fbpx
Wikipedia

Winter War

Winter War
Part of the European theatre of World War II

A Finnish Maxim M/09-21 machine gun crew during the Winter War
Date30 November 1939 – 13 March 1940
(3 months, 1 week and 6 days)
Location
Eastern Finland
Result Moscow Peace Treaty
Territorial
changes
Cession of the Gulf of Finland islands, Karelian Isthmus, Ladoga Karelia, Salla, Rybachy Peninsula and lease of Hanko to the Soviet Union
Belligerents

 Finland

 Soviet Union

Commanders and leaders
Strength
300,000–340,000 soldiers[F 1]
32 tanks[F 2]
114 aircraft[F 3]
425,000–760,000 soldiers[F 4]
2,514–6,541 tanks[F 5]
3,880 aircraft[10]
Casualties and losses
25,904 dead or missing[11]
43,557 wounded[12]
800–1,100 captured[13]
20–30 tanks
62 aircraft[14]
1 armed icebreaker damaged
Finnish Ladoga Naval Detachment ceded to the Soviet Union
70,000 total casualties
126,875–167,976 dead or missing[15][16][17][18]
188,671–207,538 wounded or sick[15][16] (including at least 61,506 sick or frostbitten[19])
5,572 captured[20]
1,200–3,543 tanks[21][22][23]
261–515 aircraft[23][24]

321,000–381,000 total casualties

The Winter War[F 6] was a war between the Soviet Union and Finland. It began with a Soviet invasion of Finland on 30 November 1939, three months after the outbreak of World War II, and ended three and a half months later with the Moscow Peace Treaty on 13 March 1940. Despite superior military strength, especially in tanks and aircraft, the Soviet Union suffered severe losses and initially made little headway. The League of Nations deemed the attack illegal and expelled the Soviet Union.

The Soviets made several demands, including that Finland cede substantial border territories in exchange for land elsewhere, claiming security reasons – primarily the protection of Leningrad, 32 km (20 mi) from the Finnish border. When Finland refused, the Soviets invaded. Most sources conclude that the Soviet Union had intended to conquer all of Finland, and cite the establishment of the puppet Finnish Communist government and the Molotov–Ribbentrop Pact's secret protocols as evidence of this,[F 7] while other sources argue against the idea of a full Soviet conquest.[F 8] Finland repelled Soviet attacks for more than two months and inflicted substantial losses on the invaders in temperatures as low as −43 °C (−45 °F). The battles focused mainly on Taipale along the Karelian Isthmus, on Kollaa in Ladoga Karelia and on Raate Road in Kainuu, but there were also battles in Salla and Petsamo in Lapland.

Following the initial setbacks, the Soviets reduced their strategic objectives and put an end to the puppet Finnish communist government in late January 1940, informing the Finnish government that they were willing to negotiate peace.[38][39] After the Soviet military reorganized and adopted different tactics, they renewed their offensive in February 1940 and overcame the Finnish defences on the Karelian Isthmus. This left the Finnish army in the main theatre of war near the breaking point, with a retreat seeming inevitable. Consequently, Finnish commander-in-chief Carl Gustaf Emil Mannerheim urged a peace deal with the Soviets, while the Finns still retained bargaining power.[40]

Hostilities ceased in March 1940 with the signing of the Moscow Peace Treaty in which Finland ceded 9% of its territory to the Soviet Union. Soviet losses were heavy, and the country's international reputation suffered.[41] Their gains exceeded their pre-war demands, and the Soviets received substantial territories along Lake Ladoga and further north. Finland retained its sovereignty and enhanced its international reputation. The poor performance of the Red Army encouraged German Chancellor Adolf Hitler to believe that an attack on the Soviet Union would be successful and confirmed negative Western opinions of the Soviet military. After 15 months of Interim Peace, in June 1941, Germany commenced Operation Barbarossa, and the Continuation War between Finland and the Soviets began.

Background

Finnish-Soviet relations and politics

 
Geopolitical status in Northern Europe in November 1939[42][43]
  Neutral countries
  Germany and annexed countries
  Soviet Union and annexed countries
  Neutral countries with military bases established by Soviet Union in October 1939

Until the early 19th century, Finland was the eastern part of the Kingdom of Sweden. From 21 February 1808 to 17 September 1809, the Russian Empire waged the Finnish War against the Kingdom of Sweden, ostensibly to protect the Russian capital, Saint Petersburg. Eventually Russia conquered and annexed Finland, and converted it into an autonomous buffer state.[44] The resulting Grand Duchy of Finland enjoyed wide autonomy within Russia until the end of the 19th century, when Russia began attempts to assimilate Finland as part of a general policy to strengthen the central government and unify the Empire by Russification. Those attempts were aborted because of Russia's internal strife, but they ruined Russia's relationship with Finland. In addition, support increased in Finland for self-determination movements.[45]

World War I led to the collapse of the Russian Empire during the Russian Revolution of 1917 and the Russian Civil War. On 15 November 1917, the Bolshevik Russian government declared that national minorities possessed the right of self-determination, including the right to secede and form a separate state, which gave Finland a window of opportunity. On 6 December 1917, the Senate of Finland declared the nation's independence. Soviet Russia, later the Soviet Union, recognised the new Finnish government just three weeks after the declaration.[45] Finland achieved full sovereignty in May 1918 after a four-month civil war in which the conservative Whites defeated the socialist Reds with the help of the Imperial German Army, pro-German Jägers, and some Swedish troops, in addition to the expulsion of Bolshevik troops.[46]

Finland joined the League of Nations in 1920 and sought security guarantees, but Finland's primary goal was co-operation with the Scandinavian countries, mainly Sweden, and it focused on the exchange of information and on defence planning (the joint defence of Åland, for example), rather than on military exercises or on the stockpiling and the deployment of materiel. Nevertheless, Sweden carefully avoided committing itself to Finnish foreign policy.[47] Finland's military policy included clandestine defence co-operation with Estonia.[48]

The period after the Finnish Civil War to the early 1930s was a politically unstable time in Finland because of the continued rivalry between the conservatives and the socialists. The Communist Party of Finland was declared illegal in 1931, and the nationalist Lapua Movement organised anticommunist violence, which culminated in a failed coup attempt in 1932. The successor of the Lapua Movement, the Patriotic People's Movement, had a minor presence in national politics and never had more than 14 seats of the 200 in the Finnish Parliament.[49] By the late 1930s, the export-oriented Finnish economy was growing and the nation's extreme political movements had diminished.[50]

 
The Soviet–Finnish Non-Aggression Pact was signed by Aarno Yrjö-Koskinen and Maxim Litvinov in Moscow 1932.

After Soviet involvement in the Finnish Civil War in 1918, no formal peace treaty was signed. In 1918 and 1919, Finnish volunteers conducted two unsuccessful military incursions across the Soviet border, the Viena and Aunus expeditions, to annex areas in Karelia that according to the Greater Finland ideology would combine all Baltic Finnic peoples into a single state. In 1920, Finnish communists based in Soviet Russia attempted to assassinate the former Finnish White Guard Commander-in-Chief, Marshal Carl Gustaf Emil Mannerheim. On 14 October 1920, Finland and Soviet Russia signed the Treaty of Tartu, confirming the old border between the autonomous Grand Duchy of Finland and Imperial Russia proper as the new Finnish–Soviet border. Finland also received Petsamo Province, with its ice-free harbour on the Arctic Ocean.[51][52] Despite the signing of the treaty, relations between the two countries remained strained. The Finnish government allowed volunteers to cross the border to support the East Karelian uprising in Russia in 1921, and Finnish communists in the Soviet Union continued to prepare for revenge and staged a cross-border raid into Finland, the Pork Mutiny, in 1922.[53] In 1932, the Soviet–Finnish Non-Aggression Pact was signed between both countries, and it was reaffirmed for ten years in 1934.[53] Foreign trade in Finland was booming, but less than 1% of it was with the Soviet Union.[54] In 1934, the Soviet Union also joined the League of Nations.[53]

Justification

Soviet General Secretary Joseph Stalin regarded it a disappointment that the Soviet Union could not halt the Finnish Revolution.[55] He thought that the pro-Finland movement in Karelia posed a direct threat to Leningrad and that the area and defences of Finland could be used to invade the Soviet Union or restrict fleet movements.[56] Soviet propaganda then painted Finland's leadership as a "vicious and reactionary fascist clique". Field Marshal Mannerheim and Väinö Tanner, the leader of the Finnish Social Democratic Party, were targeted for particular scorn.[57] When Stalin gained absolute power through the Great Purge of 1938, the Soviets changed their foreign policy toward Finland and began to pursue the reconquest of the provinces of Tsarist Russia that had been lost during the chaos of the October Revolution of 1917 and the Russian Civil War almost two decades earlier.[58] Soviet leaders believed that the old empire's extended borders provided territorial security and wanted Leningrad, only 32 km (20 mi) from the Finnish border, to enjoy a similar level of security against the rising power of Nazi Germany.[59][60]

Negotiations

 
Finnish soldiers gather breakfast from a field kitchen during "additional refresher training" at the Karelian Isthmus, on 10 October 1939.

In April 1938, NKVD agent Boris Yartsev contacted Finnish Foreign Minister Rudolf Holsti and Finnish Prime Minister Aimo Cajander, stating that the Soviets did not trust Germany and that war was considered possible between the two countries. The Red Army would not wait passively behind the border but would rather "advance to meet the enemy". Finnish representatives assured Yartsev that Finland was committed to a policy of neutrality and that the country would resist any armed incursion. Yartsev suggested that Finland cede or lease some islands in the Gulf of Finland along the seaward approaches to Leningrad, but Finland refused.[61][62]

Negotiations continued throughout 1938 without results. The Finnish reception of Soviet entreaties was decidedly cool, as the violent collectivisation and purges in Stalin's Soviet Union resulted in a poor opinion of the country. Most of the Finnish communist elite in the Soviet Union had been executed during the Great Purge, further tarnishing the Soviets' image in Finland. Meanwhile, Finland was attempting to negotiate a military co-operation plan with Sweden and hoping to jointly defend Åland.[63]

The Soviet Union and Nazi Germany signed the Molotov–Ribbentrop Pact in August 1939. It was publicly a non-aggression treaty, but it included a secret protocol in which eastern European countries were divided into spheres of interest. Finland fell into the Soviet sphere. On 1 September 1939, Germany began its invasion of Poland, and two days later, the United Kingdom and France declared war on Germany. On 17 September, the Soviets invaded Eastern Poland. Estonia, Latvia and Lithuania were soon forced to accept treaties that allowed the Soviets to establish military bases on their soil.[64] Estonia accepted the ultimatum by signing the agreement on 28 September. Latvia and Lithuania followed in October. Unlike the three Baltic countries, Finland started a gradual mobilisation under the guise of "additional refresher training".[65] The Soviets had already started intensive mobilisation near the Finnish border in 1938–39.[58] Assault troops thought to be necessary for the invasion did not begin deployment until October 1939. Operational plans made in September called for the invasion to start in November.[66][67]

On 5 October 1939, the Soviets invited a Finnish delegation to Moscow for negotiations. Juho Kusti Paasikivi, the Finnish envoy to Sweden, was sent to Moscow to represent the Finnish government[65] Furthermore, the negotiations were attended by Stalin in person, signalling the seriousness of the effort.[68] Paasikivi would later recount his surprise over the friendly atmosphere in which the delegation was received, and mentioned the pleasant manners of Stalin towards them.[69]

The meetings began on 12 October, with Molotov's offer of a mutual assistance pact, which the Finns immediately refused. To the Finns' surprise, Molotov dropped the offer and instead proposed an exchange of territory.[68] The offer stipulated that the Finnish-Soviet border on the Karelian Isthmus be moved westward to a point only 30 km (19 mi) east of Viipuri (Russian: Vyborg) and that Finland destroy all existing fortifications on the Karelian Isthmus. Likewise, the delegation demanded the cession of islands in the Gulf of Finland as well as Rybachy Peninsula (Finnish: Kalastajasaarento). The Finns would also have to lease the Hanko Peninsula for 30 years and to permit the Soviets to establish a military base there. In exchange, the Soviet Union would cede Repola and Porajärvi from Eastern Karelia (2120 square miles), an area twice the size as that of the territory demanded from Finland (1000 square miles).[65][70][71]

The Soviet offer divided the Finnish government: Gustaf Mannerheim had argued for an agreement, being pessimistic of the Finnish prospects in a war against the Soviet Union.[72] But the Finnish government was reticent in reaching an agreement out of mistrust for Stalin: there was a fear of repeated follow-up demands, which would have put the future of Finnish sovereignty in danger. There were also those, such as Foreign Minister Eljas Erkko and Prime Minister Aimo Cajander, and the Finnish intelligence in general, who mistook the demands and the Soviet military build-up as a mere bluff on the part of Stalin, and were thus disinclined to reach an agreement.[72]

The Finns made two counteroffers to cede the Terijoki area to the Soviet Union. That would double the distance between Leningrad and the Finnish border but was far less than the Soviets had demanded.[73] The Finns would also cede the islands in the Gulf of Finland, but they would not agree to lease any territory to the USSR for military purposes.[74][75]

On the next meeting on 23 October, Stalin conceded to lessen his demands: a reduction in the amount of land demanded in Karelia; a reduction of the Hanko garrison from 5000 to 4000 men; and reducing the length of lease from 30 years to whatever date the ongoing (second world) war in Europe would end.[76] However, this sudden change, contrary to previous statements that Soviet demands were minimalist and thus unalterable, had surprised the Finnish government, and lead them to believe more concession may be forthcoming. Thus, Paasikivi's idea of reaching some sort of compromise by offering the Soviets the island of Jussarö and the fort of Ino were refused by Helsinki.[77]

On 31 October, Molotov publicly announced the Soviet demands to the Supreme Soviet. This surprised the Finns, and lent credibility to Soviet claims that their demands were minimalist and thus unalterable, as it would have been impossible to reduce them without a loss of prestige after having made them public.[78] However, the Soviet offer was eventually rejected with respect to the opinion of the public and Parliament.[73]

At the meeting on 9 November, Paasikivi announced to the attending Stalin and Molotov the Finnish refusal to accept even their reduced demands. The Soviets were visibly surprised. Finnish Foreign Minister Vaino Tanner later wrote that "the eyes of our opposite numbers opened wide". Stalin had asked "You don't even offer Ino?"[79] This would become the final meeting: the Soviets stopped responding to further Finnish letters and on 13 November, when the Finnish delegation was recalled from Moscow, no Soviet officials came to see them off.[80] The Finns had left under the expectation that the negotiations would continue.[81] Instead, the Soviet Union ramped up its military preparations.[82]

The negotiations had failed, as neither side was willing to substantially reduce their demands, nor was either side able to fully trust the other. The Finns were fearful of an encroachment on their sovereignty, while the Soviets were (claiming to be) fearful of a springboard for international enemies in Finland, in close proximity to Leningrad. No promises to the contrary managed to persuade the other.[83] Additionally, both sides had misunderstood the others position: the Finns had assumed that the Soviets had opened up on a maximalist demand, ready to be traded down smaller. The Soviets instead had stressed the minimalist nature of their demands, and were incredulous over Finnish reluctance to agree.[75] Finally, there was also Stalin's unwillingness or inability to accept that any territorial concessions on the part of Finland would have only been possible by a 4/5th majority in the Finnish parliament. He had mocked such a requirement, proposing that they count his and Molotov's votes, too.[84]

Shelling of Mainila and Soviet intentions

On 26 November 1939, an incident was reported near the Soviet village of Mainila, near the border with Finland. A Soviet border guard post had been shelled by an unknown party resulting, according to Soviet reports, in the deaths of four and injuries of nine border guards. Research conducted by several Finnish and Russian historians later concluded that the shelling was a false flag operation since there were no artillery units there, and it was carried out from the Soviet side of the border by an NKVD unit with the purpose of providing the Soviets with a casus belli and a pretext to withdraw from the non-aggression pact.[85][86][F 9] Soviet war games held in March 1938 and 1939 had been based on a scenario in which border incidents taking place at the village of Mainila would spark the war.[89]

 
29 November 1939, foreign journalists at Mainila, where a border incident between Finland and the Soviet Union escalated into the Winter War.

