fbpx
Wikipedia

Polish prisoners-of-war in the Soviet Union after 1939

As a result of the Soviet invasion of Poland in 1939, hundreds of thousands of Polish soldiers became prisoners of war. Many of them were executed; 22,000 Polish military personnel and civilians perished in the Katyn massacre alone.[1][2]

Soviet invasion of Poland edit

 
Polish prisoners of war captured by the Red Army during the Soviet invasion of Poland
 
Polish policemen and civilians captured by the Red Army after the Soviet invasion of Poland
 
A Soviet propaganda poster urging the civilians to beware of spies; in this case a man in the shadows wearing Polish officers parade uniform.
 
The note from Beria which was signed by members of the Soviet Politburo; it decided the fate (mass execution) of Polish officers, dated 5 March 1940

On September 17, 1939, the Red Army invaded the territory of Poland from the east. The invasion took place while Poland was already sustaining serious defeats in the wake of the German attack on the country that started on September 1, 1939. The Soviets moved to safeguard their claims in accordance with the Molotov–Ribbentrop Pact.[3][4]

During the Red Army's rapid advance, about 6,000–7,000 Polish soldiers died in the fighting,[5] 230,000–450,000 were taken prisoner—230,000 immediately after the campaign and 70,000 more when the Soviets annexed the Baltic States and assumed custody of Polish troops interned there.[5][6][7][8]

The Soviets often failed to honour the terms of surrender. In some cases, they promised Polish soldiers freedom after capitulation and then arrested them when they laid down their arms.[2] Some Polish soldiers were murdered shortly after capture, like General Józef Olszyna-Wilczyński, who was taken prisoner, interrogated and shot on September 22, during the invasion itself.[2][9][10] On September 24, the Soviets murdered forty-two staff and patients at a Polish military hospital in the village of Grabowiec near Zamość.[11] After a tactical Polish victory at the battle of Szack on September 28, where the combined Korpus Ochrony Pogranicza (KOP) or Border Protection Corps forces, under General Wilhelm Orlik-Rueckemann, routed the Soviet 52nd Rifle Division, the Soviets executed all the Polish officers they captured.[12] The Soviets also executed hundreds of defenders at Grodno, the exact number of those killed has not been established.

First period (1939–1941) edit

Some Polish prisoners were freed or escaped, but 125,000 found themselves incarcerated in prison camps run by the NKVD.[13] Of these, the Soviet authorities released 42,400 soldiers (mostly soldiers of Ukrainian and Belarusian ethnicity serving in the Polish army who lived in the former Polish territories now annexed by the Soviet Union) in October.[14][15][16] The 43,000 soldiers born in West Poland, then under German control, were transferred to the Germans; in turn the Soviets received 13,575 Polish prisoners from the Germans.[16][15]

Poland and the Soviet Union never officially declared war on each other in 1939; the Soviets effectively broke off diplomatic relations when they withdrew recognition of the Polish government at the start of the invasion.[17] The Soviets regarded captured Polish military personnel not as prisoners-of-war, but as counter-revolutionaries resisting the legal Soviet reclamation of western Ukraine and West Belarus.[18] The USSR refused to allow Red Cross supervision of prisoners - on the grounds that it had not signed the 1929 Geneva Convention on the Treatment of PoWs and did not recognise the Hague Convention. The Soviet military handed the Polish prisoners over to the Narodnyy komissariat vnutrennikh del (People's Commissariat of Internal Affairs, better known as the NKVD or secret police), they received sentences under clauses in the Soviet penal code relating to crimes including treason and counter-revolution, and were not considered subject to the "Regulations for the Treatment of Prisoners of War" approved by the Soviet Council of Ministers.[19]

As early as September 19, 1939, the People's Commissar for Internal Affairs and First Rank Commissar of State Security, Lavrenty Beria, ordered the NKVD to create the Administration for Affairs of Prisoners of War and Internees to manage Polish prisoners. The NKVD took custody of Polish prisoners from the Red Army and proceeded to organize a network of reception centers and transit camps and to arrange rail transport to prisoner-of-war camps in the western USSR. The camps were located at Jukhnovo (Babynino rail station), Yuzhe (Talitsy), Kozelsk, Kozelshchyna, Oranki, Ostashkov (Stolbnyi Island on Seliger Lake near Ostashkov), Tyotkino rail station (56 mi/90 km from Putyvl), Starobielsk, Vologda (Zaenikevo rail station) and Gryazovets.[20]

