to stop the warfare and offer peace to their neighbors hoping to be able to come out of the international isolation they had been subjected to Courted by the Soviets the potential allies of Poland Lithuania Latvia Romania or the South Caucasus states were unwilling to join a Polish led anti Soviet alliance Faced with the diminishing revolutionary fervor in Europe the Soviets were inclined to delay their hallmark project a Soviet republic of Europe to some indefinite future 104 The peace offers sent to Warsaw by Russia s Foreign Secretary Georgy Chicherin and other Russian governing institutions between late December 1919 and early February 1920 had not been responded to The Soviets proposed a favorable for Poland troop demarcation line consistent with the current military frontiers leaving permanent border determinations for later 105 While the Soviet overtures generated considerable interests on the parts of the socialist agrarian and nationalist political camps the attempts of the Polish Sejm to prevent further warfare turned futile Pilsudski who ruled over the military and to a considerable degree over the weak civilian government prevented any movement toward peace By late February he directed the Polish representatives to engage in pretended negotiations with the Soviets Pilsudski and his collaborators stressed what they saw as the increasing with time Polish military advantage over the Red Army and their belief that the state of war had created highly favorable conditions for Poland s economic development 106 On 4 March 1920 General Wladyslaw Sikorski initiated a new offensive in Polesia the Polish forces had driven a wedge between Soviet forces to the north Belarus and south Ukraine The Soviet counter offensive in Polesia and Volhynia was pushed back 99 Polish Russian peace negotiations in March 1920 produced no results Pilsudski was not interested in a negotiated solution to the conflict Preparations for a large scale resumption of hostilities were being finalized and the newly declared over the protest of a majority of parliamentary deputies marshal and his circle expected the planned new offensive to lead to the fulfillment of Pilsudski s federalist ideas 83 107 On 7 April Chicherin accused Poland of rejecting the Soviet peace offer and notified the Allies of the negative developments urging them to prevent the forthcoming Polish aggression The Polish diplomacy claimed the necessity to counteract the immediate threat of a Soviet assault in Belarus but the Western opinion to whom the Soviet arguments seemed reasonable rejected the Polish narrative 108 The Soviet forces on the Belarusian front were weak at the time and the Bolsheviks had no plans for an offensive action 106 Pilsudski s alliance with Petliura nbsp Jozef Pilsudski right in the train and Symon Petliura 16 May 1920Having resolved Poland s armed conflicts with the emerging Ukrainian states to Poland s satisfaction Pilsudski was able to work on a Polish Ukrainian alliance against Russia 109 110 On 2 December 1919 Andriy Livytskyi and other Ukrainian diplomats declared their readiness to give up the Ukrainian claims to eastern Galicia and western Volhynia in return for Poland s recognition of the independence of the Ukrainian People s Republic UPR 110 The Treaty of Warsaw Pilsudski s agreement with Hetman Symon Petliura the exiled Ukrainian nationalist leader and two other members of the Directorate of Ukraine was signed on 21 April 1920 111 112 It appeared to be Pilsudski s major success potentially signifying the beginning of a successful implementation of his long held designs Petliura who formally represented the government of the Ukrainian People s Republic which had de facto been defeated by the Bolsheviks fled with some Ukrainian troops to Poland where he found political asylum His control extended only to a sliver of land near the Polish controlled areas 113 Petliura had therefore little choice but to accept the Polish offer of alliance largely on Polish terms as determined by the outcome of the recent warfare between the two nations 114 By concluding an agreement with Pilsudski Petliura accepted the Polish territorial gains in western Ukraine and the future Polish Ukrainian border along the Zbruch River In exchange for renouncing the Ukrainian territorial claims he was promised independence for Ukraine and Polish military assistance in reinstating his government in Kiev 16 101 Given the powerful opposition against Pilsudski s eastern policy in war tired Poland the negotiations with Petliura were conducted in secrecy and the text of the 21 April agreement remained secret Poland recognized in it Ukraine s right to parts of the former Polish Lithuanian Commonwealth before 1772 east of the Zbruch 49 A military convention was added on 24 April it placed Ukrainian units under Polish command 111 By 1 May a Polish Ukrainian trade agreement was negotiated It had not been signed to prevent its far ranging provisions anticipating exploitation of Ukraine by Poland from being revealed and from causing catastrophic damage to Petliura s political reputation 115 nbsp Petliura right with Polish General Antoni ListowskiFor Pilsudski the alliance gave his campaign for the Intermarium federation an actual starting point and potentially the most important federation partner satisfied his demands regarding parts of Polish eastern border relevant to the proposed Ukrainian state and laid a foundation for a Polish dominated Ukrainian state between Russia and Poland 114 According to Richard K Debo while Petliura could not contribute real strength to the Polish offensive for Pilsudski the alliance provided some camouflage for the naked aggression involved 114 For Petliura it was the final chance to preserve the Ukrainian statehood and at least a theoretical independence of the Ukrainian heartlands despite his acceptance of the loss of West Ukrainian lands to Poland The British and the French did not recognize the UPR and blocked its admission to the League of Nations in autumn 1920 The treaty with the Ukrainian republic did not generate any international support for Poland It caused new tensions and conflicts especially within the Ukrainian movements that aimed for the country s independence 116 Regarding the deal they had concluded both leaders encountered strong opposition in their respective countries Pilsudski faced stiff opposition from Roman Dmowski s National Democrats who opposed Ukrainian independence 109 To protest the alliance and the upcoming war over Ukraine Stanislaw Grabski resigned the chairmanship of the foreign affairs committee in the Sejm where the National Democrats were a dominant force their approval would be needed to finalize any future political settlement 101 109 Petliura was criticized by many Ukrainian politicians for entering a pact with the Poles and for abandoning western Ukraine after the destruction of the West Ukrainian People s Republic western Ukraine was from their point of view occupied by Poland 117 118 109 During their occupation of the territory meant for the UPR Polish officials engaged in forced requisitions some of which were intended for troop supply but also in extensive looting of Ukraine and its people It ranged from activities approved and promoted at the highest level such as the widespread theft of trains loaded with goods to plunder perpetrated by Polish soldiers in Ukrainian countryside and cities In his 29 April and 1 May letters to General Kazimierz Sosnkowski and Prime Minister Leopold Skulski Pilsudski emphasized that the railroad booty had been enormous but he could not divulge further because the appropriations took place in violation of Poland s treaty with Ukraine 119 The alliance with Petliura gave Poland 15 000 allied Ukrainian troops at the beginning of the Kiev campaign 120 which increased to 35 000 by recruitment and from Soviet deserters during the war 120 According to Chwalba 60 000 Polish soldiers and 4 000 Ukrainians took part in the original offensive there were only 22 488 Ukrainian soldiers on the Polish food ration list as of 1 September 1920 121 From Kiev offensive to armistice Main article Polish Soviet War in 1920 Polish forces Further information Polish Soviet War Polish order of battle nbsp Polish officers on the southern front in 1920The Polish Army was made up of soldiers who had served in the armies of the partitioning empires especially professional officers as well as many new enlistees and volunteers The soldiers had come from different armies formations backgrounds and traditions While veterans of Pilsudski s Polish Legions and the Polish Military Organisation formed a privileged stratum integrating the Greater Poland Army and the Blue Army into the national force presented many challenges 122 The unification of the Greater Poland Army led by General Jozef Dowbor Musnicki a highly regarded force of 120 000 soldiers and the Blue Army led by General Jozef Haller with the main Polish Army under Pilsudski had been finalized on 19 October 1919 in Krakow in a symbolic ceremony 123 Within the young Polish state whose continuous existence was uncertain members of many groups resisted conscription For example Polish peasants and small town dwellers Jews or Ukrainians from Polish controlled territories tended to avoid service in Polish armed forces for different reasons The Polish military was overwhelmingly ethnically Polish and Catholic 124 The intensifying desertion problem in summer 1920 led to the introduction of death penalty for desertion in August The summary military trials and the executions often took place on the same day 125 Female soldiers functioned as members of the Voluntary Legion of Women they were normally assigned auxiliary duties 126 A system of military training for officers and soldiers was established with significant help from the French Military Mission to Poland 127 The Polish Air Force had about two thousand planes mostly old 45 of them had been captured from the enemy Only two hundred could be airborne at any given time They were used for various purposes including combat but mostly for reconnaissance 128 150 French pilots and navigators flew as part of the French Mission 129 According to Norman Davies estimating the strength of the opposing sides is difficult and even generals often had incomplete reports of their own forces 130 The Polish forces grew from approximately 100 000 by the end of 1918 to over 500 000 in early 1920 and 800 000 in the spring of that year 131 132 Before the Battle of Warsaw the army reached the total strength of about one million soldiers including 100 000 volunteers 9 nbsp Polish fighters of the Kosciuszko SquadronThe Polish armed forces were aided by military members of Western missions especially the French Military Mission Poland was supported in addition to the allied Ukrainian forces over twenty thousand soldiers 133 by Russian and Belarusian units and volunteers of many