Molotov claimed that the incident was a Finnish artillery attack. He demanded that Finland apologise for the incident and to move its forces beyond a line 20–25 km (12–16 mi) from the border.[90] Finland denied responsibility for the attack, rejected the demands and called for a joint Finnish–Soviet commission to examine the incident. In turn, the Soviet Union claimed that the Finnish response was hostile, renounced the non-aggression pact and severed diplomatic relations with Finland on 28 November. In the following years, Soviet historiography described the incident as Finnish provocation. Doubt on the official Soviet version was cast only in the late 1980s, during the policy of glasnost. The issue has continued to divide Russian historiography even after the end of the Soviet Union in 1991.[91][92]

Soviet intentions

In 2013, Russian President Vladimir Putin stated at a meeting with military historians that the Soviets had launched the Winter War to "correct mistakes" made in determining the border with Finland after 1917.[93] Opinion on the scale of the initial Soviet invasion decision is divided. The puppet Finnish communist government and the Molotov–Ribbentrop Pact's secret protocol is used as proof that the Soviet Union had intended to conquer all of Finland.[F 10]

On 1 December 1939, the Soviet Union formed a puppet government, named the Finnish Democratic Republic, to govern Finland after Soviet conquest.[F 11] A declaration delivered via TASS stated:

The People's Government in its present composition regards itself as a provisional government. Immediately upon arrival in Helsinki, capital of the country, it will be reorganised and its composition enlarged by the inclusion of representatives of the various parties and groups participating in the people's front of toilers.[98]

Soviet leaflets dropped over Helsinki on the first day of the war stated: "Finnish Comrades! We come to you not as conquerors, but as liberators of the Finnish people from the oppression of the capitalists and the landlords".[99][100]

In 1939, Soviet military leadership had formulated a realistic and comprehensive plan for the occupation of Finland.[101] However, Joseph Stalin was not pleased with the conservative pace that the operation required and demanded new plans be drawn up. With the new plans, the key deadline for Finland's capitulation was to be Stalin's 60th birthday on 21 December.[102] Convinced of the invasion's forthcoming success, Andrei Zhdanov, chairman of the highest legislative body in the Soviet Union, commissioned a celebratory piece of music from Dmitri Shostakovich, Suite on Finnish Themes, intended to be performed as the marching bands of the Red Army paraded through Helsinki.[103][104]

Hungarian historian István Ravasz wrote that the Soviet Central Committee had set out in 1939 that the former borders of the Tsarist Empire were to be restored, including Finland.[30] American political scientist Dan Reiter stated that the Soviets "sought to impose a regime change" and thus "achieve absolute victory". He quoted Molotov, who had commented in November 1939 on the regime change plan to a Soviet ambassador that the new government "will not be Soviet, but one of a democratic republic. Nobody is going to set up Soviets over there, but we hope it will be a government we can come to terms with as to ensure the security of Leningrad".[33] According to Russian historian Yuri Kilin, the Soviet terms encompassed the strongest fortified approaches of the Finnish defences for a reason. He claimed that Stalin had little hope for such a deal but would play for time for the ongoing mobilisation. He stated the objective as being to secure Finland from being used as a staging ground by means of regime change.[105]

Others argue against the idea of a complete Soviet conquest. American historian William R. Trotter asserted that Stalin's objective was to secure Leningrad's flank from a possible German invasion through Finland. He stated that "the strongest argument" against a Soviet intention of full conquest is that it did not happen in either 1939 or during the Continuation War in 1944 even though Stalin "could have done so with comparative ease".[35] Bradley Lightbody wrote that the "entire Soviet aim had been to make the Soviet border more secure".[36] In 2002, Russian historian A. Chubaryan stated that no documents had been found in Russian archives that support a Soviet plan to annex Finland. Rather, the objective was to gain Finnish territory and to reinforce Soviet influence in the region.[34]

Another American historian Stephen Kotkin also shares the position that the Soviet Union did not aim for annexation. He points out the different treatment Finland was given, compared to the Baltics: unlike the pacts of mutual assistance that the Baltics were pressured into, resulting in their total Sovietization, the Soviets demanded limited territorial concessions from Finland, and even offered land in return, which would not have made sense if full Sovietization was intended.[106] And according to Kotkin, Stalin seemed to be genuinely interested in reaching an agreement during the negotiations: he had personally attended six of the seven meetings with the Finns, and had multiple times reduced his demands.[107] However, mutual mistrust and misunderstandings would mar the negotiations, producing an impasse.[83]

Opposing forces

Soviet military plan

Before the war, Soviet leadership had expected total victory within a few weeks. The Red Army had just completed the invasion of eastern Poland at a cost of fewer than 4,000 casualties after Germany attacked Poland from the west. Stalin's expectations of a quick Soviet triumph were backed up by politician Andrei Zhdanov and military strategist Kliment Voroshilov, but other generals were more reserved. Red Army Chief of Staff Boris Shaposhnikov advocated a narrow-front assault right on the Karelian isthmus.[108] Additionally, Shaposhnikov argued for a fuller build-up, extensive fire support and logistical preparations, a rational order of battle and the deployment of the army's best units. Zhdanov's military commander, Kirill Meretskov, reported, "The terrain of coming operations is split by lakes, rivers, swamps, and is almost entirely covered by forests.... The proper use of our forces will be difficult". These doubts were not reflected in Meretskov's troop deployments, and he publicly announced that the Finnish campaign would take two weeks at most. Soviet soldiers had even been warned not to cross the border mistakenly into Sweden.[109]

Stalin's purges in the 1930s had devastated the officer corps of the Red Army; those purged included three of its five marshals, 220 of its 264 division or higher-level commanders and 36,761 officers of all ranks. Fewer than half of all the officers remained.[110][111] They were commonly replaced by soldiers who were less competent but more loyal to their superiors. Unit commanders were overseen by political commissars, whose approval was needed to approve and ratify military decisions, which they evaluated based on their political merits. The dual system further complicated the Soviet chain of command[112][113] and annulled the independence of commanding officers.[114]

After the Soviet success at the Battles of Khalkhin Gol against Japan, on the USSR's eastern border, Soviet High Command had divided into two factions. One side was represented by the Spanish Civil War veterans General Pavel Rychagov from the Soviet Air Forces; the tank expert General Dmitry Pavlov and Stalin's favourite general, Marshal Grigory Kulik, the chief of artillery.[115] The other faction was led by Khalkhin Gol veterans General Georgy Zhukov of the Red Army and General Grigory Kravchenko of the Soviet Air Forces.[116] Under this divided command structure, the lessons of the Soviet Union's "first real war on a massive scale using tanks, artillery, and aircraft" at Khalkin Gol went unheeded.[117] As a result, Russian BT tanks were less successful during the Winter War, and it took the Soviet Union three months and over a million men to accomplish what Zhukov had managed at Khalkhin Gol in ten days (albeit in completely different circumstances).[117][118]

Soviet order of battle

 
Dense forests of Ladoga Karelia at Kollaa. A Soviet tank on the road in the background according to the photographer.

Soviet generals were impressed by the success of German Blitzkrieg tactics, but they had been tailored to conditions in Central Europe, with its dense well-mapped network of paved roads. Armies fighting there had recognised supply and communications centres, which could be easily targeted by armoured vehicle regiments. Finnish Army centres, in contrast, were deep inside the country. There were no paved roads, and even gravel or dirt roads were scarce. Most of the terrain consisted of trackless forests and swamps. The war correspondent John Langdon-Davies observed the landscape: "Every acre of its surface was created to be the despair of an attacking military force".[119] Waging Blitzkrieg in Finland was a highly-difficult proposition, and according to Trotter, the Red Army failed to meet the level of tactical co-ordination and local initiative that would be required to execute such tactics in Finland.[120]

Commander of the Leningrad Military District Kiril Meretskov initially ran the overall operation against the Finns.[121] The command was passed on 9 December 1939 to the General Staff Supreme Command (later known as Stavka), directly under Kliment Voroshilov (chairman), Nikolai Kuznetsov, Stalin and Boris Shaposhnikov.[122][123] On 28 December, when Stalin asked for volunteers to take over military command, Semyon Timoshenko offered himself on the condition that he be allowed to implement Shaposhnikov's initial plan of a focused attack on the Karelian Isthmus to break the Mannerhiem Line; it was accepted.[124][125] In January 1940, the Leningrad Military District was reformed and renamed "North-Western Front".[125]

The Soviet forces were organised as follows:[126]

  • The 7th Army, comprising nine divisions, a tank corps and three tank brigades, was located on the Karelian Isthmus. Its objective was to quickly overrun the Finnish defenses on the Karelian Isthmus and conquer Viipuri. From there, the 7th Army was to continue towards Lappeenranta, then turn west towards Lahti, before the final push to the capital Helsinki. The force was later divided into the 7th and 13th Armies.[127][128]
  • The 8th Army, comprising six divisions and a tank brigade, was north of Lake Ladoga. Its mission was to execute a flanking manoeuvre around the northern shore of Lake Ladoga to strike at the rear of the Mannerheim Line.[127]
  • The 9th Army was positioned to strike into Central Finland through the Kainuu region. It was composed of three divisions with one more on its way. Its mission was to thrust westward to cut Finland in half.[127]
  • The 14th Army, comprising three divisions, was based in Murmansk. Its objectives were to capture the Arctic port of Petsamo and then advance to the town of Rovaniemi.[127]

Finnish order of battle

 
Offensives of the four Soviet armies from 30 November to 22 December 1939 displayed in red[129][130]

The Finnish strategy was dictated by geography. The 1,340 km (830 mi) border with the Soviet Union was mostly impassable except along a handful of unpaved roads. In prewar calculations, the Finnish Defence Command, which had established its wartime headquarters at Mikkeli,[126] had estimated seven Soviet divisions on the Karelian Isthmus and no more than five along the whole border north of Lake Ladoga. In the estimation, the manpower ratio would have favoured the attacker by three to one. The true ratio was much higher, however, since for example, 12 Soviet divisions were deployed north of Lake Ladoga.[131]

Finland had a large force of reservists, which was trained in regular maneuvers, some of which had experience from the recent Finnish Civil War. The soldiers were also almost universally trained in basic survival techniques, such as skiing. The Finnish Army was not able to equip all its soldiers with proper uniforms at the outbreak of war, but its reservists were equipped with warm civilian clothing. However, the sparsely-populated highly-agrarian Finland had to draft so many of its working men that the Finnish economy was massively strained because of a lack of workers. An even greater problem than lack of soldiers was the lack of materiel since foreign shipments of anti-tank weapons and aircraft were arriving only in small quantities. The ammunition situation was alarming, as stockpiles had cartridges, shells and fuel to last only 19 to 60 days. The ammunition shortage meant the Finns could seldom afford counter-battery or saturation fire. Finnish tank forces were operationally nonexistent.[131] The ammunition situation was alleviated somewhat since Finns were largely armed with Mosin–Nagant rifles dating from the Finnish Civil War, which used the same 7.62×54mmR cartridge that was used by Soviet forces. The situation was so severe that Finnish soldiers sometimes had to maintain their ammunition supply by looting the bodies of dead Soviet soldiers.[132]

The Finnish forces were positioned as follows:[133]

Soviet invasion

Start of invasion and political operations

On 30 November 1939, Soviet forces invaded Finland with 21 divisions, totalling 450,000 men, and bombed Helsinki,[127][134] killing about 100 citizens and destroying more than 50 buildings. In response to international criticism, Soviet Foreign Minister Vyacheslav Molotov stated that the Soviet Air Force was not bombing Finnish cities but rather dropping humanitarian aid to the starving Finnish population; the bombs were sarcastically dubbed Molotov bread baskets by Finns.[135][136] The Finnish statesman J. K. Paasikivi commented that the Soviet attack without a declaration of war violated three separate non-aggression pacts: the Treaty of Tartu, which was signed in 1920, the non-aggression pact between Finland and the Soviet Union, which was signed in 1932 and again in 1934; and also the Covenant of the League of Nations, which the Soviet Union signed in 1934.[88] Field Marshal C.G.E. Mannerheim was appointed Commander-in-Chief of the Finnish Defence Forces after the Soviet attack. In a further reshuffling, Aimo Cajander's caretaker cabinet was replaced by Risto Ryti and his cabinet, with Väinö Tanner as foreign minister because of opposition to Cajander's prewar politics.[137] Finland brought the matter of the Soviet invasion before the League of Nations. The League expelled the Soviet Union on 14 December 1939 and exhorted its members to aid Finland.[138][139]

Headed by Otto Wille Kuusinen, the Finnish Democratic Republic puppet government operated in the parts of Finnish Karelia occupied by the Soviets, and was also referred to as the "Terijoki Government", after the village of Terijoki, the first settlement captured by the advancing Red Army.[140] After the war, the puppet government was reabsorbed into the Soviet Union. From the very outset of the war, working-class Finns stood behind the legitimate government in Helsinki.[138] Finnish national unity against the Soviet invasion was later called the spirit of the Winter War.[141]

First battles and Soviet advance to Mannerheim Line

 
The situation on 7 December: Soviets have reached the Mannerheim Line on the Karelian Isthmus.
  Finnish division (XX) or corps (XXX)
  Soviet division (XX), corps (XXX) or army (XXXX)

The array of Finnish defence structures that during the war started to be called the Mannerheim Line was located on the Karelian Isthmus approximately 30 to 75 km (19 to 47 mi) from the Soviet border. The Red Army soldiers on the Isthmus numbered 250,000, facing 130,000 Finns.[142] The Finnish command deployed a defence in depth of about 21,000 men in the area in front of the Mannerheim Line to delay and damage the Red Army before it reached the line.[143] In combat, the most severe cause of confusion among Finnish soldiers was Soviet tanks. The Finns had few anti-tank weapons and insufficient training in modern anti-tank tactics. According to Trotter, the favoured Soviet armoured tactic was a simple frontal charge, the weaknesses of which could be exploited. The Finns learned that at close range, tanks could be dealt with in many ways; for example, logs and crowbars jammed into the bogie wheels would often immobilise a tank. Soon, Finns fielded a better ad hoc weapon, the Molotov cocktail, a glass bottle filled with flammable liquids and with a simple hand-lit fuse. Molotov cocktails were eventually mass-produced by the Finnish Alko alcoholic-beverage corporation and bundled with matches with which to light them. 80 Soviet tanks were destroyed in the border zone engagements.[144]

By 6 December, all of the Finnish covering forces had withdrawn to the Mannerheim Line. The Red Army began its first major attack against the Line in Taipale – the area between the shore of Lake Ladoga, the Taipale river and the Suvanto waterway. Along the Suvanto sector, the Finns had a slight advantage of elevation and dry ground to dig into. The Finnish artillery had scouted the area and made fire plans in advance, anticipating a Soviet assault. The Battle of Taipale began with a forty-hour Soviet artillery preparation. After the barrage, Soviet infantry attacked across open ground but was repulsed with heavy casualties. From 6 to 12 December, the Red Army continued to try to engage using only a single division. Next, the Red Army strengthened its artillery and deployed tanks and the 150th Rifle Division forward to the Taipale front. On 14 December, the bolstered Soviet forces launched a new attack but were pushed back again. A third Soviet division entered the fight but performed poorly and panicked under shell fire. The assaults continued without success, and the Red Army suffered heavy losses. One typical Soviet attack during the battle lasted just an hour but left 1,000 dead and 27 tanks strewn on the ice.[145] North of Lake Ladoga on the Ladoga Karelia front, the defending Finnish units relied on the terrain. Ladoga Karelia, a large forest wilderness, did not have road networks for the modern Red Army.[146] The Soviet 8th Army had extended a new railroad line to the border, which could double the supply capability on the front. On 12 December, the advancing Soviet 139th Rifle Division, supported by the 56th Rifle Division, was defeated by a much smaller Finnish force under Paavo Talvela in Tolvajärvi, the first Finnish victory of the war.[147]