Kozelsk and Starobielsk held mainly military officers, while Ostashkov was used mainly for Boy Scouts, gendarmes, police and prison officers. Inmates at these camps were not exclusively military officers or members of the other groups mentioned, they also included members of the Polish intelligentsia. The approximate distribution of men throughout the camps was as follows:

  • Kozelsk, 5,000
  • Ostashkov, 6,570
  • Starobelsk (Katyn forest), 4,000

They totalled 15,570 men.[21]

According to a report from 19 November 1939, the NKVD had about 40,000 Polish POWs: about 8,000-8,500 officers and warrant officers, 6,000–6,500 police officers and 25,000 soldiers and NCOs who were still being held as POWs.[22][failed verification][16][23][24] In December, a wave of arrests took into custody some Polish officers who were not yet imprisoned; Ivan Serov reported to Lavrentiy Beria on 3 December that "in all, 1,057 former officers of the Polish Army had been arrested".[15] The 25,000 soldiers and non-commissioned officers were assigned to forced labor (road construction, heavy metallurgy).[15]

Once at the camps, from October 1939 to February 1940, the Poles were subjected to lengthy interrogations and constant political agitation by NKVD officers such as Vasily Zarubin. The Soviets encouraged the Poles to believe they would be released,[25] but the interviews were in effect a selection process to determine who would live and who would die.[1] According to NKVD reports, the prisoners could not be induced to adopt a pro-Soviet attitude.[21] They were declared "hardened and uncompromising enemies of Soviet authority".[1]

On March 5, 1940, a note to Joseph Stalin from Beria saw the members of the Soviet Politburo — Stalin, Vyacheslav Molotov, Lazar Kaganovich, Mikhail Kalinin, Kliment Voroshilov, Anastas Mikoyan and Beria — signed an order for the execution of "nationalists and counter-revolutionaries" kept at camps and prisons in western Ukraine and Belarus. This execution became known as the Katyn massacre, where 22,000 perished[1][2]

Second period (1941–1944) edit

Diplomatic relations were, however, re-established in 1941 after the German invasion of the Soviet Union forced Joseph Stalin to look for allies. Thus the military agreement from August 14 and subsequent Sikorski–Mayski Agreement from August 17, 1941, resulted in Stalin agreeing to declare the Molotov–Ribbentrop Pact in relation to Poland null and void,[26] and release tens of thousands of Polish prisoners-of-war held in Soviet camps. Pursuant to an agreement between the Polish government-in-exile and Stalin, the Soviets granted "amnesty" to many Polish citizens, from whom a military force was formed. Stalin also agreed that this military force would be subordinate to the Polish government-in-exile. This force was known as the Anders Army. From 1943 Poles were recruited into the Berling Army.

Third period (after 1944) edit

The third group of Polish prisoners were members of Polish resistance organizations (Armia Krajowa, or 'cursed soldiers') loyal to the Polish government-in-exile and seen by the Soviets as a threat to their establishment of a power base in Poland. Relatively few were sent to the Soviet Union (although there were notable exceptions, see Trial of the Sixteen); most were transferred to the Polish communist security forces and prisons, or enlisted in the Berling Army.