nationalities 129 Twenty American pilots served in the Kosciuszko Squadron Their contributions in spring and summer 1920 on the Ukrainian front were considered to be of critical importance 134 Russian anti Bolshevik units fought on the Polish side About one thousand White soldiers fought in summer 1919 135 The largest Russian formation was sponsored by the Russian Political Committee represented by Boris Savinkov and commanded by General Boris Permikin 111 135 The 3rd Russian Army reached over ten thousand battle ready soldiers and in early October 1920 was dispatched to the front to fight on the Polish side they did not engage in combat because of the armistice that took effect at that time 135 Six thousand soldiers fought valiantly on the Polish side in the Cossack Russian units from 31 May 1920 135 Various smaller Belarusian formations fought in 1919 and 1920 However the Russian Cossack and Belarusian military organizations had their own political agendas and their participation has been marginalized or omitted in the Polish war narrative 135 Soviet losses and the spontaneous enrollment of Polish volunteers allowed rough numerical parity between the two armies 49 by the time of the Battle of Warsaw the Poles may have had gained a slight advantage in numbers and logistics 136 One of the major formations on the Polish side was the First Polish Army Red Army nbsp Mikhail Kalinin and Leon Trotsky greet Red Army troopsIn early 1918 Lenin and Leon Trotsky embarked on the rebuilding of the Russian armed forces The new Red Army was established by the Council of People s Commissars Sovnarkom on 28 January to replace the demobilized Imperial Russian Army Trotsky became commissar of war on 13 March and Georgy Chicherin took over Trotsky s previous job as foreign minister On 18 April the Commissar Bureau was created it initiated the practice of assigning political commissars to military formations 137 One million German soldiers occupied the western Russian Empire but on 1 October after the first indications of German defeat in the West Lenin ordered general conscription with the intention of building a multi million member army While over 50 000 former tsarist officers had joined the White Army 75 000 of them ended up in the Red Army by summer 1919 138 The Revolutionary Military Council of the Russian Republic was established in September 1918 It was chaired by Trotsky Trotsky lacked military experience or expertise but knew how to mobilize troops and was a master of war propaganda Revolutionary war councils of particular fronts and armies were placed under the council of the republic The system was intended as implementation of the concept of collective leadership and management of military affairs 139 The Red Army s chief commander from July 1919 was Sergey Kamenev he was installed by Joseph Stalin Kamenev s Field Staff was led by former tsarist generals His every decision had to be approved by the Military Council The actual command center was placed in an armored train used by Trotsky to travel around the front areas and coordinate military activity 139 Hundreds of thousands of recruits deserted from the Red Army which resulted in 600 public executions in the second half of 1919 The army however conducted operations on several fronts and had remained an effective fighting force 140 Officially there were five million soldiers in the Red Army as of 1 August 1920 but only 10 or 12 percent of them could be counted as the actual fighting force Female volunteers served in combat on the same basis as men also in Semyon Budyonny s 1st Cavalry Army The Red Army was particularly weak in the areas of logistics supplies and communication Great quantities of Western arms had been captured from the White and Allied forces and domestic production of military equipment kept increasing throughout the war Still the stocks were often critically short As in the Polish Army boots had been in short supply and many fought barefoot There were relatively few Soviet airplanes 220 at the most at the Western Front 141 and the Polish air formations soon came to dominate the air space 142 nbsp Semyon BudyonnyWhen the Poles launched their Kiev offensive the Russian Southwestern Front had about 83 000 Soviet soldiers including 29 000 front line troops The Poles had some numerical superiority which was estimated from 12 000 to 52 000 personnel 130 During the Soviet counter offensive in mid 1920 on all fronts the Soviets numbered about 790 000 at least 50 000 more than the Poles Mikhail Tukhachevsky estimated that he had 160 000 combat ready soldiers while Pilsudski estimated Tukhachevsky s forces at 200 000 220 000 143 In 1920 the Red Army personnel numbered 402 000 on the Soviet Western Front and 355 000 on the Southwestern Front in Galicia according to Davies 143 Grigori F Krivosheev gives 382 071 personnel for the Western Front and 282 507 for the Southwestern Front between July and August 144 After the reorganization of the Western Rifle Division in mid 1919 there were no separate Polish units within the Red Army Within both the Western and the Southwestern Fronts besides Russian units there had been separate Ukrainian Latvian and German Hungarian units In addition many communists of various nationalities for example the Chinese fought in integrated units The Lithuanian Army supported the Soviet forces to some degree 111 Among the commanders leading the Red Army offensive were Semyon Budyonny Leon Trotsky Sergey Kamenev Mikhail Tukhachevsky the new commander of the Western Front Alexander Yegorov the new commander of the Southwestern Front and Hayk Bzhishkyan Logistics and plans Logistics were very bad for both armies and were supported by whatever equipment was left over from World War I or could be captured The Polish Army for example used guns made in five countries and rifles manufactured in six each of which used different ammunition 145 The Soviets had at their disposal many military depots that were left by the German armies after their withdrawal in 1918 1919 and modern French armaments that were captured in great numbers from the White Russians and the Allied expeditionary forces during the Russian Civil War Still they suffered a shortage of arms as both the Red Army and the Polish forces were grossly underequipped by Western standards 145 nbsp Tadeusz RozwadowskiHowever the Red Army had at its disposal an extensive arsenal as well as fully functional armament industry concentrated in Tula both inherited from tsarist Russia 146 147 In contrast the partitioning powers had all deliberately avoided industrializing ethnically Polish territories let alone permit the establishment of any meaningful armaments industry within them As a result there were no firearm factories in Poland and everything including rifles and ammunition had to be imported 146 Gradual progress in the area of military manufacturing had been made and after the war there were in Poland 140 industrial establishments producing military items 148 The Polish Soviet War was fought not by trench warfare but by maneuverable formations The total front was 1500 km over 900 mi long and was manned by relatively small amounts of troops 146 Around the time of the Battle of Warsaw and afterwards the Soviets suffered from overly long transportation lines and had been unable to supply their forces in a timely manner 146 By early 1920 the Red Army had been very successful against the White movement 43 In January 1920 the Soviets began concentrating forces on the Polish northern front along the Berezina River 72 British Prime Minister David Lloyd George ordered the Baltic Sea blockade of Soviet Russia lifted Estonia signed with Russia the Treaty of Tartu on 3 February recognizing the Bolshevik government European arms merchants proceeded with supplying the Soviets with items needed by the military for which the Russian government paid with gold and valuables taken from the imperial stock and confiscated from individuals 140 From early 1920 both the Polish and Soviet sides had prepared for decisive confrontations However Lenin and Trotsky had not yet been able to dispose of all the White forces including especially the army of Pyotr Wrangel threatening them from the south Pilsudski unconstrained by such limitations was able to attack first 85 Convinced that the Whites were no longer a threat to Poland he resolved to take care of the remaining enemy the Bolsheviks 112 The plan for the Kiev offensive was to beat the Red Army on Poland s southern flank and to install the pro Polish Petliura government in Ukraine 16 Victor Sebestyen author of a 2017 biography of Lenin wrote The newly independent Poles started the war With England and France s backing they invaded Ukraine in spring 1920 Some Allied leaders had not supported Poland including former British Prime Minister H H Asquith who called the Kiev offensive a purely aggressive adventure a wanton enterprise Sebestyen characterized Pilsudski as a Polish nationalist not a socialist 149 Kiev offensive Main article Kiev offensive 1920 nbsp Polish Kiev offensive at its height June 1920On 17 April 1920 the Polish General Staff ordered the armed forces to assume attack positions The Red Army which had been regrouping since 10 March was not fully ready for combat 150 The main goal of the military operation was to create a Ukrainian state formally independent but under Polish patronage which would separate Poland from Russia 16 150 On 25 April the southern group of Polish armies under Pilsudski s command commenced an offensive in the direction of Kiev 150 The Polish forces were assisted by thousands of Ukrainian soldiers under Petliura who represented the Ukrainian People s Republic 120 151 Alexander Yegorov commander of the Russian Southwestern Front had at his disposal the 12th and 14th Armies They faced the invading force but were small 15 000 battle ready soldiers weak poorly equipped and had been distracted by peasant rebellions in Russia Yegorov s armies had been gradually reinforced since the Soviets had found out of the Polish war preparations 152 nbsp Vladimir Lenin Chairman of the Council of People s Commissars of Soviet Russia delivers a speech to motivate troops to fight in the Polish Soviet War on 5 May 1920On 26 April in his Call to the People of Ukraine Pilsudski told his intended audience that the Polish Army would only stay as long as necessary until a legal Ukrainian government took control over its own territory However although many Ukrainians were anti communist many were anti Polish and resented the Polish advance 16 117 The well equipped and highly mobile Polish 3rd Army under Rydz Smigly quickly overpowered the Red Army in Ukraine 153 The Soviet 12th and 14th Armies had for the most part declined to engage in combat and suffered limited losses they withdrew or were pushed past the Dnieper River 101 150 154 On 7 May the combined Polish Ukrainian forces led by Rydz Smigly encountered