In Central and Northern Finland, roads were few and the terrain hostile. The Finns did not expect large-scale Soviet attacks, but the Soviets sent eight divisions, heavily supported by armour and artillery. The 155th Rifle Division attacked at Lieksa, and further north the 44th attacked at Kuhmo. The 163rd Rifle Division was deployed at Suomussalmi and ordered to cut Finland in half by advancing on the Raate road. In Finnish Lapland, the Soviet 88th and 122nd Rifle Divisions attacked at Salla. The Arctic port of Petsamo was attacked by the 104th Mountain Rifle Division by sea and land, supported by naval gunfire.[148]

Operations from December to January

Weather conditions

 
Swedish volunteer with a Carl Gustaf M/96 rifle wearing a face wool mask.[149]

The winter of 1939–40 was exceptionally cold with the Karelian Isthmus experiencing a record low temperature of −43 °C (−45 °F) on 16 January 1940.[150] At the beginning of the war, only those Finnish soldiers who were in active service had uniforms and weapons. The rest had to make do with their own clothing, which for many soldiers was their normal winter clothing with a semblance of insignia added. Finnish soldiers were skilled in cross-country skiing.[151] The cold, snow, forest, and long hours of darkness were factors that the Finns could use to their advantage. The Finns dressed in layers, and the ski troopers wore a lightweight white snow cape. This snow-camouflage made the ski troopers almost invisible so that they could more easily execute guerrilla attacks against Soviet columns. At the beginning of the war, Soviet tanks were painted in standard olive drab and men dressed in regular khaki uniforms. Not until late January 1940 did the Soviets paint their equipment white and issue snowsuits to their infantry.[152]

Most Soviet soldiers had proper winter clothes, but this was not the case with every unit. In the Battle of Suomussalmi, thousands of Soviet soldiers died of frostbite. The Soviet troops also lacked skill in skiing, so soldiers were restricted to movement by road and were forced to move in long columns. The Red Army lacked proper winter tents, and troops had to sleep in improvised shelters.[153] Some Soviet units incurred frostbite casualties as high as ten per cent even before crossing the Finnish border.[152] However, the cold weather did give an advantage to Soviet tanks, as they could move over frozen terrain and bodies of water, rather than being immobilised in swamps and mud.[153] According to Krivosheev, at least 61,506 Soviet troops were sick or frostbitten during the war.[19]

Finnish guerrilla tactics

 
Soviet tracks at Kianta Lake, Suomussalmi during a Finnish pursuit in December 1939. Nordic combined skier Timo Murama is pictured.

In battles from Ladoga Karelia to the Arctic port of Petsamo, the Finns used guerrilla tactics. The Red Army was superior in numbers and material, but Finns used the advantages of speed, manoeuvre warfare and economy of force. Particularly on the Ladoga Karelia front and during the Battle of Raate Road, the Finns isolated smaller portions of numerically superior Soviet forces. With Soviet forces divided into smaller groups, the Finns dealt with them individually and attacked from all sides.[154]

For many of the encircled Soviet troops in a pocket (called a motti in Finnish, originally meaning 1 m3 (35 cu ft) of firewood), staying alive was an ordeal comparable to combat. The men were freezing and starving and endured poor sanitary conditions. Historian William R. Trotter described these conditions as follows: "The Soviet soldier had no choice. If he refused to fight, he would be shot. If he tried to sneak through the forest, he would freeze to death. And surrender was no option for him; Soviet propaganda had told him how the Finns would torture prisoners to death."[155] The problem however was that the Finns were mostly too weak to fully exploit their success. Some of the pockets of encircled Soviet soldiers held out for weeks and even months, binding a huge number of Finnish forces.

Battles of the Mannerheim Line

The terrain on the Karelian Isthmus did not allow guerrilla tactics, so the Finns were forced to resort to the more conventional Mannerheim Line, with its flanks protected by large bodies of water. Soviet propaganda claimed that it was as strong as or even stronger than the Maginot Line. Finnish historians, for their part, have belittled the line's strength, insisting that it was mostly conventional trenches and log-covered dugouts.[156] The Finns had built 221 strong-points along the Karelian Isthmus, mostly in the early 1920s. Many were extended in the late 1930s. Despite these defensive preparations, even the most fortified section of the Mannerheim Line had only one reinforced-concrete bunker per kilometre. Overall, the line was weaker than similar lines in mainland Europe.[157] According to the Finns, the real strength of the line was the "stubborn defenders with a lot of sisu" – a Finnish idiom roughly translated as "guts, fighting spirit".[156]

On the eastern side of the Isthmus, the Red Army attempted to break through the Mannerheim Line at the battle of Taipale. On the western side, Soviet units faced the Finnish line at Summa, near the city of Viipuri, on 16 December. The Finns had built 41 reinforced-concrete bunkers in the Summa area, making the defensive line in this area stronger than anywhere else on the Karelian Isthmus. Because of a mistake in planning, the nearby Munasuo swamp had a 1-kilometre (0.62 mi)-wide gap in the line.[158] During the First Battle of Summa, a number of Soviet tanks broke through the thin line on 19 December, but the Soviets could not benefit from the situation because of insufficient co-operation between branches of service. The Finns remained in their trenches, allowing the Soviet tanks to move freely behind the Finnish line, as the Finns had no proper anti-tank weapons. The Finns succeeded in repelling the main Soviet assault. The tanks, stranded behind enemy lines, attacked the strongpoints at random until they were eventually destroyed, 20 in all. By 22 December, the battle ended in a Finnish victory.[159]

The Soviet advance was stopped at the Mannerheim Line. Red Army troops suffered from poor morale and a shortage of supplies, eventually refusing to participate in more suicidal frontal attacks. The Finns, led by General Harald Öhquist, decided to launch a counter-attack and encircle three Soviet divisions into a motti near Viipuri on 23 December. Öhquist's plan was bold; however it failed. The Finns lost 1,300 men, and the Soviets were later estimated to have lost a similar number.[160]

Battles in Ladoga Karelia

 
Simo Häyhä, the legendary Finnish sniper, known as "the White Death" by Soviets.

The strength of the Red Army north of Lake Ladoga in Ladoga Karelia surprised the Finnish Headquarters. Two Finnish divisions were deployed there, the 12th Division led by Lauri Tiainen and the 13th Division led by Hannu Hannuksela. They also had a support group of three brigades, bringing their total strength to over 30,000. The Soviets deployed a division for almost every road leading west to the Finnish border. The 8th Army was led by Ivan Khabarov, who was replaced by Grigory Shtern on 13 December.[161] The Soviets' mission was to destroy the Finnish troops in the area of Ladoga Karelia and advance into the area between Sortavala and Joensuu within 10 days. The Soviets had a 3:1 advantage in manpower and a 5:1 advantage in artillery, as well as air supremacy.[162]

Finnish forces panicked and retreated in front of the overwhelming Red Army. The commander of the Finnish IV Army Corps Juho Heiskanen was replaced by Woldemar Hägglund on 4 December.[163] On 7 December, in the middle of the Ladoga Karelian front, Finnish units retreated near the small stream of Kollaa. The waterway itself did not offer protection, but alongside it, there were ridges up to 10 m (33 ft) high. The ensuing battle of Kollaa lasted until the end of the war. A memorable quote, "Kollaa holds" (Finnish: Kollaa kestää) became a legendary motto among Finns.[164] Further contributing to the legend of Kollaa was the sniper Simo Häyhä, dubbed "the White Death" by Soviets, and credited with over 500 kills.[165] Captain Aarne Juutilainen, dubbed "the Terror of Morocco", also became a living legend in the Battle of Kollaa.[166] To the north, the Finns retreated from Ägläjärvi to Tolvajärvi on 5 December and then repelled a Soviet offensive in the battle of Tolvajärvi on 11 December.[167]

In the south, two Soviet divisions were united on the northern side of the Lake Ladoga coastal road. As before, these divisions were trapped as the more mobile Finnish units counterattacked from the north to flank the Soviet columns. On 19 December, the Finns temporarily ceased their assaults due to exhaustion.[168] It was not until the period of 6–16 January 1940 that the Finns resumed their offensive, dividing Soviet divisions into smaller mottis.[169] Contrary to Finnish expectations, the encircled Soviet divisions did not try to break through to the east but instead entrenched. They were expecting reinforcements and supplies to arrive by air. As the Finns lacked the necessary heavy artillery equipment and were short of men, they often did not directly attack the mottis they had created; instead, they worked to eliminate only the most dangerous threats. Often the motti tactic was not applied as a strategy, but as a Finnish adaptation to the behaviour of Soviet troops under fire.[170] In spite of the cold and hunger, the Soviet troops did not surrender easily but fought bravely, often entrenching their tanks to be used as pillboxes and building timber dugouts. Some specialist Finnish soldiers were called in to attack the mottis; the most famous of them was Major Matti Aarnio, or "Motti-Matti" as he became known.[171]

In North Karelia, Soviet forces were outmanoeuvred at Ilomantsi and Lieksa. The Finns used effective guerrilla tactics, taking special advantage of their superior skiing skills and snow-white layered clothing and executing surprise ambushes and raids. By the end of December, the Soviets decided to retreat and transfer resources to more critical fronts.[172]

Battles in Kainuu

 
Dead Soviet soldiers and their equipment at Raate Road, Suomussalmi, after being encircled at the Battle of Raate Road

The Suomussalmi–Raate engagement was a double operation[173] which would later be used by military academics as a classic example of what well-led troops and innovative tactics can do against a much larger adversary. Suomussalmi was a municipality of 4,000 with long lakes, wild forests and few roads. The Finnish command believed that the Soviets would not attack there, but the Red Army committed two divisions to the Kainuu area with orders to cross the wilderness, capture the city of Oulu and effectively cut Finland in two. There were two roads leading to Suomussalmi from the frontier: the northern Juntusranta road and the southern Raate road.[174]

The Battle of Raate Road, which occurred during the month-long Battle of Suomussalmi, resulted in one of the largest Soviet losses in the Winter War. The Soviet 44th and parts of the 163rd Rifle Division, comprising about 14,000 troops,[175] were almost completely destroyed by a Finnish ambush as they marched along the forest road. A small unit blocked the Soviet advance while Finnish Colonel Hjalmar Siilasvuo and his 9th Division cut off the retreat route, split the enemy force into smaller mottis, and then proceeded to destroy the remnants in detail as they retreated. The Soviets suffered 7,000–9,000 casualties;[176] the Finnish units, 400.[177] The Finnish troops captured dozens of tanks, artillery pieces, anti-tank guns, hundreds of trucks, almost 2,000 horses, thousands of rifles, and much-needed ammunition and medical supplies.[178] So sure of their victory had the Soviets been that a military band, complete with instruments, banners and notes, was traveling with the 44th Division to perform in a victory parade. The Finns found their instruments among the captured materiel.[179]

Battles in Finnish Lapland

 
A Finnish soldier on guard near Kemijärvi in February 1940.

The Finnish area of Lapland, bestriding the Arctic Circle, is sparsely developed, with little daylight and persistent snow-cover during winter; the Finns expected nothing more than raiding parties and reconnaissance patrols. Instead, the Soviets sent full divisions.[180] On 11 December, the Finns rearranged the defence of Lapland and detached the Lapland Group from the North Finland Group. The group was placed under the command of Kurt Wallenius.[181]

In southern Lapland, near the village of Salla, the Soviet 88th and 122nd Divisions, totaling 35,000 men, advanced. In the Battle of Salla, the Soviets proceeded easily to Salla, where the road split. Further ahead was Kemijärvi, while the fork to Pelkosenniemi led northwest. On 17 December, the Soviet northern group, comprising an infantry regiment, a battalion, and a company of tanks, was outflanked by a Finnish battalion. The 122nd retreated, abandoning much of its heavy equipment and vehicles. Following this success, the Finns shuttled reinforcements to the defensive line in front of Kemijärvi. The Soviets hammered the defensive line without success. The Finns counter-attacked, and the Soviets retreated to a new defensive line where they stayed for the rest of the war.[182][183]

To the north was Finland's only ice-free port in the Arctic, Petsamo. The Finns lacked the manpower to defend it fully, as the main front was distant at the Karelian Isthmus. In the battle of Petsamo, the Soviet 104th Division attacked the Finnish 104th Independent Cover Company. The Finns abandoned Petsamo and concentrated on delaying actions. The area was treeless, windy, and relatively low, offering little defensible terrain. The almost constant darkness and extreme temperatures of the Lapland winter benefited the Finns, who executed guerrilla attacks against Soviet supply lines and patrols. As a result, the Soviet movements were halted by the efforts of one-fifth as many Finns.[180]

Aerial warfare

Soviet Air Force

The USSR enjoyed air superiority throughout the war. The Soviet Air Force, supporting the Red Army's invasion with about 2,500 aircraft (the most common type being Tupolev SB), was not as effective as the Soviets might have hoped. The material damage by the bomb raids was slight as Finland offered few valuable targets for strategic bombing. For example, the city of Tampere was one of the most important targets because it was an important railway junction, and also housed State Aircraft Factory and the Tampere Linen and Iron Industry premises, which manufactured munitions and weapons, including grenade launchers.[184][185] Often, targets were village depots with little value. The country had few modern highways in the interior, therefore making the railways the main targets for bombers. Rail tracks were cut thousands of times but the Finns hastily repaired them and service resumed within a matter of hours.[10] The Soviet Air Force learned from its early mistakes, and by late February instituted more effective tactics.[186]

The largest bombing raid against the capital of Finland, Helsinki, occurred on the first day of the war. The capital was bombed only a few times thereafter. All in all, Soviet bombings cost Finland five per cent of its total man-hour production. Nevertheless, Soviet air attacks affected thousands of civilians, killing 957.[11] The Soviets recorded 2,075 bombing attacks in 516 localities. The city of Viipuri, a major Soviet objective close to the Karelian Isthmus front, was almost levelled by nearly 12,000 bombs.[187] No attacks on civilian targets were mentioned in Soviet radio or newspaper reports. In January 1940, the Soviet Pravda newspaper continued to lie that no civilian targets in Finland had been struck, even accidentally.[188] It is estimated that the Soviet air force lost about 400 aircraft because of inclement weather, lack of fuel and tools, and during transport to the front. The Soviet Air Force flew approximately 44,000 sorties during the war.[186]

Finnish Air Force

 
March 1940, a Finnish Bristol Blenheim Mk. IV bomber of the No. 44 Squadron refuelling at its air base on a frozen lake in Tikkakoski. On the fuselage is the swastika, which the Finnish Air Force had adopted as their symbol in 1918. Despite the similarity, it was not a Nazi design but was based on the personal owner; Eric von Rosen had donated the first aircraft to the Air Force.

At the beginning of the war, Finland had a small air force, with only 114 combat planes fit for duty. Missions were limited, and fighter aircraft were mainly used to repel Soviet bombers. Strategic bombings doubled as opportunities for military reconnaissance. Old-fashioned and few in number, aircraft offered little support for Finnish ground troops. In spite of losses, the number of planes in the Finnish Air Force rose by over 50 per cent by the end of the war.[189] The Finns received shipments of British, French, Italian, Swedish and American aircraft.[190]

Finnish fighter pilots often flew their motley collection of planes into Soviet formations that outnumbered them 10 or even 20 times. Finnish fighters shot down 200 Soviet aircraft, while losing 62 of their own on all causes.[14] Finnish anti-aircraft guns downed more than 300 enemy aircraft.[14] Often, a Finnish forward air base consisted of a frozen lake, a windsock, a telephone set and some tents. Air-raid warnings were given by Finnish women organised by the Lotta Svärd.[191] The top scoring fighter ace was Jorma Sarvanto, with 12.83 victories. He would increase his tally during the Continuation War.