Polish generals killed by the Soviets in 1939–1945 edit

  • Bronisław Babiański [pl] - Major General in the Polish Army of the Second Polish Republic. In September 1939, when the German Army and the Soviet Army invaded Poland, he moved to Grodno, where he was captured by the NKVD a month later. He has been missing since then, presumably killed by the NKVD.
  • Leon Billewicz - Brigadier General, seized by the Soviets in Żurawno nearby Stryi on 19 September 1939 along with the hastily organized Polish units heading toward Polish-Hungarian border. He was detained in Starobielsk and executed in Kharkiv.
  • Bronisław Bohatyrewicz - Brigadier General, he had retired from the Army before 1939, nevertheless was arrested in September 1939 and deported to the camp in Kozielsk and subsequently murdered in the Katyń massacre. He was one of only two generals identified during exhumation in 1943.
  • Alexandre Chkheidze - Brigadier General, was detained by the NKVD in Lviv, September 1939, as the 'enemy of people'. He was replaced to Kiev in June 1940 and accused of list of 'crimes'. The last trace of the general is receipt put by the commander of convoy in December 1940. The general was likely shot by a firing squad in Moscow in 1941.
  • Xawery Czernicki - Rear Admiral, he shared common lot of Polish officers detained by the Soviets. Having crossed thresholds of Ostaszków, Starobielsk, Kozielsk Soviet camp, he was eventually murdered in the Katyń massacre.
  • Kazimierz Dzierżanowski [pl] - Lieutenant General, captured by the NKVD in Lviv, in October 1939, afterwards relocated to Kiev in 1940. His fate is unknown, but he is suspected to have died of exhaustion in the Kiev prison.
  • Stanisław Haller de Hallenburg - Lieutenant General, arrested in 1939 and imprisoned in Starobielsk. In 1941, when Władysław Sikorski had issued the order to form Polish Army in the Soviet Union after the outbreak of war between Germany and the Soviet Union, Stanisław Haller was to be appointed the Commander in Chief of that army. Oblivious to Sikorski, Haller had been dead since 1940, when he fell victim to the Katyń massacre.
  • Kazimierz Horoszkiewicz [pl] - nominal Lieutenant General in the Polish Army of the Second Polish Republic, in September 1939, eluding the Germans he arrived to Lviv, at that time already under the Soviet occupation. Having been sent to Siberia, Horoszkiewicz had died in Tobolsk on his way back to the west, to newly formed Polish units in the Soviet Union in 1942.
  • Albin Jasiński [pl] - Brigadier General, organized Polish Self-Defence units in Drohiczyn against the Soviet oppression in 1939. He was detained by the NKVD, and died in 1940 during tortures inflicted by the NKVD interrogators.
  • Aleksander Walenty Jasiński [pl] - Brigadier General, he disappeared after the Soviets had entered Lviv. His fate has been unknown since.
  • Marian Jasiński [pl] - nominal Brigadier General, he has been lost from the Soviet invasion, likely killed by the Soviets.
  • Adolf Karol Jastrzębski [pl] - Brigadier General, imprisoned by the Soviets, sent to gulag in Vologda, died of hard labour, exhaustion and hunger.
  • Władysław Jędrzejewski - Lieutenant General, he was organizing the Self-Defence units in Lviv, when the Soviet army entered the city. He was executed in 1940 by the NKVD.
  • Władysław Jung [pl] - Lieutenant General, the Soviet aggression caught him in Lviv. He made failed attempt to cross the German-Soviet demarcation line in 1939. Kept in prison on severe cold, he died of gangrene.
  • Juliusz Klemens Kolmer [pl] - Brigadier General, arrested by NKVD in Lviv, 1940. He was presumably killed by the Soviets.
  • Aleksander Kowalewski (general) [pl] - Brigadier General, he prepared operation group in Podolia during September Campaign in 1939. When the news of the Soviet invasion had reached him, General Kowalewski set off on the southeastern direction, where he clashed with approaching Soviet army. In the meantime, General of the Armies announced the directive not to engage Soviets unless provoked. General Kowalewski followed the order and capitulated to Soviets. Imprisoned and relocated to Starobielsk, murdered in Kharkiv in 1940.
  • Szymon Kurz [pl] - Brigadier General, arrested in November 1939 by the NKVD. Executed in the spring of 1940.
  • Kazimierz Orlik-Łukoski - Major General, was captured during the German–Soviet invasion and later turned over to the NKVD. He was imprisoned in Starobielsk, and later killed in the Katyń massacre.