only token resistance as they entered Kiev mostly abandoned by the Soviet military 16 150 nbsp Polish troops in KievThe Soviets proceeded with their first counteroffensive using the Western Front forces Following the order of Trotsky Mikhail Tukhachevsky launched an offensive on the Belarusian front before the planned by the Polish command arrival of Polish troops from the Ukrainian front On 14 May his forces attacked the somewhat weaker Polish armies there and penetrated the Polish held areas territories between the Daugava and the Berezina Rivers to the depth of 100 km After two Polish divisions arrived from Ukraine and the new Reserve Army was assembled Stanislaw Szeptycki Kazimierz Sosnkowski and Leonard Skierski led a Polish counteroffensive from 28 May The result was the Polish recovery of the bulk of the lost territory From 8 June the front had stabilised near the Avuta River and remained inactive until July 155 156 This Polish thrust into Ukraine was met with Red Army counterattacks from 29 May 4 By that time Yegorov s Southwestern Front had been considerably reinforced and he initiated an assault maneuver in the Kiev area 150 Semyon Budyonny s 1st Cavalry Army Konarmia conducted repeated attacks and broke the Polish Ukrainian front on 5 June 4 The Soviets deployed mobile cavalry units to disrupt the Polish rearguard and target communications and logistics 150 By 10 June the Polish armies were in retreat along the entire front Following Pilsudski s order Rydz Smigly with the Polish and Ukrainian troops under his command abandoned Kiev the city was not being attacked to the Red Army 150 157 Soviet victories nbsp Russian volunteers about to be sent to the Polish frontOn 29 April 1920 the Central Committee of the Bolshevik Communist Party of Russia appealed for volunteers for the war with Poland to defend the Russian republic against a Polish usurpation The first units of the volunteer army departed Moscow and headed for the front on 6 May 158 On 9 May the Soviet newspaper Pravda printed an article Go West Russian Na Zapad Through the corpse of White Poland lies the way to the World Inferno On bayonets we will carry happiness and peace to working humanity 159 On 30 May 1920 General Aleksei Brusilov the last tsarist commander in chief published in Pravda an appeal To all former officers wherever they may be encouraging them to forgive past grievances and join the Red Army 160 Brusilov considered it a patriotic duty of all Russian officers to enlist with the Bolshevik government which he thought to be defending Russia against foreign invaders 112 Lenin understood the importance of the appeal to Russian nationalism The Soviet counteroffensive was indeed boosted by Brusilov s involvement 14 000 officers and over 100 000 soldiers of lower ranks enlisted in or returned to the Red Army thousands of civilian volunteers contributed to the war effort as well 161 nbsp Soviet offensive successes early August 1920The 3rd Army and other Polish formations avoided destruction in the course of their long retreat from the Kiev frontier but remained tied down in western Ukraine They could not support the Polish northern front and reinforce as planned by Pilsudski the defences at the Avuta River 162 Poland s 320 km 200 mi long northern front was manned by a thin line of 120 000 troops backed by some 460 artillery pieces with no strategic reserves This approach to holding ground harked back to the World War I practice of establishing a fortified line of defense The Polish Soviet front however bore little resemblance to that war s conditions as it was weakly manned supported with inadequate artillery and had almost no fortifications Such arrangement allowed the Soviets to attain numerical superiority at strategically crucial locations 162 Against the Polish line the Red Army gathered its Western Front led by Tukhachevsky Its numbers exceeded 108 000 infantry and 11 000 cavalry supported by 722 artillery pieces and 2 913 machine guns 162 According to Chwalba Tukhachevsky s 3rd 4th 15th and 16th Armies had a total of 270 000 soldiers and a 3 1 advantage over the Poles in the area of the Western Front s attack 17 nbsp Hayk BzhishkyanA stronger and better prepared Soviet second northern offensive was launched on 4 July along the Smolensk Brest axis and crossed the Avuta and the Berezina Rivers 4 158 162 Important role was played by the 3rd Cavalry Corps known as the assault army and led by Hayk Bzhishkyan On the first day of fighting the Polish first and second lines of defense were overpowered and on 5 July the Polish forces commenced a full and quick retreat along the entire front The combat strength of the First Polish Army was reduced by 46 during the first week of fighting The retreat soon turned into a chaotic and disorganized flight 17 On 9 July Lithuania s talks with the Soviets commenced The Lithuanians launched a series of attacks against the Poles and disorganized the planned relocation of Polish forces 163 Polish troops withdrew from Minsk on 11 July 150 Along the line of old German trenches and fortifications from World War I only Lida was defended for two days 164 Bzhishkyan s units together with Lithuanian forces captured Vilnius on 14 July 150 162 To the south in eastern Galicia Budyonny s cavalry approached Brody Lwow and Zamosc It had become clear to the Poles that the Soviet objectives were not limited to countering the effects of the Kiev offensive but that Poland s independent existence was at stake 165 The Soviet armies moved toward the west at a remarkable speed Carrying out a bold maneuver Bzhishkyan took Grodno on 19 July the strategically important and easy to defend Osowiec Fortress was captured by Bzhishkyan s 3rd Cavalry Corps on 27 July 164 Bialystok fell on 28 July and Brest on 29 July 166 A Polish counteroffensive Pilsudski aimed for was thwarted by the unexpected fall of Brest 150 The Polish high command attempted to defend the Bug River line reached by the Russians on 30 July but the quick loss of the Brest Fortress forced a cancellation of Pilsudski s plans 164 On the same day Polish forces delayed the Soviet offensive in the Battle of Zabinka 167 After crossing the Narew River on 2 August the Western Front was only about 100 km 62 mi from Warsaw 162 By that time however Polish resistance intensified The shortened front facilitated greater concentrations of Polish troops involved in defensive operations they were being constantly reinforced due to the closeness of Polish population centers and the influx of volunteers Polish supply lines had become short while the opposite was true regarding the enemy logistics As General Sosnkowski was able to generate and energize 170 000 new Polish soldiers within a few weeks Tukhachevsky noted that instead of quickly concluding their mission as expected his force encountered determined resistance 168 nbsp Volunteers from Lwow serving in the Polish Army s 2nd Death s SquadronThe Southwestern Front pushed the Polish forces out of most of Ukraine Stalin thwarted Sergey Kamenev s orders and directed the formations under Budyonny s command to close on Zamosc and Lwow the largest city in eastern Galicia and garrison of the Polish 6th Army 169 170 The protracted Battle of Lwow began in July 1920 Stalin s action was detrimental to the situation of the forces of Tukhachevsky in the north since Tukhachevsky needed relief from Budyonny near Warsaw where in August decisive battles were fought Instead of performing a concentric attack on Warsaw the two Soviet fronts were getting further apart 146 170 Pilsudski used the resulting void to launch his counteroffensive on 16 August during the Battle of Warsaw 146 Fighting the Battle of Brody and Berestechko 29 July 3 August the Polish forces attempted to stop Budyonny s advance on Lwow but the effort was terminated by Pilsudski who mustered two divisions to take part in the approaching struggle for the Polish capital 171 172 On 1 August 1920 Polish and Soviet delegations met at Baranavichy and exchanged notes but their armistice talks produced no results 173 Diplomatic front nbsp Polish propaganda poster with the caption Beat the Bolshevik The Western Allies were critical of Polish politics and unhappy with Poland s refusal to cooperate with the Allied intervention in the Russian Civil War but they supported the Polish forces fighting the Red Army nevertheless shipping to Poland armaments extending credits and supporting the country politically France was especially disappointed but also particularly interested in defeating the Bolsheviks so Poland was a natural ally in this respect British politicians represented a gamut of opinions on the Polish Russian issue but many were highly critical of Polish policies and actions In January 1920 the United States Secretary of War Newton D Baker accused Poland of conducting imperial politics at the expense of Russia In early spring 1920 the Allies irritated by the Polish conduct considered the idea of transferring the lands east of the Bug River to Allied control under auspices of the League of Nations 30 In autumn 1919 the British government of Prime Minister David Lloyd George agreed to provide arms for Poland On 17 May 1920 following the Polish takeover of Kiev the cabinet spokesman asserted in the House of Commons that no assistance has been or is being given to the Polish government 112 The initial success of the Kiev offensive caused enormous euphoria in Poland and Pilsudski s leading role was recognized by most politicians 49 However with the tide turning against Poland Pilsudski s political power weakened and that of his opponents including Roman Dmowski rose The government of Leopold Skulski Pilsudski s ally resigned in early June After protracted bickering an extra parliamentary government of Wladyslaw Grabski was appointed on 23 June 1920 174 The Western Allies were worried by the progress of the Bolshevik armies but blamed Poland for the situation The conduct of Polish leaders was adventurous in their opinion and amounted to foolishly playing with fire It could lead to the destruction of the work of the Paris Peace Conference Western societies wanted peace and good relations with Russia 175 nbsp Russian Bolshevik propaganda posterAs the Soviet armies advanced the Soviet leadership s confidence soared In a telegram Lenin exclaimed We must direct all our attention to preparing and strengthening the Western Front A new slogan must be announced Prepare for war against Poland 176 The Soviet communist theorist Nikolai Bukharin writing for the newspaper Pravda wished for the resources to carry the campaign beyond Warsaw right up to London and Paris 177 According to General Tukhachevsky s exhortation Over the corpse of White Poland lies the path to world conflagration On to Warsaw Forward 112 As the victory seemed more certain to them Stalin and Trotsky engaged in political intrigues and argued about the direction of main Soviet offensive 