Naval warfare

Naval activity

There was little naval activity during the Winter War. The Baltic Sea began to freeze over by the end of December, impeding the movement of warships; by mid-winter, only ice breakers and submarines could still move. The other reason for low naval activity was the nature of Soviet Navy forces in the area. The Baltic Fleet was a coastal defence force which did not have the training, logistical structure, or landing craft to undertake large-scale operations. The Baltic Fleet possessed two battleships, one heavy cruiser, almost 20 destroyers, 50 motor torpedo boats, 52 submarines, and other miscellaneous vessels. The Soviets used naval bases in Paldiski, Tallinn and Liepāja for their operations.[192]

The Finnish Navy was a coastal defence force with two coastal defence ships, five submarines, four gunboats, seven motor torpedo boats, one minelayer and six minesweepers and at least 5 icebreakers. The two coastal defence ships, Ilmarinen and Väinämöinen, were moved to harbour in Turku where they were used to bolster the air defence. Their anti-aircraft guns shot down one or two planes over the city, and the ships remained there for the rest of the war.[137] At 18 January, Finnish armed icebreaker Tarmo was severely damaged at Kotka, received 2 bombs from a Soviet bomber with 39 Finnish troops killed in action. As well as coastal defence, the Finnish Navy protected the Ålandish and Finnish merchant vessels in the Baltic Sea.[193]

Soviet aircraft bombed Finnish vessels and harbours and dropped mines into Finnish seaways. Still, only five merchant ships were lost to Soviet action. World War II, which had started before the Winter War, proved more costly for the Finnish merchant vessels, with 26 lost due to hostile action in 1939 and 1940.[194]

Coastal artillery

Finnish coastal artillery batteries defended important harbours and naval bases. Most batteries were left over from the Imperial Russian period, with 152 mm (6.0 in) guns being the most numerous. Finland attempted to modernise its old guns and installed a number of new batteries, the largest of which featured a 305 mm (12.0 in) gun battery on the island of Kuivasaari in front of Helsinki, originally intended to block the Gulf of Finland to Soviet ships with the help of batteries on the Estonian side.[195]

The first naval battle occurred in the Gulf of Finland on 1 December, near the island of Russarö, 5 km (3.1 mi) south of Hanko. That day, the weather was fair and visibility was excellent. The Finns spotted the Soviet cruiser Kirov and two destroyers. When the ships were at a range of 24 km (13 nmi; 15 mi), the Finns opened fire with four 234 mm (9.2 in) coastal guns. After five minutes of firing by the coastal guns, the cruiser had been damaged by near misses and retreated. The destroyers remained undamaged, but the Kirov suffered 17 dead and 30 wounded. The Soviets already knew the locations of the Finnish coastal batteries, but were surprised by their range.[196]

Coastal artillery had a greater effect on land by reinforcing defence in conjunction with army artillery. Two sets of fortress artillery made significant contributions to the early battles on the Karelian Isthmus and in Ladoga Karelia. These were located at Kaarnajoki on the Eastern Isthmus and at Mantsi on the northeastern shore of Lake Ladoga. The fortress of Koivisto provided similar support from the southwestern coast of the Isthmus.[197]

Soviet breakthrough in February

Red Army reforms and offensive preparations

 
Finnish officers inspecting Soviet skiing manuals gained as loot from the Battle of Suomussalmi

Joseph Stalin was not pleased with the results of December in the Finnish campaign. The Red Army had been humiliated. By the third week of the war, Soviet propaganda was already working to explain the failures of the Soviet military to the populace: blaming bad terrain and harsh climate, and falsely claiming that the Mannerheim Line was stronger than the Maginot Line, and that the Americans had sent 1,000 of their best pilots to Finland. However, the Soviets were confronted with the unavoidable reality of the poor performance of their troops against the Finns. Stalin in particular was concerned about the effects of the war on Soviet reputation.[198] In late December, the Soviets decided to reduce their strategic objectives and focused on bringing the war to an end.[199]

Chief of Staff Boris Shaposhnikov was given full authority over operations in the Finnish theatre, and he ordered the suspension of frontal assaults in late December. Kliment Voroshilov was replaced with Semyon Timoshenko as the commander of the Soviet forces in the war on 7 January.[200] The main focus of the Soviet attack was switched to the Karelian Isthmus. Timoshenko and Zhdanov reorganised and tightened control between different branches of service in the Red Army. They also changed tactical doctrines to meet the realities of the situation.[201]

The Soviet forces on the Karelian Isthmus were divided into two armies: the 7th and the 13th Army. The 7th Army, now under Kirill Meretskov, would concentrate 75 per cent of its strength against the 16 km (9.9 mi) stretch of the Mannerheim Line between Taipale and the Munasuo swamp. Tactics would be basic: an armoured wedge for the initial breakthrough, followed by the main infantry and vehicle assault force. The Red Army would prepare by pinpointing the Finnish frontline fortifications. The 123rd Rifle Division then rehearsed the assault on life-size mock-ups. The Soviets shipped large numbers of new tanks and artillery pieces to the theatre. Troops were increased from ten divisions to 25–26 divisions with six or seven tank brigades and several independent tank platoons as support, totalling 600,000 soldiers.[201] On 1 February, the Red Army began a large offensive, firing 300,000 shells into the Finnish line in the first 24 hours of the bombardment.[202]

Soviet offensive on the Karelian Isthmus

Although the Karelian Isthmus front was less active in January than in December, the Soviets increased bombardments, wearing down the defenders and softening their fortifications. During daylight hours, the Finns took shelter inside their fortifications from the bombardments and repaired damage during the night. The situation led quickly to war exhaustion among the Finns, who lost over 3,000 soldiers in trench warfare. The Soviets also made occasional small infantry assaults with one or two companies.[203] Because of the shortage of ammunition, Finnish artillery emplacements were under orders to fire only against directly threatening ground attacks. On 1 February, the Soviets further escalated their artillery and air bombardments.[202]

Although the Soviets refined their tactics and morale improved, the generals were still willing to accept massive losses to reach their objectives. Attacks were screened by smoke, heavy artillery, and armour support, but the infantry charged in the open and in dense formations.[202] Unlike their tactics in December, Soviet tanks advanced in smaller numbers. The Finns could not easily eliminate tanks if infantry troops protected them.[204] After 10 days of constant artillery barrage, the Soviets achieved a breakthrough on the Western Karelian Isthmus in the Second Battle of Summa.[205]

By 11 February, the Soviets had approximately 460,000 soldiers, 3,350 artillery pieces, 3,000 tanks and 1,300 aircraft deployed on the Karelian Isthmus. The Red Army was constantly receiving new recruits after the breakthrough.[206] Opposing them, the Finns had eight divisions, totalling about 150,000 soldiers. One by one, the defenders' strongholds crumbled under the Soviet attacks and the Finns were forced to retreat. On 15 February, Mannerheim authorised a general retreat of the II Corps to a fallback line of defence.[207] On the eastern side of the isthmus, the Finns continued to resist Soviet assaults, achieving a stalemate in the battle of Taipale.[208]

Peace negotiations

Although the Finns attempted to re-open negotiations with Moscow by every means during the war, the Soviets did not respond. In early January, Finnish communist Hella Wuolijoki contacted the Finnish Government. She offered to contact Moscow through the Soviet Union's ambassador to Sweden, Alexandra Kollontai. Wuolijoki departed for Stockholm and met Kollontai secretly at a hotel. On 29 January, Molotov put an end to the puppet Terijoki Government and recognized the Ryti–Tanner government as the legal government of Finland, informing it that the USSR was willing to negotiate peace.[39][209]

By mid-February, it became clear that the Finnish forces were rapidly approaching exhaustion. For the Soviets, casualties were high, the situation was a source of political embarrassment to the Soviet regime, and there was a risk of Franco-British intervention (which was overestimated by Soviet intelligence in February and March 1940[210]). With the spring thaw approaching, the Soviet forces risked becoming bogged down in the forests. Finnish Foreign Minister Väinö Tanner arrived in Stockholm on 12 February and negotiated the peace terms with the Soviets through the Swedes. German representatives, not aware that the negotiations were underway, suggested on 17 February that Finland negotiate with the Soviet Union.[211]

Both Germany and Sweden were keen to see an end to the Winter War. The Germans feared losing the iron ore fields in Northern Sweden and threatened to attack at once if the Swedes granted the Allied forces right of passage. The German invasion plan, named Studie Nord, was later implemented as Operation Weserübung.[212] Leon Trotsky opined after the war that Hitler would view a Soviet occupation of Finland as a threat to this plan. Any potential German plans for bases in Finland would also be thwarted if the Soviets occupied Finland, though Trotsky himself believed that Hitler was not interested in occupying Finland, but rather its role as a buffer between Germany and the USSR.[213]

As the Finnish Cabinet hesitated in the face of harsh Soviet conditions, Sweden's King Gustav V made a public statement on 19 February in which he confirmed having declined Finnish pleas for support from Swedish troops. On 25 February, the Soviet peace terms were spelt out in detail. On 29 February, the Finnish Government accepted the Soviet terms in principle and was willing to enter into negotiations.[214] Red Army commanders wished to continue the war, whereas the Communist Party pointed out that the war had been too costly and called for the signing of a peace treaty. The party believed that Finland could be taken over later by means of a revolution. The heated discussion that ensued failed to yield any clear result and the matter went to a vote, in which the party's opinion prevailed and the decision was taken to bring hostilities to an end.[213]

End of war in March

 
Situation on the Karelian Isthmus on 13 March 1940, the last day of the war[215]
  Finnish corps (XXX) or Oesch's coast group
  Soviet corps (XXX) or army (XXXX)

On 5 March, the Red Army advanced 10 to 15 km (6.2 to 9.3 mi) past the Mannerheim Line and entered the suburbs of Viipuri. The same day, the Red Army established a beachhead on the Western Gulf of Viipuri. The Finns proposed an armistice on 6 March, but the Soviets, wanting to keep the pressure on the Finnish government, declined the offer. The Finnish peace delegation travelled to Moscow via Stockholm and arrived on 7 March. They were disappointed to find that Stalin was not present during peace negotiations, likely due to the Red Army's humiliation by the Finns.[213] The Soviets had further demands, as their military position was strong and improving. On 9 March, the Finnish military situation on the Karelian Isthmus was dire, as troops were experiencing heavy casualties. Artillery ammunition was exhausted and weapons were wearing out. The Finnish government, realizing that the hoped-for Franco-British military expedition would not arrive in time, as Norway and Sweden had not given the Allies right of passage, had little choice but to accept the Soviet terms.[216] Finnish President Kyösti Kallio resisted the idea of giving up any territory to the Soviet Union, but eventually agreed to sign the Moscow Peace Treaty. When he signed the document, the tormented president uttered the well-known words: "Let the hand wither that signs this monstrous treaty!"[217]

Moscow Peace Treaty

 
Finland's territorial concessions to the Soviet Union displayed in red

The Moscow Peace Treaty was signed in Moscow on 12 March 1940. A cease-fire took effect the next day at noon Leningrad time, 11 a.m. Helsinki time.[218][219] With it, Finland ceded a portion of Karelia, the entire Karelian Isthmus and land north of Lake Ladoga. The area included Viipuri (Finland's second-largest city [Population Register] or fourth-largest city [Church and Civil Register], depending on the census data[220]), much of Finland's industrialised territory, and significant land still held by Finland's military – all in all, nine per cent of Finnish territory. The ceded territory included 13 per cent of Finland's economic assets.[221] 12 per cent of Finland's population, 422,000 to 450,000 Karelians, were evacuated and lost their homes.[222][223][224] Finland ceded a part of the region of Salla, Rybachy Peninsula in the Barents Sea, and four islands in the Gulf of Finland. The Hanko peninsula was leased to the Soviet Union as a military base for 30 years. The region of Petsamo, captured by the Red Army during the war, was returned to Finland according to the treaty.[225]

Finnish concessions and territorial losses exceeded Soviet pre-war demands. Before the war, the Soviet Union demanded for the frontier with Finland on the Karelian Isthmus to be moved westward to a point 30 kilometres (19 mi) east of Viipuri to the line between Koivisto and Lipola; for existing fortifications on the Karelian Isthmus to be demolished and for the islands of Suursaari, Tytärsaari, and Koivisto in the Gulf of Finland and Rybachy Peninsula to be ceded. In exchange, the Soviet Union proposed to cede Repola and Porajärvi from Eastern Karelia, an area twice as large as the territories that were originally demanded from the Finns.[226][65][227]

Foreign support

Foreign volunteers

 
Norwegian volunteers somewhere in Northern Finland

World opinion largely supported the Finnish cause, and the Soviet aggression was generally deemed unjustified. World War II had not yet directly affected France, the United Kingdom or the United States; the Winter War was practically the only conflict in Europe at that time and thus held major world interest. Several foreign organisations sent material aid, and many countries granted credit and military materiel to Finland. Nazi Germany allowed arms to pass through its territory to Finland, but after a Swedish newspaper made this public, Adolf Hitler initiated a policy of silence towards Finland, as part of improved German–Soviet relations following the signing of the Molotov–Ribbentrop Pact.[228]

The largest foreign contingent came from neighboring Sweden, which provided nearly 8,760 volunteers during the war. The Volunteer Corps was formed of predominantly Swedes, as well as 1,010 Danes and 727 Norwegians. They fought on the northern front at Salla during the last days of the war. A Swedish unit of Gloster Gladiator fighters, named "the Flight Regiment 19" also participated. Swedish anti-air batteries with Bofors 40 mm (1.6 in) guns were responsible for air defence in northern Finland and the city of Turku.[229] Volunteers arrived from Hungary, Italy and Estonia. 350 American nationals of Finnish background volunteered, and 210 volunteers of other nationalities arrived in Finland before the war ended.[229] Max Manus, a Norwegian, fought in the Winter War before returning to Norway and later achieved fame as a resistance fighter during the German occupation of Norway. In total, Finland received 12,000 volunteers, 50 of whom died during the war.[230] The British actor Christopher Lee volunteered in the war for two weeks, but did not face combat.[231]

White émigrés and Russian prisoners-of-war

Finland officially refused overtures from the anti-Soviet Russian All-Military Union (ROVS) for aid. Nevertheless, Mannerheim eventually agreed to establish a small Russian detachment (Russkaya narodnaya armiya, RNA) of 200 men after being introduced to Boris Bazhanov, a high-ranking ROVS member, in person in January 1940. The project was deemed top secret, and was under the auspices of the intelligence division of the Finnish army headquarters.[232]

The ranks of RNA were to be filled by prisoners-of-war, but it would be commanded by White émigrés instead of captured Soviet Army officers, who were deemed unreliable. Bazhanov's Finnish assistant Feodor Schulgin chose Captain Vladimir Kiseleff, Lieutenant Vladimir Lugovskoy, Anatoly Budyansky and brothers Nikolay and Vladimir Bastamov as officers for the unit. Of the five, the Bastamovs were not Finnish citizens, but had Nansen passports. The prisoners-of-war were trained in Huittinen, although it is possible that some were also trained in Lempäälä.[232]

RNA never participated in battle, despite Boris Bazhanov's later claims to the contrary in his memoirs. About 35 to 40 members of it were present during a battle in Ruskeala in early March 1940, where they spread flyers and broadcast propaganda to encircled Soviet troops, but did not carry weapons. The men were subsequently detained by Finnish forces, who mistook them for Soviet infiltrators. After the war's end, Bazhanov was immediately asked to leave Finland, which he did. Finnish military historian Carl Geust presumes that most members of the RNA were executed after they were returned to the Soviet Union after the war. Additionally, Vladimir Bastamov was later extradited into the Soviet Union as one of the Leino prisoners in 1945, and was sentenced to 20 years of hard labour. He was released after Stalin's death and returned to Finland in 1956.[232]

Franco-British intervention plans

 
Franco-British support was offered on the condition their forces could pass freely from Narvik through neutral Norway and Sweden instead of the difficult passage through Soviet-occupied Petsamo.