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d Fischer, Benjamin B., "", Studies in Intelligence, Winter 1999-2000.
  2. ^ a b c d Sanford, Google Books, p. 20–24.
  3. ^ Encyklopedia PWN 'KAMPANIA WRZEŚNIOWA 1939' May 9, 2006, at the Wayback Machine, last retrieved on 10 December 2005, Polish language
  4. ^ Stanley S. Seidner, Marshal Edward Śmigły-Rydz Rydz and the Defense of Poland, New York, 1978.
  5. ^ a b (in Polish) Edukacja Humanistyczna w wojsku 2007-01-10 at the Wayback Machine. 1/2005. Dom wydawniczy Wojska Polskiego. ISSN 1734-6584. (Official publication of the Polish Army). Retrieved 28 November 2006.
  6. ^ (in Polish) obozy jenieckie żołnierzy polskich 2013-11-04 at the Wayback Machine (Prison camps for Polish soldiers) Encyklopedia PWN. Retrieved 28 November 2006.
  7. ^ (in Russian) Молотов на V сессии Верховного Совета 31 октября цифра «примерно 250 тыс.» (Please provide translation of the reference title and publication data and means)
  8. ^ (in Russian) Отчёт Украинского и Белорусского фронтов Красной Армии Мельтюхов, с. 367. [1][permanent dead link] (Please provide translation of the reference title and publication data and means)
  9. ^ (in Polish) Olszyna-Wilczyński Józef Konstanty 2008-03-06 at the Wayback Machine, entry at Encyklopedia PWN. Retrieved 14 November 2006.
  10. ^ (in Polish). Archived from the original on January 7, 2005. Retrieved January 7, 2005.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: unfit URL (link) Polish Institute of National Remembrance. 16.10.03. From Internet Archive.
  11. ^ (in Polish) Tygodnik Zamojskim[permanent dead link], 15 September 2004. Retrieved 28 November 2006.
  12. ^ (in Polish) Szack. Encyklopedia Interia. Retrieved 28 November 2006.
  13. ^ Decision to commence investigation into Katyn Massacre 2012-09-30 at the Wayback Machine, Małgorzata Kużniar-Plota, Departmental Commission for the Prosecution of Crimes against the Polish Nation, Warsaw 30 November 2004. "[...] some 250,000 Polish soldiers were taken into Soviet captivity. Some of them were released, and some escaped, but 125,400 prisoners were placed in NKVD prison camps in Kozelsk, Ostashkov, Starobelsk, Putivl, Yuzha, Oranki, Kozelshchina, and elsewhere."
  14. ^ George Sanford (2005). Katyn and the Soviet massacre of 1940: truth, justice and memory. Psychology Press. p. 44. ISBN 978-0-415-33873-8. Retrieved 7 May 2011.
  15. ^ a b c d Alfred J. Rieber (2000). Forced migration in Central and Eastern Europe, 1939-1950. Psychology Press. pp. 31–33. ISBN 978-0-7146-5132-3. Retrieved 19 May 2011.
  16. ^ a b c Simon-Dubnow-Institut für Jüdische Geschichte und Kultur (2007). Shared history, divided memory: Jews and others in Soviet-occupied Poland, 1939-1941. Leipziger Universitätsverlag. p. 180. ISBN 978-3-86583-240-5. Retrieved 19 May 2011.
  17. ^ See telegrams: No. 317 2009-11-07 at the Wayback Machine of September 10: Schulenburg, the German ambassador in the Soviet Union, to the German Foreign Office. Moscow, 10 September 1939-9:40 p.m.; No. 371 2007-04-30 at the Wayback Machine of 16 September; No. 372 2007-04-30 at the Wayback Machine of 17 September Source: The Avalon Project at Yale Law School. Last accessed on 14 November 2006; (in Polish)1939 wrzesień 17, Moskwa Nota rządu sowieckiego nie przyjęta przez ambasadora Wacława Grzybowskiego (Note of the Soviet government to the Polish government on 17 September 1939 refused by Polish ambassador Wacław Grzybowski). Retrieved 15 November 2006.
  18. ^ Sanford, pp. 22–3; See also, Sanford, p 39: "The Soviet Union's invasion and occupation of Eastern Poland in September 1939 was a clear act of aggression in international law...But the Soviets did not declare war, nor did the Poles respond with a declaration of war. As a result there was confusion over the status of soldiers taken captive and whether they qualified for treatment as PoWs. Jurists consider that the absence of a formal declaration of war does not absolve a power from the obligations of civilised conduct towards PoWs. On the contrary, failure to do so makes those involved, both leaders and operational subordinates, liable to charges of War Crimes and Crimes against Humanity."
  19. ^ Sanford, p. 25 and p. 41.
  20. ^ "The grave unknown elsewhere or any time before ... Katyń – Kharkov – Mednoe", last retrieved on 10 December 2005. Article includes a note that it is based on a special edition of a "Historic Reference-Book for the Pilgrims to Katyń – Kharkow – Mednoe" by Jędrzej Tucholski
  21. ^ a b Zawodny, Janusz K., Death in the Forest: The Story of the Katyn Forest Massacre, University of Notre Dame Press, 1962, ISBN 0-268-00849-3 partial HTML online
  22. ^ Decision to commence investigation into Katyn Massacre 2012-09-30 at the Wayback Machine, Małgorzata Kużniar-Plota, Departmental Commission for the Prosecution of Crimes against the Polish Nation, Warsaw 30 November 2004
  23. ^ Anna M. Cienciala; Wojciech Materski (2007). Katyn: a crime without punishment. Yale University Press. p. 81. ISBN 978-0-300-10851-4. Retrieved 19 May 2011.
  24. ^ (in Russian) Катынь. Пленники необъявленной войны. сб.док. М., МФ "Демократия": 1999, сс.20–21, 208–210.
  25. ^ "The Katyn Diary of Leon Gladun" 2019-03-11 at the Wayback Machine, last accessed on 19 December 2005, English translation of Polish document. See the entries on 25 December 1939 and 3 April 1940.
  26. ^ "In relation to Poland the effects of the pact have been abrogated on the basis of the Sikorski-Mayski agreement".
    René Lefeber, Malgosia Fitzmaurice, The Changing Political Structure of Europe: aspects of International law, Martinus Nijhoff Publishers, ISBN 0-7923-1379-8, Google Print, p.101