9 178 At the height of the Polish Soviet conflict Jews were subjected to antisemitic violence by Polish forces who considered them a potential threat and often accused of supporting the Bolsheviks 179 180 The perpetrators of the pogroms that took place were motivated by Zydokomuna accusations 181 During the Battle of Warsaw the Polish authorities interned Jewish soldiers and volunteers and sent them to an internment camp 182 183 nbsp Trotsky on an anti Soviet Polish poster titled Bolshevik freedom which depicts him on a pile of skulls and holding a bloody knife during the Polish Soviet War of 1920 Small caption in the lower right corner reads The Bolsheviks promised We ll give you peace We ll give you freedom We ll give you land Work and bread Despicably they cheated They started a war With Poland Instead of freedom they brought The fist Instead of land confiscation Instead of work misery Instead of bread famine To counter the immediate Soviet threat national resources were urgently mobilized in Poland and competing political factions declared unity On 1 July the Council of Defense of the State was appointed 49 174 On 6 July Pilsudski was outvoted in the council which resulted in the trip of Prime Minister Grabski to the Spa Conference in Belgium made to request Allied assistance for Poland and their mediation in setting up peace negotiations with Soviet Russia 184 185 The Allied representatives made a number of demands as conditions for their involvement 186 On 10 July 184 Grabski signed an agreement containing several terms as required by the Allies Polish forces would withdraw to the border intended to delineate Poland s eastern ethnographic frontier and published by the Allies on 8 December 1919 Poland would participate in a subsequent peace conference and the questions of sovereignty over Vilnius Eastern Galicia Cieszyn Silesia and Danzig would be left up to the Allies 185 186 Promises of possible Allied help in mediating the Polish Soviet conflict were made in exchange 185 186 On 11 July 1920 the British Foreign Secretary George Curzon sent a telegram to Georgy Chicherin 186 187 It requested the Soviets to halt their offensive at what had since become known as the Curzon Line and to accept it as a temporary border with Poland along the Bug and San Rivers 33 until a permanent border could be established in negotiations 16 186 Talks in London with Poland and the Baltic states were proposed In case of a Soviet refusal the British threatened to assist Poland with unspecified measures 188 189 Roman Dmowski s reaction was that Poland s defeat was greater than the Poles had realized 186 In the Soviet response issued on 17 July Chicherin rejected the British mediation and declared willingness to negotiate only directly with Poland 16 184 Both the British and the French reacted with more definitive promises of help with military equipment for Poland 190 The Second Congress of the Communist International deliberated in Moscow between 19 July and 7 August 1920 Lenin spoke of the increasingly favorable odds for the accomplishment of the World Proletarian Revolution which would lead to the World Soviet Republic the delegates eagerly followed daily reports from the front 184 The congress issued an appeal to workers in all countries asking them to forestall their governments efforts to aid White Poland 191 Pilsudski lost another vote at the Defense Council and on 22 July the government dispatched a delegation to Moscow to ask for armistice talks The Soviets claimed interest in peace negotiations only the subject the Polish delegation was not authorized to discuss 184 nbsp PolrewkomSponsored by the Soviets the Provisional Polish Revolutionary Committee Polrewkom was formed on 23 July to organise the administration of Polish territories captured by the Red Army 16 49 184 The committee was led by Julian Marchlewski Feliks Dzierzynski and Jozef Unszlicht were among its members 184 They found little support in Soviet controlled Poland 117 On 30 July in Bialystok the Polrewkom decreed the end of the Polish gentry bourgeoisie government At Polrewkom s Bialystok rally on 2 August its representatives were greeted on behalf of Soviet Russia the Bolshevik party and the Red Army by Mikhail Tukhachevsky 191 The Galician Revolutionary Committee Galrewkom was established already on 8 July 192 nbsp Polish propaganda poster The text reads To arms Save the fatherland Remember well our future fate On 24 July the all party Polish Government of National Defense under Wincenty Witos and Ignacy Daszynski was established 49 64 191 It eagerly adopted a radical program of land reform meant to counter Bolshevik propaganda the scope of the promised reform was greatly reduced once the Soviet threat had receded 64 The government attempted to conduct peace negotiations with Soviet Russia a new Polish delegation tried to cross the front and establish contact with the Soviets from 5 August 191 On 9 August General Kazimierz Sosnkowski became Minister of Military Affairs 193 Pilsudski was severely criticized by politicians ranging from Dmowski to Witos His military competence and judgement were questioned and he displayed signs of mental instability However a majority of members of the Council of National Defense which was asked by Pilsudski to rule on his fitness to lead the military quickly expressed their full confidence Dmowski disappointed resigned his membership in the council and left Warsaw 194 Poland suffered from sabotage and delays in deliveries of war supplies when Czechoslovak and German workers refused to transit such materials to Poland 16 After 24 July in Danzig given the Germany instigated strike of seaport workers the British official and Allied representative Reginald Tower having consulted the British government used his soldiers to unload commodities heading for Poland 191 195 On 6 August the British Labour Party printed in a pamphlet that British workers would not take part in the war as Poland s allies In 1920 London dockworkers refused to allow a ship bound for Poland until the weapons were off loaded The Trades Union Congress the Parliamentary Labour Party and the National Executive Committee also all threatened a general strike if the British Armed Forces directly intervened in Poland 196 The French Section of the Workers International declared in its newspaper L Humanite Not a man not a sou not a shell for the reactionary and capitalist Poland Long live the Russian Revolution Long live the Workers International 162 Weimar Germany Austria and Belgium banned transit of materials destined for Poland through their territories 191 On 6 August the Polish government issued an Appeal to the World which disputed the charges of Polish imperialism and stressed Poland s belief in self determination and the dangers of a Bolshevik invasion of Europe 197 nbsp Antisemitic portrayal of a BolshevikHungary offered to send a 30 000 cavalry corps to Poland s aid but President Tomas Masaryk and Foreign Minister Edvard Benes of Czechoslovakia were opposed to assisting Poland and the Czechoslovak government refused to allow them through 191 On 9 August 1920 Czechoslovakia declared neutrality regarding the Polish Soviet War 193 Significant amounts of military and other badly needed supplies from Hungary did arrive in Poland 146 198 The leading Polish commander Tadeusz Rozwadowski spoke of the Hungarians in September 1920 You were the only nation that really wanted to help us 198 The Soviets presented their armistice conditions to the Allies on 8 August in Britain Sergey Kamenev issued assurances of Soviet recognition of Poland s independence and right to self determination but the conditions he presented amounted to demands for surrender of the Polish state Prime Minister David Lloyd George and the British House of Commons approved the Soviet demands as just and reasonable and the British ambassador in Warsaw presented the United Kingdom s categorical advice on that matter to Foreign Minister Eustachy Sapieha On 14 August the Polish delegation finally went to Tukhachevsky s headquarters in Minsk for the official peace talks Severe conditions for peace were presented to them by Georgy Chicherin on 17 August Decisive battles were already taking place on the outskirts of Warsaw 199 Most foreign deputations and Allied missions had left the Polish capital and went to Poznan 170 In summer 1919 Lithuania had been engaged in territorial disputes and armed skirmishes with Poland over the city of Vilnius and the areas around Sejny and Suwalki 22 Pilsudski s attempt to take control of Lithuania by engineering a coup in August 1919 contributed to worsening of the relations 22 200 The Soviet and Lithuanian governments signed on 12 July 1920 the Soviet Lithuanian Peace Treaty it recognised Vilnius and extended territories as parts of a proposed Greater Lithuania 201 202 The treaty contained a secret clause that allowed Soviet forces unrestricted movement in Lithuania during any Soviet war with Poland which led to questions regarding Lithuanian neutrality during the ongoing Polish Soviet War 203 204 The Lithuanians also provided the Soviets with logistic support 204 Following the treaty the Red Army occupied Vilnius the Soviets returned the city to Lithuanian control just before it was recaptured by Polish forces in late August 22 The Soviets had also encouraged their own communist government the Litbel and planned a Soviet sponsored Lithuanian regime when they win the war with Poland 201 205 206 The Soviet Lithuanian Treaty was a Soviet diplomatic victory and Polish defeat it had as predicted by the Russian diplomat Adolph Joffe a destabilizing effect on Poland s internal politics 201 nbsp The Interallied Mission to PolandThe French Military Mission to Poland of four hundred members arrived in 1919 It consisted mostly of French officers but included also a few British advisers led by Adrian Carton de Wiart In summer 1920 there were one thousand officers and soldiers in the mission under General Paul Prosper Henrys 129 Members of the French Mission through the training programs they conducted and frontline involvement contributed to battle readiness of Polish forces 129 The French officers included Captain Charles de Gaulle 129 During the Polish Soviet War he won the Virtuti Militari Poland s highest military decoration In France de Gaulle had enlisted in General Jozef Haller s Blue Army The army s transit to Poland in 1919 was facilitated by France 49 Blue Army troops were mostly of Polish origin but included also international volunteers who had been under French command during World War I In 1920 France was reluctant to aid Poland in Poland s war with Soviet Russia Only after the Soviet armistice conditions were presented on 8 August France declared through its representative in Warsaw the intention to support Poland morally politically and materially in its fight for independence 191 nbsp Maxime WeygandOn 25 