France had been one of the earliest supporters of Finland during the Winter War. The French saw an opportunity to weaken Germany's resource imports via a Finnish counteroffensive, as both Sweden and the Soviet Union were strategic trading partners to Germany. France had another motive, preferring to have a major war in a remote part of Europe rather than on French soil. France planned to re‑arm the Polish exile units and transport them to the Finnish Arctic port of Petsamo. Another proposal was a massive air strike with Turkish co-operation against the Caucasus oil fields.[233]

The British, for their part, wanted to block the flow of iron ore from Swedish mines to Germany as the Swedes supplied up to 40 per cent of Germany's iron demand.[233] The matter was raised by British Admiral Reginald Plunkett on 18 September 1939, and the next day Winston Churchill brought up the subject in the Chamberlain War Cabinet.[234] On 11 December, Churchill opined that the British should gain a foothold in Scandinavia with the objective to help the Finns, but without a war with the Soviet Union.[235] Because of the heavy German reliance on Northern Sweden's iron ore, Hitler had made it clear to the Swedish government in December that any Allied troops on Swedish soil would immediately provoke a German invasion.[236]

On 19 December, French Prime Minister Édouard Daladier introduced his plan to the General Staff and the War Cabinet. In his plan, Daladier created linkage between the war in Finland and the iron ore in Sweden.[235] There was a danger of Finland's possible fall under Soviet hegemony. In turn, Nazi Germany could occupy both Norway and Sweden. These two powers could divide Scandinavia between them, as they had already done with Poland. The main motivation of the French and the British was to reduce German war-making ability.[237]

The Military Co-ordination Committee met on 20 December in London, and two days later the French plan was put forward.[237] The Anglo-French Supreme War Council elected to send notes to Norway and Sweden on 27 December, urging the Norwegians and Swedes to help Finland and offer the Allies their support. Norway and Sweden rejected the offer on 5 January 1940.[236] The Allies came up with a new plan, in which they would demand that Norway and Sweden give them right of passage by citing a League of Nations resolution as justification. The expedition troops would disembark at the Norwegian port of Narvik and proceed by rail toward Finland, passing through the Swedish ore fields on the way. This demand was sent to Norway and Sweden on 6 January, but it was likewise rejected six days later.[238]

Stymied but not yet dissuaded from the possibility of action, the Allies formulated a final plan on 29 January. First, the Finns would make a formal request for assistance. Then, the Allies would ask Norway and Sweden for permission to move the "volunteers" across their territory. Finally, to protect the supply line from German actions, the Allies would send units ashore at Namsos, Bergen, and Trondheim. The operation would have required 100,000 British and 35,000 French soldiers with naval and air support. The supply convoys would sail on 12 March and the landings would begin on 20 March.[239] The end of the war on 13 March cancelled Franco-British plans to send troops to Finland through Northern Scandinavia.[240]

Aftermath and casualties

Finland

 
Heroes' Memorial Day in Joensuu 19.5.1940.

The 105-day war had a profound and depressing effect in Finland. Meaningful international support was minimal and arrived late, and the German blockade had prevented most armament shipments.[241] The 15-month period between the Winter War and Operation Barbarossa, part of which was the Continuation War, was later called the Interim Peace.[225] After the end of the war, the situation of the Finnish Army on the Karelian Isthmus became a subject of debate in Finland. Orders had already been issued to prepare a retreat to the next line of defence in the Taipale sector. Estimates of how long the Red Army could have been delayed by retreat-and-stand operations varied from a few days to a few weeks,[242][243] or to a couple of months at most.[244]

Immediately after the war, Helsinki officially announced 19,576 dead.[245] According to revised estimates in 2005 by Finnish historians, 25,904 people died or went missing and 43,557 were wounded on the Finnish side during the war.[F 12] Finnish and Russian researchers have estimated that there were 800–1,100 Finnish prisoners of war, of whom between 10 and 20 per cent died. The Soviet Union repatriated 847 Finns after the War.[13] Air raids killed 957 civilians.[11] Between 20 and 30 tanks were destroyed and 62 aircraft were lost.[14] Also, Finland had to cede all ships of the Finnish Ladoga Naval Detachment to the Soviet Union by virtue of the Moscow Peace Treaty.

During the Interim Peace, Finland aimed to improve its defensive capabilities and conducted negotiations with Sweden on a military alliance, but negotiations ended once it became clear that both Germany and the Soviet Union opposed such an alliance.[246] On 31 July 1940, German Chancellor Adolf Hitler gave the order to plan an assault on the Soviet Union and so Germany had to reassess its position regarding Finland. Until then, Germany had rejected Finnish appeals to purchase arms. However, the prospect of an invasion of the Soviet Union reversed the policy. In August, the secret sale of weapons to Finland was permitted.[247]

Karelian evacuees established an interest group, the Finnish Karelian League, to defend Karelian rights and interests and to find a way to return ceded regions of Karelia to Finland.[224][248] Finland wished to re-enter the war mainly because of the Soviet invasion of Finland during the Winter War, which had taken place after Finland had failed by relying on the League of Nations and on Nordic neutrality.[249] Finland aimed primarily to reverse its territorial losses from the Moscow Peace Treaty and, depending on the success of the German invasion of the Soviet Union, possibly to expand its borders, especially into East Karelia. Some right-wing groups, such as the Academic Karelia Society, supported a Greater Finland ideology.[250] The Continuation War began in June 1941 and led to Finnish participation in the Siege of Leningrad as well as the Finnish occupation of East Karelia.[251][252]

Soviet Union

 
Monument devoted to the victims of the Winter War in St. Petersburg

The Soviet General Staff Supreme Command (Stavka) met in April 1940, reviewed the lessons of the Finnish campaign and recommended reforms. The role of frontline political commissars was reduced, and old-fashioned ranks and forms of discipline were reintroduced. Clothing, equipment and tactics for winter operations were improved. Not all of the reforms had been completed when Germans initiated Operation Barbarossa 14 months later.[253]

Between the Winter War and perestroika in the late 1980s, Soviet historiography relied solely on Molotov's speeches on the Winter War. In his radio speech of 29 November 1939, Molotov argued that the Soviet Union had tried to negotiate guarantees of security for Leningrad for two months. The Finns had taken a hostile stance to "please foreign imperialists". Finland had undertaken military provocation, and the Soviet Union could no longer abide by the non-aggression pacts. According to Molotov, the Soviet Union did not want to occupy or annex Finland, but the goal was purely to secure Leningrad.[254]

The official Soviet figure, with reference to the command of the Leningrad Military District, was published at a session of the Supreme Soviet on 26 March 1940, with 48,475 dead and 158,863 sick and wounded.[18] More recent Russian estimates vary: in 1990, Mikhail Semiryaga claimed 53,522 dead, and N. I. Baryshnikov, 53,500. In 1997, Grigoriy Krivosheyev claimed 126,875 dead and missing and total casualties of 391,783, with 188,671 wounded.[15] In 1991, Yuri Kilin claimed 63,990 dead and total casualties of 271,528. In 2007, he revised the estimate of dead to 134,000[16] and in 2012, he updated the estimate to 138,533.[255] In 2013, Pavel Petrov stated that the Russian State Military Archive has a database confirming 167,976 killed or missing along with the soldiers' names, dates of birth and ranks.[17]

There were 5,572 Soviet prisoners of war in Finland.[20][256][257] After the Winter War, the Soviet prisoners were returned to the USSR in accordance with the Moscow Peace Treaty. Of these, 450 were released, 4,354 were sentenced to imprisonment in labour camps ranging from 3 to 10 years and 414 were exposed to be "active in traitorous activities while in captivity", with 334 criminal cases being transferred to the Supreme Court of the Soviet Union; 232 of those cases ended in a death penalty.[258]

Between 1,200 and 3,543 Soviet tanks were destroyed. The official figure was 611 tank casualties, but Yuri Kilin found a note received by the head of the Soviet General Staff, Boris Shaposhnikov, reporting 3,543 tank casualties and 316 tanks destroyed. According to Finnish historian Ohto Manninen, the 7th Soviet Army lost 1,244 tanks during the breakthrough battles of the Mannerheim Line in mid-winter. In the immediate aftermath of the war, the Finnish estimate of the number of lost Soviet tanks was 1,000 to 1,200.[21][22][23] The Soviet Air Forces lost around 1,000 aircraft, but fewer than half of them were combat casualties.[23][24] According to Carl Fredrik Geust, based on the studies of Soviet air force units, Finnish anti-aircraft units shot down 119 and Finnish fighter pilots 131 Soviet aircraft, though all Soviet aircraft losses had been more than 900.

Germany

The Winter War was a political success for the Germans. Both the Red Army and the League of Nations were humiliated, and the Anglo-French Supreme War Council had been revealed to be chaotic and powerless. The German policy of neutrality was unpopular in the homeland, and relations with Italy had suffered. After the Moscow Peace Treaty, Germany improved its ties with Finland, and within two weeks, Finnish-German relations were at the top of the agenda.[259][36] More importantly, the very poor performance of the Red Army convinced Hitler that an invasion on the Soviet Union would be successful. In June 1941, Hitler declared, "we have only to kick in the door and the whole rotten structure will come crashing down".[260]

Allies

The Winter War laid bare the disorganisation and ineffectiveness of the Red Army and that of the Allies. The Anglo-French Supreme War Council was unable to formulate a workable plan, revealing its unsuitability to make effective war in either Britain or France. This failure led to the collapse of the Third Daladier Government in France and the nomination of Paul Reynaud as the new Prime Minister of France.[261]

See also

Explanatory notes

  1. ^ At the beginning of the war, the Finns had 300,000 soldiers. The Finnish Army had only 250,028 rifles (total 281,594 firearms), but White Guards brought their own rifles (over 114,000 rifles, total 116,800 firearms) to the war. The Finnish Army reached its maximum strength at the beginning of March 1940 with 346,000 soldiers in uniform.[1][2]
  2. ^ From 1919 onwards, the Finns possessed 32 French Renault FT tanks and a few lighter tanks. These were unsuitable for the war and they were subsequently used as fixed pillboxes. The Finns bought 32 British Vickers 6-Ton tanks during 1936–39, but without weapons. Weapons were intended to be manufactured and installed in Finland. Only 10 tanks were fit for combat at the beginning of the conflict.[3]
  3. ^ On 1 December 1939 the Finns had 114 combat aeroplanes fit for duty and seven aeroplanes for communication and observation purposes. Almost 100 aeroplanes were used for flight training purposes, unsuitable for combat or under repair. In total, the Finns had 173 aircraft and 43 reserve aircraft.[4]
  4. ^ [5] 550,757 soldiers on 1 January 1940 and 760,578 soldiers by the beginning of March.[6] In the Leningrad Military District, 1,000,000 soldiers[7] and 20 divisions one month before the war and 58 divisions two weeks before its end.[8]
  5. ^ At the beginning of the war the Soviets had 2,514 tanks and 718 armoured cars. The main battlefield was the Karelian Isthmus where the Soviets deployed 1,450 tanks. At the end of the war the Soviets had 6,541 tanks and 1,691 armoured cars. The most common tank type was T-26, but also BT type was very common.[9]
  6. ^ This name is translated as follows: Finnish: talvisota, Swedish: Vinterkriget, Russian: Зи́мняя война́, tr. Zimnyaya voyna. The names Soviet–Finnish War 1939–1940 (Russian: Сове́тско-финская война́ 1939–1940) and Soviet–Finland War 1939–1940 (Russian: Сове́тско-финляндская война́ 1939–1940) are often used in Russian historiography;[25][26][27] Russo–Finnish War 1939–1940 or Finno-Russian War 1939–1940 are used by the U.S. Library of Congress' catalogue (see authority control).
  7. ^ See the relevant section and the following sources:[28][29][30][31][32][33]
  8. ^ See the relevant section and the following sources:[34][35][36][37]
  9. ^ The Soviet role is confirmed in Nikita Khrushchev's memoirs, which states that Artillery Marshal Grigory Kulik had personally supervised the bombardment of the Soviet village.[87][88]
  10. ^ See the following sources:[28][29][30][31][32]
  11. ^ See the following sources:[94][95][96][97]
  12. ^ A detailed classification of dead and missing is as follows:[11][12]
    • Dead, buried 16,766;
    • Wounded, died of wounds 3,089;
    • Dead, not buried, later declared as dead 3,503;
    • Missing, declared as dead 1,712;
    • Died as a prisoner of war 20;
    • Other reasons (diseases, accidents, suicides) 677;
    • Unknown 137;
    • Died during the additional refresher training (diseases, accidents, suicides) 34.