External links edit

  • The epilogue to September 1939 – Polish soldiers in Soviet captivity - testimonies of Polish POW's in Soviet Union; "Chronicles of Terror"

polish, prisoners, soviet, union, after, 1939, result, soviet, invasion, poland, 1939, hundreds, thousands, polish, soldiers, became, prisoners, many, them, were, executed, polish, military, personnel, civilians, perished, katyn, massacre, alone, contents, sov. As a result of the Soviet invasion of Poland in 1939 hundreds of thousands of Polish soldiers became prisoners of war Many of them were executed 22 000 Polish military personnel and civilians perished in the Katyn massacre alone 1 2 Contents 1 Soviet invasion of Poland 2 First period 1939 1941 3 Second period 1941 1944 4 Third period after 1944 5 Polish generals killed by the Soviets in 1939 1945 6 See also 7 References 8 External linksSoviet invasion of Poland editFurther information Soviet invasion of Poland nbsp Polish prisoners of war captured by the Red Army during the Soviet invasion of Poland nbsp Polish policemen and civilians captured by the Red Army after the Soviet invasion of Poland nbsp A Soviet propaganda poster urging the civilians to beware of spies in this case a man in the shadows wearing Polish officers parade uniform nbsp The note from Beria which was signed by members of the Soviet Politburo it decided the fate mass execution of Polish officers dated 5 March 1940On September 17 1939 the Red Army invaded the territory of Poland from the east The invasion took place while Poland was already sustaining serious defeats in the wake of the German attack on the country that started on September 1 1939 The Soviets moved to safeguard their claims in accordance with the Molotov Ribbentrop Pact 3 4 During the Red Army s rapid advance about 6 000 7 000 Polish soldiers died in the fighting 5 230 000 450 000 were taken prisoner 230 000 immediately after the campaign and 70 000 more when the Soviets annexed the Baltic States and assumed custody of Polish troops interned there 5 6 7 8 The Soviets often failed to honour the terms of surrender In some cases they promised Polish soldiers freedom after capitulation and then arrested them when they laid down their arms 2 Some Polish soldiers were murdered shortly after capture like General Jozef Olszyna Wilczynski who was taken prisoner interrogated and shot on September 22 during the invasion itself 2 9 10 On September 24 the Soviets murdered forty two staff and patients at a Polish military hospital in the village of Grabowiec near Zamosc 11 After a tactical Polish victory at the battle of Szack on September 28 where the combined Korpus Ochrony Pogranicza KOP or Border Protection Corps forces under General Wilhelm Orlik Rueckemann routed the Soviet 52nd Rifle Division the Soviets executed all the Polish officers they captured 12 The Soviets also executed hundreds of defenders at Grodno the exact number of those killed has not been established First period 1939 1941 editSome Polish prisoners were freed or escaped but 125 000 found themselves incarcerated in prison camps run by the NKVD 13 Of these the Soviet authorities released 42 400 soldiers mostly soldiers of Ukrainian and Belarusian ethnicity serving in the Polish army who lived in the former Polish territories now annexed by the Soviet Union in October 14 15 16 The 43 000 soldiers born in West Poland then under German control were transferred to the Germans in turn the Soviets received 13 575 Polish prisoners from the Germans 16 15 Poland and the Soviet Union never officially declared war on each other in 1939 the Soviets effectively broke off diplomatic relations when they withdrew recognition of the Polish government at the start of the invasion 17 The Soviets regarded captured Polish military personnel not as prisoners of war but as counter revolutionaries resisting the legal Soviet reclamation of western Ukraine and West Belarus 18 The USSR refused to allow Red Cross supervision of prisoners on the grounds that it had not signed the 1929 Geneva Convention on the Treatment of PoWs and did not recognise the Hague Convention The Soviet military handed the Polish prisoners over to the Narodnyy komissariat vnutrennikh del People s Commissariat of Internal Affairs better known as the NKVD or secret police they received sentences under clauses in the Soviet penal code relating to crimes including treason and counter revolution and were not considered subject to the Regulations for the Treatment of Prisoners of War approved by the Soviet Council of Ministers 19 As early as September 19 1939 the People s Commissar for Internal Affairs and First Rank Commissar of State Security Lavrenty Beria ordered the NKVD to create