July 1920 the expanded Interallied Mission to Poland arrived in Warsaw 207 Led by the British diplomat Edgar Vincent it included the French diplomat Jean Jules Jusserand and Maxime Weygand chief of staff to Marshal Ferdinand Foch the supreme commander of the victorious Entente The Allied politicians expected to assume control over Poland s foreign affairs and military policies with Weygand becoming top military commander in the war It was not allowed and General Weygand accepted an advisory position 207 The dispatch of the Allied mission to Warsaw was a proof that the West had not given up on Poland and gave the Poles a reason to believe that not all was lost 208 The mission members made a significant contribution to the war effort However the crucial Battle of Warsaw was fought and won primarily by the Poles Many in the West erroneously believed that it was the timely arrival of the Allies that had saved Poland Weygand occupied the central role in the myth that was created 16 209 As Polish French cooperation continued French weaponry including infantry armament artillery and Renault FT tanks were shipped to Poland to reinforce its military On 21 February 1921 France and Poland agreed to a formal military alliance 210 During the Polish Soviet negotiations Polish Ministry of Foreign Affairs paid particular attention to keeping the Allies informed of their course and making them feel co responsible for the outcome 211 The Soviet emphasis had gradually shifted from promoting world revolution to dismantling the Treaty of Versailles system which in Lenin s words was the treaty of the triumphant world imperialism 212 Lenin made remarks to that effect during the 9th Conference of the Russian Communist Party RKP b convened on 22 25 September 1920 16 212 He repeatedly referred to the Soviet military defeat for which he indirectly held himself largely responsible Trotsky and Stalin blamed each other for the war s outcome Stalin sharply rebutted Lenin s accusations regarding Stalin s judgement ahead of the Battle of Warsaw 212 As Lenin saw it the conquest of Warsaw not very important in itself would have allowed the Soviets to demolish the Versailles European order 213 Before the battle nbsp Soviet delegates arrive for armistice negotiations before the Battle of Warsaw August 1920According to the plan of the commander in chief of the Red Army Kamenev as of 20 July 1920 two Soviet fronts Western and Southwestern were going to execute a concentric attack on Warsaw However after consulting Tukhachevsky the Western Front commander Kamenev concluded that the Western Front alone could manage the occupation of Warsaw 169 nbsp Mikhail TukhachevskyTukhachevsky s intention was to destroy the Polish armies in the region of Warsaw His plan was to have one of his armies attack the Polish capital from the east while three other were to force their way across the Vistula further north between Modlin and Torun Parts of this formation were going to be used to outflank Warsaw from the west He issued orders to this effect on 8 August 214 It had soon become apparent to Tukhachevsky that his designs were not producing the desired result 170 The Southwestern Front was given the task of attacking Lwow Accordingly and in agreement with his own previously expressed views Stalin member of the Revolutionary Council of the Southwestern Front directed Budyonny to unleash an assault on Lwow aimed at taking the city Budyonny s 1st Cavalry Army and other Southwestern Front forces were originally supposed to head north in the direction of Brest to execute together with Tukhachevsky s armies an assault on Warsaw Budyonny s forces fought in the vicinity of Lwow until 19 August In the meantime already on 11 August Kamenev ordered the 1st Cavalry Army and the 12th Army of the Southwestern Front to proceed in the northwestern direction toward the Western Front area to fight there under Tukhachevsky s command Kamenev repeated his order on 13 August but Budyonny following Stalin s directives refused to obey On 13 August Tukhachevsky in vain pleaded with Kamenev to expedite the redirecting of both Southwestern armies to his area of combat Such circumstances led to a Soviet disadvantage as the crucial Battle of Warsaw was about to unfold 169 215 Trotsky interpreted Stalin s actions as insubordination but the historian Richard Pipes asserts that Stalin almost certainly acted on Lenin s orders in not moving the forces toward Warsaw 216 According to Stalin s biographer Duraczynski Stalin despite his devotion to Lenin displayed a great deal of initiative and boldness Unlike other Soviet officials including Lenin he had not become euphoric about the Soviet victories However he insisted on the exceptional importance of the activities of the Southwestern Front which turned out to be costly for the Soviets 169 Stalin may have been motivated by the letter Lenin wrote to him on 23 July Regarding the defeat of the Polish armies as already practically accomplished the Soviet leader suggested a redirection of main Soviet efforts toward the south west into Romania Hungary Austria and ultimately Italy Stalin agreed and he saw the conquest of Lwow on the way as fitting well with the overall scheme 215 Tukhachevsky later blamed Stalin for his defeat at the Battle of Warsaw 217 218 219 Pilsudski had his counteroffensive plan figured by 6 August He resolved to reinforce the Warsaw and Modlin region tie up the Soviet assault forces there and then use the divisions taken from the front and others in a risky maneuver of attacking the rear of Tukhachevsky s forces from the Wieprz River area The Soviets found a copy of Pilsudski s order but Tukhachevsky thought it to be a hoax In the final parade Pilsudski received before the attack about half of his worn out and undersupplied soldiers marched barefoot 170 Battle of Warsaw Main article Battle of Warsaw 1920 nbsp Wladyslaw Sikorski and the 5th Army Staff in August 1920In August 1919 Polish military intelligence first decrypted the Red Army s radio messages 146 220 221 222 From the spring of 1920 the Polish high command had been aware of current Soviet moves and plans which may have had decisively influenced the outcome of the war 146 221 On 8 August 1920 Tukhachevsky ordered some of the Soviet forces to cross the Vistula River in the area of Torun and Plock 193 The 4th Army and the formations under Hayk Bzhishkyan s command were supposed to take Warsaw from the west while the main attack came from the east On 19 August after intense fighting the Soviets were repelled from Plock and Wloclawek Bzhishkyan s corps came close to crossing the Vistula but ended up retreating toward East Prussia 192 223 Of the four Soviet armies attacking from the east none had been able to force its way across the river 224 On 10 August Polish Chief of staff Tadeusz Rozwadowski who co authored the offensive concept 225 ordered a two pronged attack from the Wkra and the Wieprz Rivers 193 Pilsudski still harshly criticized submitted a letter of resignation as commander in chief to Prime Minister Witos on 12 August Witos refused to consider the resignation and kept the matter to himself 194 nbsp Polish infantry at the Battle of WarsawOn 12 August Tukhachevsky s 16th and 3rd Armies commenced their assault on Warsaw from the east 226 The Polish 1st Army under General Franciszek Latinik retreated at first but having received reinforcements stopped the enemy at the Battle of Radzymin and on 15 August initiated offensive actions of its own 227 226 The pitched Battle of Ossow fought on 13 14 August at a nearby location became the first clear Polish victory in the Warsaw area 227 The Polish 5th Army under General Wladyslaw Sikorski counterattacked on 14 August from the area of the Modlin Fortress and crossed the Wkra River It faced the combined forces of the Soviet 3rd and 15th Armies which were numerically and materially superior The attack split the Soviet front into two parts 226 The Soviet advance toward Warsaw and Modlin was halted and had soon turned into a retreat which contributed to the success of the drive by the main Polish formation coming from the Wieprz River area under Pilsudski s command 49 By 16 August the Polish counteroffensive had been joined by Pilsudski s group coming from the Wieprz south east of Warsaw 226 The weak Mozyr Group which was supposed to protect the link between the Soviet fronts was destroyed The Poles continued their northward offensive and reached the rear of Tukhachevsky s forces 226 The Soviet armies were unable to communicate Tukhachevsky and Kamenev became disoriented and issued orders not relevant to the situation 223 A rapid pursuit of the Russians followed and continued to the East Prussian border and to the Neman River 226 Of the four armies of the Western Front two disintegrated the 4th Army with a cavalry corps crossed into East Prussia where they were interned 226 nbsp Polish soldiers display captured Soviet standards after the Battle of WarsawTukhachevsky at his headquarters in Minsk on 18 August belatedly ordered the remnants of his forces to regroup 228 He hoped to straighten the front line halt the Polish attack and regain the initiative but it was too late and on 19 August he directed his armies to retreat over the entire front 162 228 In order to reorganize the Polish forces ahead of new operations the chase after the retreating Russians was stopped on 25 August 229 A large portion of the defeated Soviet troops had been taken prisoner over 50 000 or interned in Prussia 45 000 49 229 Twelve of the twenty two Soviet divisions survived 229 Rydz Smigly s formations manned the new frontline which ran from Brest to Grodno 226 The victory allowed the Poles to regain the initiative and undertake further military offensive 49 The outcome of the struggle for the Polish capital saddened the leadership in Moscow as well as communists and their sympathizers all over the world Clara Zetkin spoke of the flower of revolution having been frozen 229 To diminish Pilsudski s military achievement and his role in the saving of Warsaw at the instigation of his Polish detractors the Battle of Warsaw had been referred to as the Miracle on the Vistula 230 and the phrase has since remained in Catholic and popular use in Poland 9 192 The miracle was attributed to the Virgin Mary 230 According to Pilsudski and his people on the other hand the miracle was performed solely by the marshal After the May Coup of 1926 the possibly indispensable contributions of Sikorski or Rozwadowski would never be mentioned in school textbooks or official accounts The myth of the great marshal was propagated and became dominant through the Sanation politics of remembrance In the West it was mostly Maxime Weygand who had been assigned a veni vidi vici kind of role even though Weygand himself had honestly denied having such an impact 231 Conclusion of military campaigns nbsp Polish cavalry at the Battle of the Niemen RiverThe