Citations

  1. ^ Palokangas (1999), pp. 299–300
  2. ^ Juutilainen & Koskimaa (2005), p. 83
  3. ^ Palokangas (1999), p. 318
  4. ^ Peltonen (1999)
  5. ^ Meltiukhov (2000): ch. 4, Table 10
  6. ^ Krivosheyev (1997), p. 63
  7. ^ Kilin (1999), p. 383
  8. ^ Manninen (1994), p. 43
  9. ^ Kantakoski (1998), p. 260
  10. ^ a b Trotter (2002), p. 187
  11. ^ a b c d Kurenmaa and Lentilä (2005), p. 1152
  12. ^ a b Lentilä and Juutilainen (1999), p. 821
  13. ^ a b Malmi (1999), p. 792
  14. ^ a b c d Tillotson (1993), p. 160
  15. ^ a b c Krivosheyev (1997), pp. 77–78
  16. ^ a b c Kilin (2007b), p. 91
  17. ^ a b Petrov (2013)
  18. ^ a b Sokolov (2000), p. 340
  19. ^ a b "РОССИЯ И СССР В ВОЙНАХ XX ВЕКА. Глава III. ЛЮДСКИЕ ПОТЕРИ КРАСНОЙ АРМИИ ЗА ВРЕМЯ ГРАЖДАНСКОЙ ВОЙНЫ И ИНОСТРАННОЙ ВОЕННОЙ ИНТЕРВЕНЦИИ". rus-sky.com. from the original on 12 May 2021. Retrieved 11 September 2018.
  20. ^ a b Manninen (1999b), p. 815
  21. ^ a b Kilin (1999) p. 381
  22. ^ a b Kantakoski (1998), p. 286
  23. ^ a b c d Manninen (1999b), pp. 810–811
  24. ^ a b Kilin (1999), p. 381
  25. ^ Baryshnikov (2005)
  26. ^ Kovalyov (2006)
  27. ^ Shirokorad (2001)
  28. ^ a b Manninen (2008), pp. 37, 42, 43, 46, 49
  29. ^ a b Rentola (2003) pp. 188–217
  30. ^ a b c Ravasz (2003) p. 3
  31. ^ a b Clemmesen and Faulkner (2013) p. 76
  32. ^ a b Zeiler and DuBois (2012) p. 210
  33. ^ a b Reiter (2009), p. 124
  34. ^ a b Chubaryan (2002), p. xvi
  35. ^ a b Trotter (2002), p. 17
  36. ^ a b c Lightbody (2004), p. 55
  37. ^ Kotkin (2017), pp. 966, 974, 1008
  38. ^ Reiter (2009), pp. 126, 127
  39. ^ a b Trotter (2002), pp. 234–235
  40. ^ Mannerheim, Carl Gustaf Emil (1953). Memoirs. E.P. Dutton & Company. pp. 364–365.
  41. ^ Massari, Ivano (18 August 2015). "The Winter War – When the Finns Humiliated the Russians". War History Online. from the original on 19 December 2021. Retrieved 19 December 2021.
  42. ^ Kilin and Raunio (2007), p. 10
  43. ^ Hough (2019).
  44. ^ Trotter 2002, pp. 3–5
  45. ^ a b Trotter (2002), pp. 4–6
  46. ^ Jowett & Snodgrass (2006), p. 3
  47. ^ Turtola (1999a), pp. 21–24
  48. ^ Turtola (1999a), pp. 33–34
  49. ^ Edwards (2006), pp. 26–27
  50. ^ Edwards (2006), p. 18
  51. ^ Polvinen (1987), pp. 156–161, 237–238, 323, 454
  52. ^ Engman (2007), pp. 452–454
  53. ^ a b c Turtola (1999a), pp. 30–33
  54. ^ Edwards (2006), p. 31
  55. ^ Edwards (2006), pp. 43–46
  56. ^ Van Dyke (1997), p. 13
  57. ^ Edwards (2006), pp. 32–33
  58. ^ a b Murphy (2021), p. 7
  59. ^ Lightbody (2004), p. 52
  60. ^ Trotter (2002), p. 15
  61. ^ Trotter (2002), pp. 12–13
  62. ^ Turtola (1999a), pp. 32–33
  63. ^ Turtola (1999a), pp. 34–35
  64. ^ Engle and Paananen (1985), p. 6
  65. ^ a b c d Turtola (1999a), pp. 38–41
  66. ^ Ries (1988), pp. 55–56
  67. ^ Manninen (1999a), pp. 141–148
  68. ^ a b Kotkin (2017), pp. 960
  69. ^ Kotkin (2017), pp. 963
  70. ^ Trotter (2002), pp. 14–16
  71. ^ Kotkin (2017), pp. 962
  72. ^ a b Kotkin (2017), p. 970
  73. ^ a b Turtola (1999a), pp. 41–43
  74. ^ Tanner (1950)
  75. ^ a b Kotkin (2017), p. 964
  76. ^ Kotkin (2017), pp. 965
  77. ^ Kotkin (2017), pp. 963, 971
  78. ^ Kotkin (2017), p. 966
  79. ^ Kotkin (2017), p. 971
  80. ^ Kotkin (2017), p. 973
  81. ^ Turtola, Martti (1999). "Kansainvälinen kehitys Euroopassa ja Suomessa 1930-luvulla". In Leskinen, Jari; Juutilainen, Antti (eds.). Talvisodan pikkujättiläinen. pp. 41–43.
  82. ^ Kotkin (2017), p. 975
  83. ^ a b Kotkin (2017), pp. 961, 974
  84. ^ Kotkin (2017), pp. 974
  85. ^ Ries (1988), pp. 77–78
  86. ^ Murphy (2021), p. 9
  87. ^ Edwards (2006), p. 105
  88. ^ a b Turtola (1999a), pp. 44–45
  89. ^ Leskinen, Jari (1997). "Suomenlahden sulku ja Neuvostoliitto" [Blockade of the Gulf of Finland and the Soviet Union]. Vaiettu Suomen silta [Hushed bridge of Finland] (in Finnish). Helsinki: Hakapaino Oy. pp. 406–407. ISBN 951-710-050-7.
  90. ^ Tanner (1950), pp. 85–86
  91. ^ Kilin (2007a), pp. 99–100
  92. ^ Aptekar (2009)
  93. ^ Yle News (2013)
  94. ^ Tanner (1950), p. 114
  95. ^ Trotter (2002), pp. 58, 61
  96. ^ Kokoshin (1998), p. 93
  97. ^ Killham (1993), p. 78
  98. ^ Coates (1940)
  99. ^ Elliston (1940), p. 237
  100. ^ Sander (2013), pp. 38, 39
  101. ^ Nenye (2015), p. 50
  102. ^ Nenye (2015), pp. 50, 51
  103. ^ Edwards (2006), p. 98
  104. ^ Nenye (2015), p. 51
  105. ^ Iltasanomat (2019)
  106. ^ Kotkin (2017), pp. 966, 974
  107. ^ Kotkin (2017), pp. 974-975
  108. ^ Kotkin (2017), pp. 981, 994
  109. ^ Trotter (2002), p. 34
  110. ^ Conquest (2007), p. 450
  111. ^ Bullock (1993), p. 489
  112. ^ Glanz (1998), p. 58
  113. ^ Ries (1988), p. 56
  114. ^ Edwards (2006), p. 189
  115. ^ Coox (1985), p. 996
  116. ^ Coox (1985), pp. 994–995
  117. ^ a b Coox (1985), p. 997
  118. ^ Goldman (2012), p. 167
  119. ^ Langdon-Davies (1941), p. 7
  120. ^ Trotter (2002), pp. 35–36
  121. ^ Edwards (2006), p. 93
  122. ^ Edwards (2006), p. 125
  123. ^ Manninen (2008), p. 14
  124. ^ Kotkin (2017), p. 994
  125. ^ a b Trotter (2002), p. 204
  126. ^ a b Trotter (2002), pp. 38–39
  127. ^ a b c d e Kilin and Raunio (2007), p. 13
  128. ^ Nenye (2015), p. 54
  129. ^ Trotter (2002)
  130. ^ Leskinen and Juutilainen (1999)
  131. ^ a b Trotter (2002), pp. 42–44
  132. ^ Laemlein (2013) pp. 95–99
  133. ^ Trotter (2002), p. 47
  134. ^ Jowett & Snodgrass (2006), p. 6
  135. ^ Paskhover (2015)
  136. ^ Russian State Military Archive F.34980 Op.14 D.108
  137. ^ a b Trotter (2002), pp. 48–51
  138. ^ a b Trotter (2002), p. 61
  139. ^ League of Nations (1939), pp. 506, 540
  140. ^ Trotter (2002), p. 58
  141. ^ Soikkanen (1999), p. 235
  142. ^ Geust; Uitto (2006), p. 54
  143. ^ Trotter (2002), p. 69
  144. ^ Trotter (2002), pp. 72–73
  145. ^ Trotter (2002), pp. 76–78
  146. ^ Trotter (2002), pp. 51–55
  147. ^ Trotter (2002), p. 121
  148. ^ Trotter (2002), pp. 53–54
  149. ^ "Swedish volunteer in position during the Soviet-Finnish War". Second World War the Military Photo Archive. 29 April 2019. from the original on 10 February 2023. Retrieved 10 February 2023.
  150. ^ Paulaharju (1999), p. 292
  151. ^ Paulaharju (1999), pp. 289–290
  152. ^ a b Trotter (2002), pp. 145–146
  153. ^ a b Paulaharju (1999), pp. 297–298
  154. ^ Trotter (2002), pp. 131–132
  155. ^ Trotter (2002), pp. 148–149
  156. ^ a b Trotter (2002), pp. 62–63
  157. ^ Vuorenmaa (1999), pp. 494–495
  158. ^ Laaksonen (1999), p. 407
  159. ^ Laaksonen (1999), pp. 411–412
  160. ^ Trotter (2002), pp. 87–89
  161. ^ Kilin and Raunio (2007), p. 113
  162. ^ Juutilainen (1999a), pp. 504–505
  163. ^ Juutilainen (1999a), p. 506
  164. ^ Juutilainen (1999a), p. 520
  165. ^ Kauppinen (2017).
  166. ^ YLE: Marokon Kauhu nousi legendaksi Kollaalla 3 November 2020 at the Wayback Machine (in Finnish)
  167. ^ Trotter (2002), p. 110
  168. ^ Juutilainen (1999a), pp. 510–511
  169. ^ Juutilainen (1999a), p. 514
  170. ^ Jowett & Snodgrass (2006), p. 44
  171. ^ Juutilainen (1999a), pp. 516–517
  172. ^ Vuorenmaa (1999), pp. 559–561
  173. ^ Vuorenmaa (1999), p. 550
  174. ^ Trotter (2002), p. 150
  175. ^ Kulju (2007), p. 230
  176. ^ Kulju (2007), p. 229
  177. ^ Kantakoski (1998), p. 283
  178. ^ Kulju (2007), pp. 217–218
  179. ^ Pöntinen, P.: Jäätynyt helvetti: Tällainen on Raatteen tie tänään 3 September 2019 at the Wayback Machine. Suomen Kuvalehti, 2015.
  180. ^ a b Trotter (2002), pp. 171–174
  181. ^ Leskinen and Juutilainen (1999), p. 164
  182. ^ Trotter (2002), pp. 178–180
  183. ^ Vuorenmaa (1999), pp. 545–549
  184. ^ Esko Lammi: Talvisodan Tampere. Vammala: Häijää Invest (Vammaspaino), 1990. ISBN 9529017073|. (in Finnish)
  185. ^ Jouko Juonala: Ilmahälytys! Talvisota: Ilta-Sanomien erikoislehti 2019, pp. 62–66. Helsinki: Sanoma Media Finland Oy. (in Finland)
  186. ^ a b Trotter (2002), p. 193
  187. ^ Trotter (2002), pp. 187–188
  188. ^ Tillotson (1993), p. 157
  189. ^ Peltonen (1999), pp. 607–608
  190. ^ Trotter (2002), p. 189
  191. ^ Trotter (2002), pp. 191–192
  192. ^ Elfvegren (1999), p. 681
  193. ^ Elfvegren (1999), p. 678
  194. ^ Elfvegren (1999), p. 692
  195. ^ Leskinen (1999), p. 130
  196. ^ Silvast (1999), pp. 694–696
  197. ^ Tillotson (1993), pp. 152–153
  198. ^ Reiter (2009), p. 126
  199. ^ Reiter (2009), pp. 126, 127
  200. ^ Trotter (2002), pp. 203–204
  201. ^ a b Laaksonen (1999), pp. 424–425
  202. ^ a b c Trotter (2002), pp. 214–215
  203. ^ Laaksonen (1999), pp. 426–427
  204. ^ Laaksonen (1999), p. 430
  205. ^ Trotter (2002), p. 218
  206. ^ Geust; Uitto (2006), p. 77
  207. ^ Trotter (2002), p. 233
  208. ^ Laaksonen (1999), p. 452
  209. ^ Enkenberg (2020), p.215
  210. ^ Rentola, Kimmo (1 October 2013). "Intelligence and Stalin's Two Crucial Decisions in the Winter War, 1939–40". The International History Review. 35 (5): 1089–1112. doi:10.1080/07075332.2013.828637. ISSN 0707-5332. S2CID 155013785. from the original on 6 August 2022. Retrieved 6 August 2022.
  211. ^ Trotter (2002), pp. 246–247
  212. ^ Edwards (2006), p. 261
  213. ^ a b c Lähteenmäki, Maria (1 January 2014). "Bad blood and humiliation: Finns' experiences of the Moscow peace negotiations in 1940". Nordia Geographical Publications. 43 (1): 101–113. ISSN 2736-9722. from the original on 6 August 2022. Retrieved 6 August 2022.
  214. ^ Trotter (2002), pp. 247–248
  215. ^ Kilin and Raunio (2007), pp. 260–295
  216. ^ Trotter (2002), pp. 249–251
  217. ^ Fadiman (1985), p. 320.
  218. ^ Trotter (2002), p. 254
  219. ^ "70th Anniversary of the End of the Winter War". Yle News. 13 March 2010. from the original on 13 March 2022. Retrieved 13 March 2022.
  220. ^ Statistics Finland (1940)
  221. ^ Kirby (2006), p. 215
  222. ^ Gadolin (1952), p. 7.
  223. ^ Engle and Paananen (1985), pp. 142–143
  224. ^ a b Ahtiainen (2000)
  225. ^ a b Jowett & Snodgrass (2006), p. 10
  226. ^ Van Dyke (1997), pp. 189–190
  227. ^ Trotter 2002, pp. 14–16
  228. ^ Trotter (2002), pp. 194–202
  229. ^ a b Jowett & Snodgrass (2006), pp. 21–22
  230. ^ Juutilainen (1999b), p. 776
  231. ^ Rigby (2003), pp. 59–60.
  232. ^ a b c Jormanainen, Heli (15 March 2020). "Venäläisemigranttien talvisota – Mannerheim hyväksyi huippusalaisen suunnitelman bolševikkien vastaisen sotavankiarmeijan perustamisesta". Yle. from the original on 17 February 2022. Retrieved 8 June 2022.
  233. ^ a b Trotter (2002), pp. 235–236
  234. ^ Edwards (2006), p. 141
  235. ^ a b Edwards (2006), p. 145
  236. ^ a b Trotter (2002), p. 237
  237. ^ a b Edwards (2006), p. 146
  238. ^ Trotter (2002), pp. 237–238
  239. ^ Trotter (2002), pp. 238–239
  240. ^ Trotter (2002), p. 239
  241. ^ Edwards (2006), pp. 272–273
  242. ^ Laaksonen (2005), p. 365
  243. ^ Paasikivi (1958). p. 177
  244. ^ Halsti (1955), p. 412
  245. ^ Dallin (1942), p. 191
  246. ^ Turtola (1999b), p. 863
  247. ^ Reiter (2009), p. 132
  248. ^ Finnish Karelian League
  249. ^ Lunde (2011), p. 9
  250. ^ Jokipii (1999), pp. 145–146
  251. ^ Rutherford (2014), p. 190
  252. ^ Yarov (2009), p. 7
  253. ^ Trotter (2002) p. 264
  254. ^ Vihavainen (1999), pp. 893–896
  255. ^ Kilin (2012), pp. 21–24.
  256. ^ Van Dyke (1997), p. 191
  257. ^ Trotter (2002), p. 263
  258. ^ Bichekhvost (2012).
  259. ^ Edwards (2006), pp. 277–279
  260. ^ Sedlar (2007), p. 8
  261. ^ Edwards (2006), pp. 13–14