the Administration for Affairs of Prisoners of War and Internees to manage Polish prisoners The NKVD took custody of Polish prisoners from the Red Army and proceeded to organize a network of reception centers and transit camps and to arrange rail transport to prisoner of war camps in the western USSR The camps were located at Jukhnovo Babynino rail station Yuzhe Talitsy Kozelsk Kozelshchyna Oranki Ostashkov Stolbnyi Island on Seliger Lake near Ostashkov Tyotkino rail station 56 mi 90 km from Putyvl Starobielsk Vologda Zaenikevo rail station and Gryazovets 20 Kozelsk and Starobielsk held mainly military officers while Ostashkov was used mainly for Boy Scouts gendarmes police and prison officers Inmates at these camps were not exclusively military officers or members of the other groups mentioned they also included members of the Polish intelligentsia The approximate distribution of men throughout the camps was as follows Kozelsk 5 000 Ostashkov 6 570 Starobelsk Katyn forest 4 000They totalled 15 570 men 21 According to a report from 19 November 1939 the NKVD had about 40 000 Polish POWs about 8 000 8 500 officers and warrant officers 6 000 6 500 police officers and 25 000 soldiers and NCOs who were still being held as POWs 22 failed verification 16 23 24 In December a wave of arrests took into custody some Polish officers who were not yet imprisoned Ivan Serov reported to Lavrentiy Beria on 3 December that in all 1 057 former officers of the Polish Army had been arrested 15 The 25 000 soldiers and non commissioned officers were assigned to forced labor road construction heavy metallurgy 15 Once at the camps from October 1939 to February 1940 the Poles were subjected to lengthy interrogations and constant political agitation by NKVD officers such as Vasily Zarubin The Soviets encouraged the Poles to believe they would be released 25 but the interviews were in effect a selection process to determine who would live and who would die 1 According to NKVD reports the prisoners could not be induced to adopt a pro Soviet attitude 21 They were declared hardened and uncompromising enemies of Soviet authority 1 On March 5 1940 a note to Joseph Stalin from Beria saw the members of the Soviet Politburo Stalin Vyacheslav Molotov Lazar Kaganovich Mikhail Kalinin Kliment Voroshilov Anastas Mikoyan and Beria signed an order for the execution of nationalists and counter revolutionaries kept at camps and prisons in western Ukraine and Belarus This execution became known as the Katyn massacre where 22 000 perished 1 2 Second period 1941 1944 editFurther information Polish Armed Forces in the East Diplomatic relations were however re established in 1941 after the German invasion of the Soviet Union forced Joseph Stalin to look for allies Thus the military agreement from August 14 and subsequent Sikorski Mayski Agreement from August 17 1941 resulted in Stalin agreeing to declare the Molotov Ribbentrop Pact in relation to Poland null and void 26 and release tens of thousands of Polish prisoners of war held in Soviet camps Pursuant to an agreement between the Polish government in exile and Stalin the Soviets granted amnesty to many Polish citizens from whom a military force was formed Stalin also agreed that this military force would be subordinate to the Polish government in exile This force was known as the Anders Army From 1943 Poles were recruited into the Berling Army Third period after 1944 editThe third group of Polish prisoners were members of Polish resistance organizations Armia Krajowa or cursed soldiers loyal to the Polish government in exile and seen by the Soviets as a threat to their establishment of a power base in Poland Relatively few were sent to the Soviet Union although there were notable exceptions see Trial of the Sixteen most were transferred to the Polish communist security forces and prisons or enlisted in the Berling Army Polish generals killed by the Soviets in 1939 1945 editBronislaw Babianski pl Major General in the Polish Army of the Second Polish Republic In September 1939 when the German Army and the Soviet Army invaded Poland he moved to Grodno where he was captured by the NKVD a month later He has been missing since then presumably killed by the NKVD Leon Billewicz Brigadier General seized by the Soviets in Zurawno nearby Stryi on 19 September 1939 along with the hastily organized Polish units heading toward Polish Hungarian border He was detained in Starobielsk and executed in Kharkiv Bronislaw Bohatyrewicz Brigadier General he had retired from the Army before 1939 nevertheless was arrested in September 1939 and deported to the camp in Kozielsk and subsequently murdered in the Katyn massacre He was one of only two generals