progress of the Soviet forces on the southern front in Ukraine was slower than in the north The losses suffered by Budyonny s 1st Cavalry Army at the Battle of Brody and Berestechko delayed its advance on Lwow On 16 August the army got going and soon reported being 15 km from the center of the city 232 On 17 August at the Battle of Zadworze a Polish battalion sacrificed itself to stop Budyonny 4 233 On 20 August Budyonny s cavalry belatedly terminated its attacks in the Lwow area in order to come to the aid of Soviet forces retreating from Warsaw 228 232 1st Army units moved on Zamosc on 29 August but the town was successfully defended by Polish and Ukrainian troops pl 4 232 On 31 August the much reduced 1st Cavalry Army was defeated by Polish cavalry under Colonel Juliusz Rommel at the Battle of Komarow near Hrubieszow 232 It was the largest battle of Polish cavalry since 1831 234 232 The remains of Budyonny s army retreated towards Volodymyr on 6 September and on 29 September were withdrawn from the Polish front 4 235 232 Heading east into Volhynia the Polish 3rd Army under Sikorski crossed the Bug River and on 13 September took Kovel 234 232 The Polish 6th Army under Haller together with the Ukrainian People s Army launched their offensive from eastern Galicia 232 By the end of September the front reached the Pinsk Sarny Khmelnytskyi Yampil line In October Juliusz Rommel s cavalry corps arrived at Korosten Ukraine 226 nbsp Austin Putilov armored car captured from the Russians and renamed as PoznanczykThe immediate Soviet threat having been repelled the Council of National Defense voted to continue the Polish offensive By 15 September forces were assembled for the Niemen operation At that time the Polish armies had an advantage over the Soviet Western Front in manpower 209 000 to 145 000 soldiers and armaments 236 From 26 August Tukhachevsky established a new frontline 236 running from the Polish Lithuanian border area in the north to Polesia centered on the Neman and Svislach Rivers line 236 The Soviet commander utilized a three week lull in the fighting to reorganize and reinforce his battered forces 226 expected to be ready to attack by the end of September 236 The Poles struck already on 20 September and soon became engaged in the Battle of the Niemen River the second greatest battle of the campaign 226 After heavy fighting they secured Grodno on 26 September 235 Rydz Smigly led from there an outflanking maneuver as a result of which Lida was taken and the Red Army s rear destabilized Polish frontal attacks followed the Soviet units disintegrated and rapidly retreated 226 After the battle the Soviet forces lost the ability to effectively resist and the Poles unleashed a continuous pursuit 226 The Polish units reached the Daugava River and in mid October entered Minsk 49 235 In the south Petliura s Ukrainian forces defeated the Bolshevik 14th Army and took control of the left bank of the Zbruch River on 18 September In October they moved east to the Yaruha Sharhorod Bar Lityn line 237 They now numbered 23 000 soldiers and controlled territories immediately to the east of the Polish controlled areas 133 They had planned an offensive in Ukraine for 11 November but were attacked by the Bolsheviks on 10 November By 21 November after several battles they were driven into Polish controlled territory 237 From the order At the end of the war issued on 18 October 1920 by Jozef Pilsudski 238 Soldiers You have spent two long years the first years of the existence of a free Poland in hard work and bloody drudgery You have ended the war with magnificent victories and the enemy broken by you has finally agreed to sign the first and main principles of the longed for peace Soldiers Not in vain and not in vain has your toil been in vain Modern Poland owes its existence to the magnificent victories of the Western powers over the partitioning states But from the very first moment of the life of a free Poland many covetous hands were stretched out towards her many efforts were directed towards keeping her in a state of powerlessness so that if she did exist she would be a plaything in the hands of others a passive field for the intrigues of the whole world The Polish nation took up arms made a tremendous effort creating a numerous and strong army On my shoulders as Commander in Chief and in your hands as defenders of the Fatherland the nation has placed the heavy task of securing Poland s existence gaining for it respect and importance in the world and giving it full independent control of its destiny Our task is coming to an end It has not been easy Poland devastated by a war waged on Polish soil not of her will was poor At times soldiers tears sprang to my eyes when I saw among the ranks of the troops led by me your barefooted battered feet which had already crossed immeasurable distances when I saw the dirty rags covering your body when I had to tear off your meagre soldier s rations and often demand that you go into bloody battle hungry and cold The work was hard and it was reliable as thousands of soldiers graves and crosses scattered across the lands of the former Republic of Poland from the distant Dnieper to the native Vistula will testify For your work and perseverance for your sacrifice and blood for your courage and daring I thank you soldiers on behalf of the whole nation and our Homeland A soldier who has done so much for Poland will not go unrewarded The grateful Homeland will not forget him I have already proposed to the government that part of the conquered land should become the property of those who made it Polish having ground it with Polish blood and immeasurable toil Soldiers You have made Poland strong confident and free You can be proud and satisfied with the fulfilment of your duty A country that in two years can produce such a soldier as you are can look to the future with confidence Jozef Pilsudski First Marshal of Poland and Commander in Chief Peace negotiationsMain article Peace of Riga nbsp Signing of the Peace of RigaPeace negotiations commenced in Minsk in mid August 1920 226 Initially the Soviets made harsh demands on the Polish side their implementation would turn Poland into a Soviet dependent state After the Battle of Warsaw defeat Adolph Joffe became chief Soviet negotiator and the original Soviet conditions for an armistice were withdrawn The negotiations were moved to Riga on 21 September 49 239 240 241 As winter approached and there had not been a military resolution to the conflict the Red Army despite many defeats had not been destroyed both sides decided to stop fighting 240 241 The Polish Council of National Defense ruled against the insistence of Pilsudski and his supporters that Poland could not afford to continue fighting the war Poland must conclude a peace even without guarantees of its durability declared Foreign Minister Eustachy Sapieha Limited continuation of the current offensive was allowed until the armistice to improve Poland s bargaining position 241 The Soviets in addition to their battlefield losses were pressured by events that necessitated the use of their military elsewhere such as developments in the Turkish Armenian War Pyotr Wrangel s White Army still occupying the Crimea or peasant rebellions in Russia 242 The Preliminary Treaty of Peace and Armistice Conditions was signed on 12 October and the armistice went into effect on 18 October 4 243 Ratifications were exchanged at Liepaja on 2 November The peace treaty negotiations ensued and were concluded between Poland on one side and Soviet Ukraine Soviet Russia and Soviet Belarus on the other on 18 March 1921 9 240 The Peace of Riga signed on that day determined the Polish Soviet border and divided the disputed territories in Belarus and Ukraine between Poland and the Soviet Union soon to be officially established 4 244 245 The treaty also regulated various other aspects of Polish Soviet relations 226 It complemented the Treaty of Versailles and laid foundations for the relatively peaceful coexistence in Eastern Europe that lasted less than two decades 146 The armistice preliminary stipulations required foreign allied forces to leave Poland 226 Signing the treaty with the Soviet republics Poland had to rescind its recognition of Petliura s Ukrainian People s Republic and other Russian Ukrainian and Belarusian White governments and organizations the allied military units of the three nationalities present in Poland were disbanded 9 The Ukrainian People s Army crossed the armistice line and fought the Red Army for a month Its remnants returned into the Polish territory where they were interned 226 The Peace of Riga was approved by the All Russian Central Executive Committee on 14 April 1921 by the Polish Sejm on 15 April and by the Central Executive Committee of Soviet Ukraine on 17 April Until late summer 1939 the Soviet Union refrained from officially questioning the Riga treaty settlement but it had been understood that the Soviet policy objective was to have it overturned 246 247 During the Polish Soviet War about 100 000 people were killed A complicated problem of prisoners of war was left to be resolved On both sides great destruction and economic losses as well as deep psychological trauma resulted Pilsudski s goal of separating Ukraine from Russia was not accomplished and the compromise Polish Soviet border attained indicated future instability 9 248 Russia nbsp Adolph JoffeThousands of peasant disturbances and rebellions took place in Russia between 1917 and 1921 The Pitchfork uprising of February March 1920 greatly distracted the Soviet leadership and negatively affected their military preparedness in Ukraine and Belarus before the Polish Kiev offensive Lenin considered the peasant resistance to grain requisitions and other privations of war communism more threatening to Soviet Russia than the White movement The last and possibly the greatest of peasant uprisings was the Tambov Rebellion of 1920 1921 242 Acute food shortages reached also Moscow and Saint Petersburg and contributed to the outbreak of the Kronstadt rebellion in March 1921 249 Soviet Russia was unable to accomplish many of the political objectives of its war with Poland Despite the support of Weimar Germany it could not destroy the Versailles imposed European system and the two powers had to wait for another opportunity to redress their grievances 13 The Polish delegation at the Riga peace talks led by Jan Dabski concentrated on an armistice line and the future border For the Soviets these were secondary concerns The statehood status of the Ukrainian and Belarusian Soviet republics was of utmost importance and their recognition was the most fateful concession the Polish negotiators had made 211 The Anglo Soviet Trade Agreement signed on 16 March 1921 was the first of a series of such international treaties It broke diplomatic isolation of Soviet Russia The resulting influx of foreign arms and