General and cited references

English

  • Ahtiainen, Ilkka (16 July 2000). . Helsinki Times. Archived from the original on 29 June 2011. Retrieved 5 November 2009.
  • Bullock, Alan (1993). Hitler and Stalin: Parallel Lives. Vintage Books. ISBN 978-0-679-72994-5.
  • Chubaryan, A. (2002). "Foreword". In Kulkov, E.; Rzheshevskii, O.; Shukman, H. (eds.). Stalin and the Soviet-Finnish War, 1939–1940. Frank Cass. ISBN 978-0-7146-5203-0.
  • Clemmesen, Michael H.; Faulkner, Marcus, eds. (2013). Northern European Overture to War, 1939–1941: From Memel to Barbarossa. Brill. ISBN 978-90-04-24908-0.
  • Coates, William Peyton; Coates, Zelda Kahan (1940). Russia, Finland and the Baltic. London: Lawrence & Wishart.
  • Conquest, Robert (2007) [1991]. The Great Terror: A Reassessment (40th Anniversary ed.). Oxford University Press, US. ISBN 978-0-19-531700-8.
  • Coox, Alvin D. (1985). Nomonhan: Japan against Russia, 1939. Stanford University Press. ISBN 0-8047-1160-7.
  • Dallin, David (1942). Soviet Russia's Foreign Policy, 1939–1942. Translated by Leon Dennen. Yale University Press.
  • Edwards, Robert (2006). White Death: Russia's War on Finland 1939–40. Weidenfeld & Nicolson. ISBN 978-0-297-84630-7.
  • Elliston, H.B. (1940). Finland Fights. London: G. Harrap.
  • Engle, Eloise; Paananen, Lauri (1985) [1973]. The Winter War: The Russo-Finnish Conflict, 1939–40. Westview Press. ISBN 0-8133-0149-1.
  • Fadiman, Clifton (1985). The Little, Brown book of anecdotes. Boston: Little, Brown. ISBN 978-0-316-08472-7. OCLC 759509883.
  • Gadolin, Axel (1952). The Solution of the Karelian Refugee Problem in Finland. Dordrecht: Springer Netherlands. ISBN 978-9401179645. OCLC 9401179646.
  • Glanz, David (1998). Stumbling Colossus: The Red Army on the Eve of World War. University Press of Kansas. ISBN 978-0-7006-0879-9.
  • Goldman, Stuart D. (2012). Nomonhan 1939, The Red Army's Victory That Shaped World War II. Naval Institute Press. ISBN 978-1-59114-329-1.
  • Hough, William J.H. (10 September 2019). "The Annexation of the Baltic States and Its Effect on the Development of Law Prohibiting Forcible Seizure of Territory". DigitalCommons@NYLS. Retrieved 29 September 2020.[dead link]
  • Jowett, Philip; Snodgrass, Brent (2006). Finland at War 1939–45. Osprey. ISBN 978-1-84176-969-1.
  • . Finnish Karelian League. Archived from the original on 20 August 2009. Retrieved 18 October 2009.
  • Killham, EdwardL (1993). The Nordic Way: A Path to Baltic Equilibrium. Howells House.
  • Kirby, David (2006). A Concise History of Finland. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-0-521-53989-0.
  • Kokoshin, Andrei (1998). Soviet Strategic Thought, 1917-91. MIT Press.
  • Kotkin, Stephen (2017). Stalin: Waiting for Hitler, 1929–1941. Penguin Press.
  • Krivosheyev, Grigoriy (1997b). Soviet Casualties and Combat Losses in the Twentieth Century (1st ed.). Greenhill Books. ISBN 1-85367-280-7. from the original on 18 January 2023. Retrieved 12 October 2015.
  • Laemlein, Tom (October 2013). "Where Will We Bury Them All?". American Rifleman. 161.
  • Langdon-Davies, John (1941). Invasion in the Snow: A Study of Mechanized War. Houghton Mifflin Company. OCLC 1535780.
  • League of Nations (14 December 1939). "Expulsion of the U.S.S.R.". League of Nations Official Journal.
  • Lightbody, Bradley (2004). The Second World War: Ambitions to Nemesis. Routledge. ISBN 0-415-22404-7.
  • Lunde, Henrik O. (2011). Finland's War of Choice: The Troubled German-Finnish Alliance in World War II. Newbury: Casemate Publishers. ISBN 978-1612000374.
  • Murphy, David (2021). The Finnish-Soviet Winter War 1939–40 Stalin's Hollow Victory. Johnny Shumate. London: Bloomsbury Publishing Plc. ISBN 978-1-4728-4394-4. OCLC 1261364794. from the original on 7 February 2022. Retrieved 22 December 2021.
  • Nenye, Vesa; Munter, Peter; Wirtanen, Toni; Birks, Chris, eds. (2015). Finland at War: The Winter War 1939–1945. Osprey. ISBN 978-1-4728-2718-0.
  • Reiter, Dan (2009). How Wars End (Illustrated ed.). Princeton University Press. ISBN 978-0691140605. from the original on 19 April 2023. Retrieved 29 October 2010.
  • Ries, Tomas (1988). Cold Will: The Defense of Finland (1st ed.). Brassey's Defence Publishers. ISBN 0-08-033592-6.
  • Rigby, Jonathan (2003). Christopher Lee: The Authorised Screen History. Reynolds & Hearn. ISBN 978-1903111642.
  • Rutherford, Jeff (2014). Combat and Genocide on the Eastern Front: The German Infantry's War, 1941–1944. Cambridge University Press. p. 190. ISBN 978-1107055711. from the original on 27 February 2018. The ensnaring of Leningrad between the German and Finnish armies did not end the combat in the region as the Soviets launched repeated and desperate attempts to regain contact with the city.
  • Sander, Gordon F. (2013). The Hundred Day Winter War: Finland's Gallant Stand against the Soviet Army. University Press of Kansas.
  • Sedlar, Jean W. (2007). Hitler's Central European Empire 1938–1945. BookLocker. ISBN 978-1591139102.
  • Tanner, Väinö (1957) [1950]. The Winter War: Finland against Russia 1939–1940. Stanford University Press. ISBN 978-0-8047-0482-3. from the original on 19 April 2023. Retrieved 3 October 2020.
  • Tillotson, H.M. (1993). Finland at Peace & War 1918–1993. Michael Russell. ISBN 0-85955-196-2.
  • Trotter, William R. (2002) [1991]. The Winter War: The Russo–Finnish War of 1939–40 (5th ed.). Aurum Press. ISBN 1-85410-881-6.
  • Van Dyke, Carl (1997). The Soviet Invasion of Finland, 1939–40. Routledge. ISBN 0-7146-4314-9.
  • Yarov, Sergey (2017). Leningrad 1941–42: Morality in a City under Siege. Foreword by John Barber. John Wiley & Sons. p. 7. ISBN 978-1509508020. from the original on 27 February 2018. While the exact number who died during the siege by the German and Finnish armies from 8 September 1941 to 27 January 1944 will never be known, available data point to 900,000 civilian deaths, over half a million of whom died in the winter of 1941–2 alone.
  • Yle News (15 March 2013). "Putin: Winter War aimed at correcting border "mistakes"". from the original on 14 December 2017. Retrieved 14 December 2017.
  • Iltasanomat (22 December 2019). "Yuri Kilin interview". from the original on 30 November 2021. Retrieved 3 December 2021.
  • Zeiler, Thomas W.; DuBois, Daniel M., eds. (2012). A Companion to World War II. Wiley Blackwell Companions to World History. Vol. 11. Wiley-Blackwell. ISBN 978-1-4051-9681-9.

Finnish, Russian and other languages

  • Aptekar, Pavel. "Casus Belli: о Майнильском инциденте, послужившим поводом, для начала "Зимней войны" 1939–40 гг" [Casus Belli: about the Mainila incident, which served as a pretext for the beginning of the "Winter War" of 1939–40]. Raboche-Krest'yanskaya Krasnaya Armiya (website) (in Russian). from the original on 2 December 2022. Retrieved 2 September 2009.
  • Baryshnikov, N.; Salomaa, E. (2005). [Finland's Entrance into World War II]. In Chernov, M. (ed.). Крестовый поход на Россию [Crusade Against Russia] (in Russian). Yauza. ISBN 5-87849-171-0. Archived from the original on 6 November 2008. Retrieved 1 July 2008.
  • Bichekhvost, Alexander Fedorovich (2012). "Вы точно человек?" [The Repressive Policy of the Soviet State and the Fate of the Red Army Prisoners of War Participants in the Soviet-Finnish War 1939–1940]. Известия Саратовского Университета. Новая Серия. Серия История. Международные Отношения (in Russian). 12 (4): 99–108. from the original on 8 July 2022. Retrieved 23 August 2020.
  • Elfvegren, Eero (1999). "Merisota talvisodassa" [Naval Warfare in the Winter War]. Talvisodan pikkujättiläinen (in Finnish).
  • Engman, Max (2007). Raja – Karjalankannas 1918–1920 [Border – The Karelian Isthmus 1918–1920]. WSOY. ISBN 978-951-0-32765-4.
  • Enkenberg, Ilkka (2020). Talvisota Väreissä (in Finnish). Readme.fi. ISBN 978-952-373-053-3.
  • Geust, Carl-Fredrik; Uitto, Antero (2006). Mannerheim-linja: Talvisodan legenda [The Mannerheim Line: Legend of the Winter War] (in Finnish). Ajatus. ISBN 951-20-7042-1.
  • Hallberg, Torsten, ed. (2006). Karelen: ett gränsland i Norden (in Swedish). Föreningen Norden. ISBN 978-9185276806.
  • Halsti, Wolfgang Hallstén (1955). Talvisota 1939–1940 [The Winter War 1939–1940] (in Finnish). Otava.
  • Jokipii, Mauno (1999). Финляндия на пути к войне: Исследование о военном сотрудничестве Германии и Финляндии в 1940–1941 гг [Birth of the Continuation War: Research of German–Finnish Military Collaboration 1940–1941] (in Russian). Petrozavodsk: Karelia. ISBN 5754507356.
  • Juutilainen, Antti; Koskimaa, Matti (2005). "Maavoimien joukkojen perustaminen" [Establishing the Army Forces]. Jatkosodan pikkujättiläinen (in Finnish).
  • Juutilainen, Antti (1999a). "Laatokan Karjalan taistelut" [Battles in Ladoga Karelia]. Talvisodan pikkujättiläinen (in Finnish).
  • Juutilainen, Antti (1999b). "Talvisodan ulkomaalaiset vapaaehtoiset" [Foreign Volunteers in the Winter War]. Talvisodan pikkujättiläinen (in Finnish).
  • Kantakoski, Pekka (1998). Punaiset panssarit: Puna-armeijan panssarijoukot 1918–1945 [Red Armour: The Red Army's Tank Forces, 1918–1945] (in Finnish). PS-Elso. ISBN 951-98057-0-2.
  • Kauppinen, Kari (18 July 2017). "Sotasankari Simo Häyhän ennennäkemätön päiväkirja löytyi – "Tässä on minun syntilistani"". Iltalehti (in Finnish). Helsinki. from the original on 12 June 2018. Retrieved 15 September 2020.
  • Kilin, Juri (2007a). "Leningradin sotilaspiirin rajakahakka". In Jokisipilä, Markku (ed.). Sodan totuudet. Yksi suomalainen vastaa 5,7 ryssää [Truths of War. One Finn equals 5.7 Russians] (in Finnish). Ajatus.
  • Kilin, Juri (2007b). "Rajakahakan hidas jäiden lähtö". In Jokisipilä, Markku (ed.). Sodan totuudet. Yksi suomalainen vastaa 5,7 ryssää [Truths of War. One Finn equals 5.7 Russians] (in Finnish).
  • Kilin, Juri; Raunio, Ari (2007). Talvisodan taisteluja [Winter War Battles] (in Finnish). Karttakeskus. ISBN 978-951-593-068-2.
  • Kilin, Yuri (1999). "Puna-armeijan Stalinin tahdon toteuttajana" [The Red Army as an Executor of Stalin's Will]. Talvisodan pikkujättiläinen (in Finnish).
  • Kilin, Yu. M. (2012). "Soviet–Finish War 1939–1940 and Red Army's Losses". Proceedings of Petrozavodsk State University. Social Sciences & Humanities. 5 (126): 21–24. ISSN 1998-5053. from the original on 6 October 2022. Retrieved 27 June 2018.
  • Kovalyov, E. (2006). "7: Зимняя война балтийских подводных лодок (1939–1940 гг.)" [Winter War and the Baltic Submarines (1939–1940)]. Короли подплава в море червонных валетов [Submarine Kings of the Knave of Hearts Sea] (in Russian). Tsentrpoligraf. ISBN 5-9524-2324-8. from the original on 1 November 2022. Retrieved 1 July 2008.
  • Kulju, Mika (2007). Raatteen tie: Talvisodan pohjoinen sankaritarina [The Raate Road: Tale of Northern Heroism during the Winter War] (in Finnish). Ajatus. ISBN 978-951-20-7218-7.
  • Kurenmaa, Pekka; Lentilä, Riitta (2005). "Sodan tappiot" [Casualties of the War]. Jatkosodan pikkujättiläinen (in Finnish).
  • Laaksonen, Lasse (2005) [1999]. Todellisuus ja harhat [Reality and Illusions] (in Finnish). Ajatus. ISBN 951-20-6911-3.
  • Laaksonen, Lasse (1999). "Kannaksen taistelut" [Battles in the Isthmus]. Talvisodan pikkujättiläinen (in Finnish).
  • Lentilä, Riitta; Juutilainen, Antti (1999). "Talvisodan uhrit" [Victims of the Winter War]. Talvisodan pikkujättiläinen.
  • Leskinen, Jari; Juutilainen, Antti (2005). Jatkosodan pikkujättiläinen [Continuation War Guidebook] (in Finnish) (1st ed.). WSOY. ISBN 951-0-28690-7.
  • Leskinen, Jari (1999). "Suomen ja Viron salainen sotilaallinen yhteistyö Neuvostoliiton hyökkäyksen varalta 1930-luvulla" [The Clandestine Finnish-Estonian Military Collaboration against a Possible Soviet Invasion in the 1930s]. In Leskinen, Jari; Juutilainen, Antti (eds.). Talvisodan pikkujättiläinen (in Finnish).
  • Leskinen, Jari; Juutilainen, Antti (1999). "Suomen kunnian päivät" [Glory Days of Finland]. Talvisodan pikkujättiläinen (in Finnish).
  • Malmi, Timo (1999). "Suomalaiset sotavangit" [Finnish Prisoners of War]. Talvisodan pikkujättiläinen (in Finnish).
  • Manninen, Ohto (2008). Miten Suomi valloitetaan: Puna-armeijan operaatiosuunnitelmat 1939–1944 [How to Conquer Finland: Operational Plans of the Red Army 1939–1944] (in Finnish). Edita. ISBN 978-951-37-5278-1.
  • Manninen, Ohto (1999a). "Neuvostoliiton tavoitteet ennen talvisotaa ja sen aikana" [Soviet objectives before and during the Winter War]. Talvisodan pikkujättiläinen (in Finnish).
  • Manninen, Ohto (1999b). "Venäläiset sotavangit ja tappiot" [Russian Prisoners of War and Casualties]. Talvisodan pikkujättiläinen (in Finnish).
  • Manninen, Ohto (1994). Talvisodan salatut taustat (Hidden background of the Winter War) (in Finnish). Kirjaneuvos. ISBN 952-90-5251-0.
  • Meltiukhov, Mikhail (2000). Упущенный шанс Сталина. Советский Союз и борьба за Европу [Stalin's Missed Chance] (in Russian). Veche. from the original on 9 December 2020. Retrieved 29 October 2010.
  • Paasikivi, Juho Kusti (1958). Toimintani Moskovassa ja Suomessa 1939–41 [My Actions in Moscow and Finland 1939–1941] (in Finnish). WSOY.
  • Palokangas, Markku (1999). "Suomalaisjoukkojen aseistus ja varustus" [Armament and Equipment of the Finnish Forces]. Talvisodan pikkujättiläinen (in Finnish).
  • Paulaharju, Jyri (1999). "Pakkastalven kourissa" [In the Grip of Winter]. Talvisodan pikkujättiläinen (in Finnish).
  • Paskhover, A. (3 June 2015). Красная Армия – самая миролюбивая, самая героическая... [Red Army – the most peaceful, the most heroic...]. Ukrayinska Pravda (in Russian). from the original on 27 June 2022. Retrieved 21 June 2015.
  • Peltonen, Martti (1999). "Ilmasota talvisodassa" [Aerial Warfare in the Winter Wari]. Talvisodan pikkujättiläinen (in Finnish).
  • Petrov, Pavel (2013). Venäläinen talvisotakirjallisuus: Bibliografia 1939–1945 [Russian Winter War Literature: Bibliography 1939–1945] (in Finnish). Docendo. ISBN 978-952-5912-97-5.
  • Polvinen, Tuomo (1987) [1971]. Venäjän vallankumous ja Suomi 1917–1920 II: toukokuu 1918–joulukuu 1920 [Russian Revolution and Finland 1917–1920 II: May 1918 – December 1920]. WSOY. ISBN 951-0-14299-9.
  • Shirokorad, A. (2001). "IX: Зимняя война 1939–1940 гг. [Winter War 1939–1940]". Северные войны России [Russia's Northern Wars] (in Russian). ACT. ISBN 5-17-009849-9. from the original on 7 December 2019. Retrieved 1 July 2008.
  • Ravasz, István (2003). [Finland's struggle for independence from 1917 to 1945, Hungarian volunteers in Finland] (PDF) (in Hungarian). Wysocki Légió Hagyományőrző Egyesületnek. Archived from the original (PDF) on 20 October 2017. Retrieved 26 January 2015.
  • Rentola, Kimmo (2003). Holtsmark, Sven G.; Pharo, Helge Ø.; Tamnes, Rolf (eds.). Motstrøms: Olav Riste og norsk internasjonal historieskrivning [Counter Currents: Olav Riste and Norwegian international historiography.] (in Norwegian). Cappelen Akademisk Forlag. ISBN 8202218284.
  • Russian State Military Archive. Российский государственный военный архив (РГВА) [Russian State Military Archive] (in Russian).
  • Silvast, Pekka (1999). "Merivoimien ensimmäinen voitto: Russarö" [The Navy's First Victory: Russarö]. Talvisodan pikkujättiläinen (in Finnish).
  • Soikkanen, Timo (1999). "Talvisodan henki" [The Spirit of the Winter War]. Talvisodan pikkujättiläinen (in Finnish).
  • Statistics Finland (1941). Suomenmaan Tilastollinen Vuosikirja 1940 [Finnish Statistics Yearbook 1940] (PDF) (in Finnish). pp. 14–15. (PDF) from the original on 7 March 2022. Retrieved 13 March 2022.
  • Turtola, Martti (1999a). "Kansainvälinen kehitys Euroopassa ja Suomessa 1930-luvulla" [International Developments in Europe and Finland in the 1930s]. Talvisodan pikkujättiläinen (in Finnish).
  • Turtola, Martti (1999b). "Katkera rauha ja Suomen ulkopoliittinen asema sodan jälkeen" [Bitter Peace and the Post-War Position of Finnish Foreign Policy]. Talvisodan pikkujättiläinen (in Finnish).
  • Vihavainen, Timo (1999). "Talvisota neuvostohistoriakirjoituksessa" [The Winter War in Soviet historiography]. Talvisodan pikkujättiläinen (in Finnish).
  • Sokolov, Boris (2000). "Путь к миру" [Secrets of the Russo-Finnish War]. Тайны финской войны (in Russian). Вече. ISBN 5-7838-0583-1.
  • Vuorenmaa, Anssi; Juutilainen, Antti (1999). "Myytti Mannerheim-linjasta". Talvisodan pikkujättiläinen (in Finnish). (Myth of the Mannerheim Line)