identified during exhumation in 1943 Alexandre Chkheidze Brigadier General was detained by the NKVD in Lviv September 1939 as the enemy of people He was replaced to Kiev in June 1940 and accused of list of crimes The last trace of the general is receipt put by the commander of convoy in December 1940 The general was likely shot by a firing squad in Moscow in 1941 Xawery Czernicki Rear Admiral he shared common lot of Polish officers detained by the Soviets Having crossed thresholds of Ostaszkow Starobielsk Kozielsk Soviet camp he was eventually murdered in the Katyn massacre Kazimierz Dzierzanowski pl Lieutenant General captured by the NKVD in Lviv in October 1939 afterwards relocated to Kiev in 1940 His fate is unknown but he is suspected to have died of exhaustion in the Kiev prison Stanislaw Haller de Hallenburg Lieutenant General arrested in 1939 and imprisoned in Starobielsk In 1941 when Wladyslaw Sikorski had issued the order to form Polish Army in the Soviet Union after the outbreak of war between Germany and the Soviet Union Stanislaw Haller was to be appointed the Commander in Chief of that army Oblivious to Sikorski Haller had been dead since 1940 when he fell victim to the Katyn massacre Kazimierz Horoszkiewicz pl nominal Lieutenant General in the Polish Army of the Second Polish Republic in September 1939 eluding the Germans he arrived to Lviv at that time already under the Soviet occupation Having been sent to Siberia Horoszkiewicz had died in Tobolsk on his way back to the west to newly formed Polish units in the Soviet Union in 1942 Albin Jasinski pl Brigadier General organized Polish Self Defence units in Drohiczyn against the Soviet oppression in 1939 He was detained by the NKVD and died in 1940 during tortures inflicted by the NKVD interrogators Aleksander Walenty Jasinski pl Brigadier General he disappeared after the Soviets had entered Lviv His fate has been unknown since Marian Jasinski pl nominal Brigadier General he has been lost from the Soviet invasion likely killed by the Soviets Adolf Karol Jastrzebski pl Brigadier General imprisoned by the Soviets sent to gulag in Vologda died of hard labour exhaustion and hunger Wladyslaw Jedrzejewski Lieutenant General he was organizing the Self Defence units in Lviv when the Soviet army entered the city He was executed in 1940 by the NKVD Wladyslaw Jung pl Lieutenant General the Soviet aggression caught him in Lviv He made failed attempt to cross the German Soviet demarcation line in 1939 Kept in prison on severe cold he died of gangrene Juliusz Klemens Kolmer pl Brigadier General arrested by NKVD in Lviv 1940 He was presumably killed by the Soviets Aleksander Kowalewski general pl Brigadier General he prepared operation group in Podolia during September Campaign in 1939 When the news of the Soviet invasion had reached him General Kowalewski set off on the southeastern direction where he clashed with approaching Soviet army In the meantime General of the Armies announced the directive not to engage Soviets unless provoked General Kowalewski followed the order and capitulated to Soviets Imprisoned and relocated to Starobielsk murdered in Kharkiv in 1940 Szymon Kurz pl Brigadier General arrested in November 1939 by the NKVD Executed in the spring of 1940 Kazimierz Orlik Lukoski Major General was captured during the German Soviet invasion and later turned over to the NKVD He was imprisoned in Starobielsk and later killed in the Katyn massacre See also editCamps for Polish prisoners and internees in Soviet Union and Lithuania 1919 1921 Treatment of Polish citizens by occupiers Sybiraks Camps for Russian prisoners and internees in Poland 1919 1924 References edit a b c d Fischer Benjamin B The Katyn Controversy Stalin s Killing Field Studies in Intelligence Winter 1999 2000 a b c d Sanford Google Books p 20 24 Encyklopedia PWN KAMPANIA WRZESNIOWA 1939 Archived May 9 2006 at the Wayback Machine last retrieved on 10 December 2005 Polish language Stanley S Seidner Marshal Edward Smigly Rydz Rydz and the Defense of Poland New York 1978 a b in Polish Edukacja Humanistyczna w wojsku Archived 2007 01 10 at the Wayback Machine 1 2005 Dom wydawniczy Wojska Polskiego ISSN 1734 6584 Official publication of the Polish Army Retrieved 28 November 2006 in Polish obozy jenieckie zolnierzy polskich Archived 2013 11 04 at the Wayback Machine Prison camps for Polish soldiers Encyklopedia PWN Retrieved 28 November 2006 in Russian Molotov na V sessii Verhovnogo Soveta 31 oktyabrya cifra primerno 250 tys Please provide translation of the reference title and publication data and means in Russian Otchyot Ukrainskogo i Belorusskogo frontov Krasnoj Armii Meltyuhov s 367 1 permanent dead link Please provide