equipment contributed to the success of the offensive against the partisans in the Tambov province executed by Tukhachevsky and completed by July 249 The grain requisition practices were eventually replaced by the New Economic Policy announced by Lenin on 23 March 1921 249 It represented a partial compromise with capitalism 64 On 16 April 1922 Russia and Germany signed the Treaty of Rapallo Diplomatic relations were established and the Russian negotiators obtained favorable resolution of their financial concerns 250 After the Peace of Riga Soviet Russia withdrew behind its cordon sanitaire Its leaders abandoned in reality the cause of the international revolution The result was the Stalinist socialism in one country pursuit The Soviet Union entered a period of intensive industrialization to eventually become the second greatest industrial power in the world 213 Poland nbsp Stanislaw GrabskiTheir losses during and after the Battle of Warsaw made the Soviets offer the Polish peace delegation substantial territorial concessions including Minsk and other areas occupied by Polish forces 22 Polish resources were also exhausted and Polish public opinion wanted a settlement 16 244 Pilsudski and his camp were opposed to the peace process and wanted the warfare to continue to make a realization of the Intermarium concept possible 9 Fulfilment of Pilsudski s territorial and political ideas was precluded already on 11 September 1920 when the Defense Council voted on Poland s border expectations Despite the positive outcome of the Battle of Warsaw Pilsudski s political position remained weak and he was unable to prevent developments that meant ruin to his long held vision of a grand Polish led alliance 211 The negotiations were controlled by Dmowski s National Democrats The National Democrats wanted to directly incorporate into the Polish state the lands they found desirable 54 The Sejm was controlled by Dmowski s allies whose ideas on the nature of the Polish state and the arrangement of its borders had since permanently prevailed 22 Because of the failed Kiev Expedition Pilsudski had lost his ability to act as the main player to manipulate people and events in Polish politics The consensus on his dominant role was gone As a consequence he was allowed to win the war but the conditions of peace were determined already by his opponents 251 nbsp Poland after the Peace of Riga with the pre partition borders of the Polish Lithuanian Commonwealth also indicatedThe National Democrats led at the Riga talks by Stanislaw Grabski 22 wanted only the territory they viewed as ethnically or historically Polish had Polish dominated cities or in their opinion could be Polonised 244 252 In the east Polish culture was weakly represented even in the cities except for a few in the western part of the disputed territories and Grabski refrained from seeking a border along the so called Dmowski s Line previously promoted by his movement 253 Despite the Red Army s defeat and the willingness of the chief Soviet negotiator Adolph Joffe to concede most of the areas occupied by Polish troops 244 254 the National Democratic politics allowed the Soviets to regain some of the territories acquired by the Polish armies during the campaign 254 The National Democrats worried that Poland would not be able to control overly extended territories dominated by national minorities Grabski wanted lands where Poles could predominate 22 Among the territories evacuated by the Polish Army were Minsk in the north and Kamianets Podilskyi and other areas east of the Zbruch River in the south 226 The Grabski Corridor a strip of land inserted to separate Lithuania from Russia and connect Poland to Latvia made Pilsudski s so called Zeligowski s Mutiny and the Polish annexation of the Vilnius area possible 211 The National Democrats were also conscious of the weakening of their electoral position that would result from annexing more territories dominated by non Polish ethnic groups 64 The failed federalist orientation was represented at Riga by Pilsudski s associate Leon Wasilewski 22 In the long run the National Democrats scheme had not quite worked because the Riga settlement created a Poland which was too westerly to be a federation but not westerly enough to remain a national state 255 Poland ended up with the largest total percentage of ethnic minorities of any unitary state in interwar Europe only about two thirds of Polish citizens considered themselves ethnically Polish or of Polish nationality 256 Still the refusal of the easternmost areas considered was beneficial to the National Democrats electoral prospects 255 The resolution of the war had thus dealt a death blow to the Intermarium project 16 One consequence of the outcome of the Polish Soviet War was that Poland s elites acquired an exaggerated perspective of the country s military capabilities 64 This point of view was not shared by Western observers who stressed that Poland was able to defend itself only because of the financial logistic and material support from the Allies 13 99 000 Polish soldiers died or went missing and the country suffered enormous other losses and destruction 13 Ukraine The Peace of Riga partitioned Ukraine and gave a portion of its territory to Poland eastern Galicia and most of Volhynia and the other portion to the Soviets 244 The Ukrainian Soviet Republic and the Byelorussian Soviet Republic were recognized by Poland 244 Historian Timothy Snyder writes That the Soviet Union established in 1922 included a Ukrainian SSR was the most important consequence of the attempts to establish an independent Ukrainian state in 1918 1920 244 The Treaty of Warsaw between Poland and the Directorate of Ukraine had been invalidated The Riga treaty violated the spirit of Poland s prior alliance with the Ukrainian People s Republic 114 244 From the beginning of the talks the Polish side de facto recognized the Ukrainian SSR and the armistice agreement stipulated termination of support for foreign forces allied against the other side 257 Members of the Ukrainian faction that accepted the alliance with Poland and fought within that alliance were now interned by the Polish authorities 244 The peace negotiations and their outcome were condemned and bitterly criticized by Ukrainian politicians and military leaders 257 As Polish democracy was alien unrepresentative and eventually curtailed 66 great resentment had been generated in the remaining interwar years because of repressive policies of Polish governments towards Ukrainians living in post Riga Poland 258 In the 1920s the Soviet policy was to help create a modern Ukrainian culture Ukrainian intellectuals co opted by the communist party were encouraged to create in the Ukrainian language and the result was cultural revival and a period of great productivity Children were educated and most books and newspapers were published in the native language The Ukrainian Autocephalous Orthodox Church was established The liberal policies ended under Stalin s rule when the new church was banned and the Ukrainian intelligentsia destroyed in massive purges 66 Given the circumstances in the 1930s Poland s eastern Galicia had become the center of Ukrainian political and cultural activity Despite the atrocities that took place in Soviet Ukraine Poland was regarded by Ukrainian activists as the principal enemy They felt disappointed by the failed alliance and the Peace of Riga and were annoyed by daily domination of the Polish authorities and local Polish elites Many perceived the Soviet Union primarily as the creator of a Ukrainian state the Ukrainian SSR 66 Belarus On 11 July 1920 Soviet forces entered Minsk and on 1 August the Byelorussian Soviet Socialist Republic was officially established Belarus like Ukraine was partitioned between Poland and the Soviet Union after the Peace of Riga The policies of the Byelorussian Soviet Republic were determined by Moscow 259 Unlike in the cases of Lithuania and Ukraine Pilsudski or his allies had not proposed a Belarusian state associated with Poland until the Riga talks when they wanted to claim Minsk as capital of a Belarusian People s Republic in that role 260 Like the Ukrainian Petliura s forces in Belarus the Volunteer Allied Army under General Stanislaw Bulak Balachowicz attacked the Soviets after the armistice Bulak Balachowicz s troops commenced their offensive on 5 November and after temporary successes had to retreat back into Polish controlled territory on 28 November The Belarusian soldiers were also interned by the Polish authorities 257 Belarusian activists regarded the Peace of Riga results as a tragic betrayal Without Minsk Polish Belarusians were reduced to being a mostly rural marginalized group To many of them the Soviet republic to the east seemed an attractive alternative In 1922 the Soviet Union was established as a formal federation of republics Its policy called for an eventual extension of the Byelorussian SSR to include the Belarusian lands under Polish administration The Communist Party of Western Belorussia established in Poland was under Soviet control The territory of the Byelorussian SSR was extended to the east in 1923 1924 and 1926 by lands taken from the Russian Republic In contrast to the repressive Polish policies in the 1920s the Soviet Union supported Belarusian culture several major national institutions and thousands of Belarusian schools had been established However the official Belarusian progress was mostly destroyed under Stalin in the 1930s 261 Belarusian activists held a Congress of Representatives in Prague in the fall of 1921 to discuss the Peace of Riga and its consequences for Belarus Vera Maslovskaya was sent there as the delegate of the Bialystok area and she proposed a resolution to fight for the unification of Belarus She sought independence of all Belarusian lands and denounced the partition Though the convention did not adopt a proposal instituting armed conflict it passed Maslovskaya s proposal which led to immediate retaliation from the Polish authorities They infiltrated the underground network fighting for Belarusian unification and arrested the participants Maslovskaya was arrested in 1922 and tried in 1923 along with 45 other participants mostly peasants 262 263 Among the arrested were also a sister and brother of Maslovskaya and several teachers and professionals Maslovskaya accepted all responsibility for the underground organisation but specifically stated that she was guilty of no crime having acted only to protect the interests of Belarus against foreign occupiers in a political and not military action Unable to prove that the leaders had participated in armed rebellion the court found them guilty of political crimes and sentenced to six years in prison 264 Lithuania Pressured by the Entente powers Poland and Lithuania signed the Suwalki Agreement on 7 October 1920 the armistice line left Vilnius on the Lithuanian side of the border However Polish military activities especially the so called Zeligowski s Mutiny launched two days after the Suwalki Agreement allowed Poland to capture the Vilnius Region where a Polish dominated Governance Committee of Central Lithuania was formed 22 24 On 8 January 1922 the Polish military enforced local legislative elections but they were boycotted by Jews Belarusians and Lithuanians 255 The resulting Vilnius assembly voted for the incorporation of Central Lithuania into Poland on 20 February 1922 and Polish Sejm approved the annexation on 24 March 24 59 265 The Western powers condemned the Polish actions but on 15 March 1923 the Conference of Ambassadors convinced of the desirability of geographical separation of Lithuania from the Soviet Union approved Poland s eastern borders as already determined by the League of Nations in early February the Soviet Union rejected the granting of Vilnius to Poland 24 246 Lithuania refused to comply the events and the incorporation worsened Polish Lithuanian relations for decades to come 24 According to Alfred E Senn even though Lithuania lost territory to Poland it was only the Polish victory against the Soviets in the Polish Soviet War that derailed the Soviet plans for westward expansion and gave Lithuania the period of interwar independence 206 Latvia Latvia s fighting with the Bolsheviks ended with the Latvian Soviet Peace Treaty on 11 August 1920 The Peace of Riga negotiations followed it established a Polish Latvian border in the area of Daugavpils That same year Latvia passed a comprehensive land reform and in 1922 introduced a democratic constitution The Warsaw Accord was signed by foreign ministers of Latvia Estonia Finland and Poland on 17 March 1922 However the Treaty of Rapallo signed on 16 April 1922 effectively placed the Baltic states in the German and Soviet spheres of influence 24 Prisoners war crimes and other controversiesFurther information Controversies of the Polish Soviet War nbsp Red Army soldiers as prisoners of warAccording to sources quoted by Chwalba of the 80 85 thousand Soviet prisoners of war 16 20 thousand died in Polish captivity Of the 51 thousand Polish prisoners 20 thousand died The practice of disproportionate killing of Polish commissioned officers continued into World War II when a series of executions known as the Katyn massacre took place 266 The war and its aftermath resulted in controversies such as the situation of prisoners of war in Poland and in Soviet Russia and Lithuania 15 267 treatment of the civilian population 268 or the behaviour of some commanders including Semyon Budyonny 269 Hayk Bzhishkyan 269 Stanislaw Bulak Balachowicz 270 271 and Vadim Yakovlev 272 The reported pogroms of Jews by the Polish military caused the United States to send a commission led by Henry Morgenthau to investigate the matter 273 Development of a military strategyThe Polish Soviet War influenced the Polish military doctrine under Pilsudski s leadership it emphasized the mobility of elite cavalry units 16 It also influenced Charles de Gaulle who was an instructor in the Polish Army with a rank of major and fought in several of the battles including the Battle of Warsaw 49 He and Sikorski correctly predicted based on their experiences during the war the importance of maneuver and mechanization in the next war Although they had failed to convince their respective military establishments to heed those lessons during the interwar period during World War II they rose to the command of their respective armed forces in exile 274 Aftermath and legacy nbsp Graves of Polish soldiers killed during the Battle of Warsaw Powazki Military CemeteryDespite the final retreat of Soviet forces and the annihilation of three Soviet field armies historians do not universally agree on the question of victory Lenin spoke of a great military defeat suffered by Soviet Russia 212 Sebestyen wrote The Poles heavily defeated and embarrassed the Soviet state one of Lenin s biggest setbacks 275 The conflict however is also viewed as military victory for Poland coupled with political defeat In the Peace of Riga Poland formally gave up its ambitions of helping build independent Ukraine and Belarus Western Ukraine and western Belarus became parts of Poland which recognized the two countries geographically their central and eastern parts as states and dependencies of Moscow 247 The countries envisioned by Pilsudski as members of Poland led Intermarium federation had instead under Lenin and Stalin become incorporated into the Soviet Union In the autumn of 1920 both combatants had realized that they could not win a decisive military victory Internally the newly reestablished Polish state had proved its viability as an overwhelming majority of its people contributed to the defense of the country and turned out insensitive to Bolshevik appeals for joining the revolution 230 As for the main protagonists neither one was able to accomplish his principal objective 230 For Pilsudski it was to recreate in some form the Polish Lithuanian Commonwealth 230 276 For Lenin to cause the downfall of capitalist edifice in Europe by facilitating revolutionary processes in key states of the Western Europe 230 Russian and Polish historians tend to assign victory to their respective countries Outside assessments vary mostly between calling the result a Polish victory or inconclusive The Poles claimed a successful defence of their state but the Soviets claimed a repulse of the Polish invasion of Ukraine and Belarus which they viewed as a part of the Allied intervention in the Russian Civil War Some British and American military historians argue that the Soviet failure to destroy the Polish Army ended Soviet ambitions for international revolution 117 277 278 Andrzej Chwalba lists a number of ways in which the Polish military victory in reality turned out being a loss the fundamental status quo Poland s sovereign existence had been preserved The perception of Poland as the aggressor damaged the country s reputation Historians and publicists in the West as well as in the East have presented the country s eastern policy in negative terms as irresponsible and adventurous 251 In 1920 and its aftermath likely hundreds of thousands of people died without any territorial or political gain for Poland 279 After signing the armistice with Poland in October 1920 the Soviets transferred troops toward Crimea and attacked the Isthmus of Perekop Pyotr Wrangel s White Army was ultimately defeated there By 14 November 83 000 soldiers and civilians had been evacuated aboard French and Russian ships to Istanbul the British government refused to provide any assistance while 300 000 White collaborators were left behind 242 The Red Army then diverted its troops into the Tambov region of central Russia to crush an anti Bolshevik peasant uprising 280 In September 1926 the Soviet Lithuanian Non Aggression Pact was signed The Soviets renewed their recognition of the Lithuanian claim to the Vilnius area 202 In 1939 after the Soviet invasion of Poland Stalin gave Vilnius to Lithuania In 1940 Lithuania was incorporated into the Soviet Union as a Soviet republic This arrangement interrupted by the German occupation of Lithuania in 1941 44 had lasted until the restoration of Lithuanian independent state in 1990 281 Under the Lithuanian Soviet Socialist Republic Vilnius became a city dominated by ethnic Lithuanians 282 After the Soviet invasion of Poland of September 1939 the partition of Belarus and Ukraine ended on Soviet terms After Operation Barbarossa and occupation by Nazi Germany the Soviet Union returned in 1944 and the two Soviet republics permanently reclaimed what had been Polish Kresy from 1920 to 1939 Since the post World War II adjustments the borders of the republics had remained stable except for the 1954 transfer of Crimea from the Russian SFSR to the Ukrainian SSR The Soviet republics borders had been preserved as borders of independent Belarus and Ukraine following the dissolution of the Soviet Union In 1943 during the course of World War II the subject of Poland s eastern borders was reopened and was discussed at the Tehran Conference Winston Churchill argued in favour of the 1920 Curzon Line rather than the Peace of Riga borders and an agreement among the Allies to that effect was reached at the Yalta Conference in 1945 283 The Western Allies despite having alliance treaties with Poland and despite the Polish contribution to the war left Poland within the Soviet sphere of influence The Allies allowed Poland to be compensated for the territorial losses in the east with the bulk of the former eastern territories of Germany The post war arrangement imposed had become known to many Poles as the Western betrayal 284 From the end of World War II until 1989 the communists held power in Poland and the Polish Soviet War was omitted or minimised in Polish and other Soviet Bloc countries history books or was presented as a foreign intervention during the Russian Civil War 285 Polish Lieutenant Jozef Kowalski was the last living veteran of the war He was awarded the Order of Polonia Restituta on his 110th birthday by President Lech Kaczynski of Poland 286 He died on 7 December 2013 aged 113 List of battlesMain article List of battles of the Polish Soviet WarSee alsoCipher Bureau Poland Germany Soviet Union relations 1918 1941 Poland Russia relations Poland Ukraine relations Polish Ukrainian War Soviet invasion of PolandNotes Battle of Daugavpils a b Volunteers There is disagreement over the dates of the war The Encyclopaedia Britannica begins its Russo Polish War article with the date range 1919 1920 but then states Although there had been hostilities between the two countries during 1919 the conflict began when the Polish head of state Jozef Pilsudski formed an alliance with the Ukrainian nationalist leader Symon Petlyura 21 April 1920 and their combined forces began to overrun Ukraine occupying Kiev on 7 May Some Western historians including Norman Davies consider mid February 1919 the beginning of the war 2 However military confrontations between forces that can be considered officially Polish and the Red Army were already happening by late autumn 1918 and in January 1919 3 The city of Vilnius for example was taken by the Soviets on 5 January 1919 4 Other names Polish Wojna polsko bolszewicka wojna polsko sowiecka wojna polsko rosyjska 1919 1921 wojna polsko radziecka Polish Bolshevik War Polish Soviet War Polish Russian War 1919 1921 Russian Sovetsko polskaya vojna Sovetsko polskaya voyna Soviet Polish War Polskij front Polsky front Polish Front For example 1 Cisek 1990 Sasiedzi wobec wojny 1920 roku Wybor dokumentow 2 Szczepanski 1995 Wojna 1920 roku na Mazowszu i Podlasiu3 Sikorski 1991 Nad Wisla i Wkra Studium do polsko radzieckiej wojny 1920 rokuReferences Rumunia zapomniany sojusznik Romania a forgotten 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