translation of the reference title and publication data and means in Polish Olszyna Wilczynski Jozef Konstanty Archived 2008 03 06 at the Wayback Machine entry at Encyklopedia PWN Retrieved 14 November 2006 Sledztwa Bialystok in Polish Archived from the original on January 7 2005 Retrieved January 7 2005 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint unfit URL link Polish Institute of National Remembrance 16 10 03 From Internet Archive in Polish Tygodnik Zamojskim permanent dead link 15 September 2004 Retrieved 28 November 2006 in Polish Szack Encyklopedia Interia Retrieved 28 November 2006 Decision to commence investigation into Katyn Massacre Archived 2012 09 30 at the Wayback Machine Malgorzata Kuzniar Plota Departmental Commission for the Prosecution of Crimes against the Polish Nation Warsaw 30 November 2004 some 250 000 Polish soldiers were taken into Soviet captivity Some of them were released and some escaped but 125 400 prisoners were placed in NKVD prison camps in Kozelsk Ostashkov Starobelsk Putivl Yuzha Oranki Kozelshchina and elsewhere George Sanford 2005 Katyn and the Soviet massacre of 1940 truth justice and memory Psychology Press p 44 ISBN 978 0 415 33873 8 Retrieved 7 May 2011 a b c d Alfred J Rieber 2000 Forced migration in Central and Eastern Europe 1939 1950 Psychology Press pp 31 33 ISBN 978 0 7146 5132 3 Retrieved 19 May 2011 a b c Simon Dubnow Institut fur Judische Geschichte und Kultur 2007 Shared history divided memory Jews and others in Soviet occupied Poland 1939 1941 Leipziger Universitatsverlag p 180 ISBN 978 3 86583 240 5 Retrieved 19 May 2011 See telegrams No 317 Archived 2009 11 07 at the Wayback Machine of September 10 Schulenburg the German ambassador in the Soviet Union to the German Foreign Office Moscow 10 September 1939 9 40 p m No 371 Archived 2007 04 30 at the Wayback Machine of 16 September No 372 Archived 2007 04 30 at the Wayback Machine of 17 September Source The Avalon Project at Yale Law School Last accessed on 14 November 2006 in Polish 1939 wrzesien 17 Moskwa Nota rzadu sowieckiego nie przyjeta przez ambasadora Waclawa Grzybowskiego Note of the Soviet government to the Polish government on 17 September 1939 refused by Polish ambassador Waclaw Grzybowski Retrieved 15 November 2006 Sanford pp 22 3 See also Sanford p 39 The Soviet Union s invasion and occupation of Eastern Poland in September 1939 was a clear act of aggression in international law But the Soviets did not declare war nor did the Poles respond with a declaration of war As a result there was confusion over the status of soldiers taken captive and whether they qualified for treatment as PoWs Jurists consider that the absence of a formal declaration of war does not absolve a power from the obligations of civilised conduct towards PoWs On the contrary failure to do so makes those involved both leaders and operational subordinates liable to charges of War Crimes and Crimes against Humanity Sanford p 25 and p 41 The grave unknown elsewhere or any time before Katyn Kharkov Mednoe last retrieved on 10 December 2005 Article includes a note that it is based on a special edition of a Historic Reference Book for the Pilgrims to Katyn Kharkow Mednoe by Jedrzej Tucholski a b Zawodny Janusz K Death in the Forest The Story of the Katyn Forest Massacre University of Notre Dame Press 1962 ISBN 0 268 00849 3 partial HTML online Decision to commence investigation into Katyn Massacre Archived 2012 09 30 at the Wayback Machine Malgorzata Kuzniar Plota Departmental Commission for the Prosecution of Crimes against the Polish Nation Warsaw 30 November 2004 Anna M Cienciala Wojciech Materski 2007 Katyn a crime without punishment Yale University Press p 81 ISBN 978 0 300 10851 4 Retrieved 19 May 2011 in Russian Katyn Plenniki neobyavlennoj vojny sb dok M MF Demokratiya 1999 ss 20 21 208 210 The Katyn Diary of Leon Gladun Archived 2019 03 11 at the Wayback Machine last accessed on 19 December 2005 English translation of Polish document See the entries on 25 December 1939 and 3 April 1940 In relation to Poland the effects of the pact have been abrogated on the basis of the Sikorski Mayski agreement Rene Lefeber Malgosia Fitzmaurice The Changing Political Structure of Europe aspects of International law Martinus Nijhoff Publishers ISBN 0 7923 1379 8 Google Print p 101External links editThe epilogue to September 1939 Polish soldiers in Soviet captivity testimonies of Polish POW s in Soviet Union Chronicles of Terror Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Polish prisoners of war in the Soviet Union after 1939 amp oldid 1146702539, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

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