Further reading

  • Campbell, David (2016). Finnish Soldier vs Soviet Soldier: Winter War 1939–40. Osprey Publishing. ISBN 978-1472813244.
  • Chew, Allen F. The White Death: The Epic of the Soviet-Finnish Winter War (ISBN 0-87013-167-2).
  • Cox, Geoffrey (1941). The Red Army Moves. Victor Gollancz. OCLC 502873.
  • Engle, Eloise and Paananen, Pauri. The Winter War: The Soviet Attack on Finland 1939–1940 (ISBN 0-8117-2433-6).
  • Hill, Alexander (2017). The Red Army and the Second World War. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-1-1070-2079-5.
  • Kolomyjec, Maksim (2011). Tanks in the Winter War 1939–1940. Translated by Dinan, Tim. Leandoer & Ekholm. ISBN 978-9197589529.
  • Nenye, Vesa; Munter, Peter; Wirtanen, Toni (2015). Finland at War: The Winter War 1939–1945. Osprey Publishing. ISBN 978-1472806314. OCLC 899228795.
  • Rahikainen, Paavo; Vainio, Ein (1996). Artillery barrage at Taipaleenjoki: Paavo Rahikainen. The battle of Sikniemi. Translated by Mayow, Nicholas. Helsinki: Finnish War Veterans Association. ISBN 978-951-97557-0-0. OCLC 41278218.
  • Reese, Roger R. (2008). "Lessons of the Winter War: a study in the military effectiveness of the Red Army, 1939–1940". Journal of Military History. 72 (3): 825–852. doi:10.1353/jmh.0.0004. S2CID 110326295.
  • Saarelainen, Tapio (2016). The White Sniper: Simo Häyhä. Casemate. ISBN 978-1612004297.
  • Sander, Gordon F. (2013). The Hundred Day Winter War: Finland's Gallant Stand against the Soviet Army. University Press of Kansas. ISBN 978-0700619108. (online review)
  • Soviet Information Bureau (1948). Falsifiers of History (Historical Survey) (1st ed.). Gospolitizdat & Foreign Languages Publishing House. OCLC 155723998.
  • Taylor, Alan (23 May 2013). "Finland in World War II". The Atlantic.
  • Trotter, William R.: A Frozen Hell: The Russo-Finnish Winter War of 1939–1940 (ISBN 1-56512-249-6).
  • Tuunainen, Pasi (2016). Finnish Military Effectiveness in the Winter War, 1939–1940. Palgrave Macmillan. doi:10.1057/978-1-137-44606-0. ISBN 978-1-137-44606-0.
  • Tuuri, Antti (2003) [1984]. The Winter War. Aspasia Books, Inc. ISBN 097310533X.
  • Weeks, Jessica L. 2014. Dictators at War and Peace, Ch. 4. Cornell University Press.
  • Woody, Christopher (1 December 2017). "These 17 photos show Finland's brutally cold World War II battle with the Soviet Union". Business Insider UK.

External links

  • Военный альбом (photographs of the Soviet–Finnish War 1939–1940)
  • Finna (search service for information from Finnish archives, libraries and museums)
  • Finnish Wartime Photograph Archive (under CC BY 4.0)
  • Fire and Ice: The Winter War of Finland and Russia (Winter War history from a documentary film's website)
  • National Archives of the United Kingdom

winter, this, article, about, 1939, 1940, between, soviet, union, finland, other, uses, disambiguation, part, european, theatre, world, finnish, maxim, machine, crew, during, date30, november, 1939, march, 1940, months, week, days, locationeastern, finlandresu. This article is about the 1939 1940 war between the Soviet Union and Finland For other uses see Winter War disambiguation Winter WarPart of the European theatre of World War IIA Finnish Maxim M 09 21 machine gun crew during the Winter WarDate30 November 1939 13 March 1940 3 months 1 week and 6 days LocationEastern FinlandResultMoscow Peace TreatyTerritorialchangesCession of the Gulf of Finland islands Karelian Isthmus Ladoga Karelia Salla Rybachy Peninsula and lease of Hanko to the Soviet UnionBelligerents Finland Foreign volunteers Soviet Union Finnish Democratic RepublicCommanders and leadersKyosti Kallio C G E Mannerheim Hugo Osterman Harald Ohquist Erik Heinrichs Woldemar Hagglund Wiljo TuompoJoseph Stalin Kliment Voroshilov Semyon Timoshenko Kirill Meretskov Vladimir Grendal Grigori Shtern Mikhail Dukhanov Valerian FrolovStrength300 000 340 000 soldiers F 1 32 tanks F 2 114 aircraft F 3 425 000 760 000 soldiers F 4 2 514 6 541 tanks F 5 3 880 aircraft 10 Casualties and losses25 904 dead or missing 11 43 557 wounded 12 800 1 100 captured 13 20 30 tanks 62 aircraft 14 1 armed icebreaker damaged Finnish Ladoga Naval Detachment ceded to the Soviet Union 70 000 total casualties126 875 167 976 dead or missing 15 16 17 18 188 671 207 538 wounded or sick 15 16 including at least 61 506 sick or frostbitten 19 5 572 captured 20 1 200 3 543 tanks 21 22 23 261 515 aircraft 23 24 321 000 381 000 total casualties The Winter War F 6 was a war between the Soviet Union and Finland It began with a Soviet invasion of Finland on 30 November 1939 three months after the outbreak of World War II and ended three and a half months later with the Moscow Peace Treaty on 13 March 1940 Despite superior military strength especially in tanks and aircraft the Soviet Union suffered severe losses and initially made little headway The League of Nations deemed the attack illegal and expelled the Soviet Union The Soviets made several demands including that Finland cede substantial border territories in exchange for land elsewhere claiming security reasons primarily the protection of Leningrad 32 km 20 mi from the Finnish border When Finland refused the Soviets invaded Most sources conclude that the Soviet Union had intended to conquer all of Finland and cite the establishment of the puppet Finnish Communist government and the Molotov Ribbentrop Pact s secret protocols as evidence of this F 7 while other sources argue against the idea of a full Soviet conquest F 8 Finland repelled Soviet attacks for more than two months and inflicted substantial losses on the invaders in temperatures as low as 43 C 45 F The battles focused mainly on Taipale along the Karelian Isthmus on Kollaa in Ladoga Karelia and on Raate Road in Kainuu but there were also battles in Salla and Petsamo in Lapland Following the initial setbacks the Soviets reduced their strategic objectives and put an end to the puppet Finnish communist government in late January 1940 informing the Finnish government that they were willing to negotiate peace 38 39 After the Soviet military reorganized and adopted different tactics they renewed their offensive in February 1940 and overcame the Finnish defences on the Karelian Isthmus This left the Finnish army in the main theatre of war near the breaking point with a retreat seeming inevitable Consequently Finnish commander in chief Carl Gustaf Emil Mannerheim urged a peace deal with the Soviets while the Finns still retained bargaining power 40 Hostilities ceased in March 1940 with the signing of the Moscow Peace Treaty in which Finland ceded 9 of its territory to the Soviet Union Soviet losses were heavy and the country s international reputation suffered 41 Their gains exceeded their pre war demands and the Soviets received substantial territories along Lake Ladoga and further north Finland retained its sovereignty and enhanced its international reputation The poor performance of the Red Army encouraged German Chancellor Adolf Hitler to believe that an attack on the Soviet Union would be successful and confirmed negative Western opinions of the Soviet military After 15 months of Interim Peace in June 1941 Germany commenced Operation Barbarossa and the Continuation War between Finland and the Soviets began Contents 1 Background 1 1 Finnish Soviet relations and politics 1 2 Justification 1 3 Negotiations 1 4 Shelling of Mainila and Soviet intentions 1 4 1 Soviet intentions 2 Opposing forces 2 1 Soviet military plan 2 2 Soviet order of battle 2 3 Finnish order of battle 3 Soviet invasion 3 1 Start of invasion and political operations 3 2 First battles and Soviet advance to Mannerheim Line 4 Operations from December to January 4 1 Weather conditions 4 2 Finnish guerrilla tactics 4 3 Battles of the Mannerheim Line 4 4 Battles in Ladoga Karelia 4 5 Battles in Kainuu 4 6 Battles in Finnish Lapland 5 Aerial warfare 5 1 Soviet Air Force 5 2 Finnish Air Force 6 Naval warfare 6 1 Naval activity 6 2 Coastal artillery 7 Soviet breakthrough in February 7 1 Red Army reforms and offensive preparations 7 2 Soviet offensive on the Karelian Isthmus 7 3 Peace negotiations 7 4 End of war in March 7 5 Moscow Peace Treaty 8 Foreign support 8 1 Foreign volunteers 8 1 1 White emigres and Russian prisoners of war 8 2 Franco British intervention plans 9 Aftermath and casualties 9 1 Finland 9 2 Soviet Union 9 3 Germany 9 4 Allies 10 See also 11 Explanatory notes 12 Citations 13 General and cited references 13 1 English 13 2 Finnish Russian and other languages 14 Further reading 15 External linksBackgroundMain article Background of the Winter WarSee also Timeline of the Winter War and Treaty of Tartu Finland Russia Finnish Soviet relations and politics Main articles East Karelian uprising and Soviet Finnish Non Aggression Pact See also Independence of Finland nbsp Geopolitical status in Northern Europe in November 1939 42 43 Neutral countries Germany and annexed countries Soviet Union and annexed countries Neutral countries with military bases established by Soviet Union in October 1939Until the early 19th century Finland was the eastern part of the Kingdom of Sweden From 21 February 1808 to 17 September 1809 the Russian Empire waged the Finnish War against the Kingdom of Sweden ostensibly to protect the Russian capital Saint Petersburg Eventually Russia conquered and annexed Finland and converted it into an autonomous buffer state 44 The resulting Grand Duchy of Finland enjoyed wide autonomy within Russia until the end of the 19th century when Russia began attempts to assimilate Finland as part of a general policy to strengthen the central government and unify the Empire by Russification Those attempts were aborted because of Russia s internal strife but they ruined Russia s relationship with Finland In addition support increased in Finland for self determination movements 45 World War I led to the collapse of the Russian Empire during the Russian Revolution of 1917 and the Russian Civil War On 15 November 1917 the Bolshevik Russian government declared that national minorities possessed the right of self determination including the right to secede and form a separate state which gave Finland a window of opportunity On 6 December 1917 the Senate of Finland declared the nation s independence Soviet Russia later the Soviet Union recognised the new Finnish government just three weeks after the declaration 45 Finland achieved full sovereignty in May 1918 after a four month civil war in which the conservative Whites defeated the socialist Reds with the help of the Imperial German Army pro German Jagers and some Swedish troops in addition to the expulsion of Bolshevik troops 46 Finland joined the League of Nations in 1920 and sought security guarantees but Finland s primary goal was co operation with the Scandinavian countries mainly Sweden and it focused on the exchange of information and on defence planning the joint defence of Aland for example rather than on military exercises or on the stockpiling and the deployment of materiel Nevertheless Sweden carefully avoided committing itself to Finnish foreign policy 47 Finland s military policy included clandestine defence co operation with Estonia 48 The period after the Finnish Civil War to the early 1930s was a politically unstable time in Finland because of the continued rivalry between the conservatives and the socialists The Communist Party of Finland was declared illegal in 1931 and the nationalist Lapua Movement organised anticommunist violence which culminated in a failed coup attempt in 1932 The successor of the Lapua Movement the Patriotic People s Movement had a minor presence in national politics and never had more than 14 seats of the 200 in the Finnish Parliament 49 By the late 1930s the export oriented Finnish economy was growing and the nation s extreme political movements had diminished 50 nbsp The Soviet Finnish Non Aggression Pact was signed by Aarno Yrjo Koskinen and Maxim Litvinov in Moscow 1932 After Soviet involvement in the Finnish Civil War in 1918 no formal peace treaty was signed In 1918 and 1919 Finnish volunteers conducted two unsuccessful military incursions across the Soviet border the Viena and Aunus expeditions to annex areas in Karelia that according to the Greater Finland ideology would combine all Baltic Finnic peoples into a single state In 1920 Finnish communists based in Soviet Russia attempted to assassinate the former Finnish White Guard Commander in Chief Marshal Carl Gustaf Emil Mannerheim On 14 October 1920 Finland and Soviet Russia signed the Treaty of Tartu confirming the old border between the autonomous Grand Duchy of Finland and Imperial Russia proper as the new Finnish Soviet border Finland also received Petsamo Province with its ice free harbour on the Arctic Ocean 51 52 Despite the signing of the treaty relations between the two countries remained strained The Finnish government allowed volunteers to cross the border to support the East Karelian uprising in Russia in 1921 and Finnish communists in the Soviet Union continued to prepare for revenge and staged a cross border raid into Finland the Pork Mutiny in 1922 53 In 1932 the Soviet Finnish Non Aggression Pact was signed between both countries and it was reaffirmed for ten years in 1934 53 Foreign trade in Finland was booming but less than 1 of it was with the Soviet Union 54 In 1934 the Soviet Union also joined the League of Nations 53 Justification Soviet General Secretary Joseph Stalin regarded it a disappointment that the Soviet Union could not halt the Finnish Revolution 55 He thought that the pro Finland movement in Karelia posed a direct threat to Leningrad and that the area and defences of Finland could be used to invade the Soviet Union or restrict fleet movements 56 Soviet propaganda then painted Finland s leadership as a vicious and reactionary fascist clique Field Marshal Mannerheim and Vaino Tanner the leader of the Finnish Social Democratic Party were targeted for particular scorn 57 When Stalin gained absolute power through the Great Purge of 1938 the Soviets changed their foreign policy toward Finland and began to pursue the reconquest of the provinces of Tsarist Russia that had been lost during the chaos of the October Revolution of 1917 and the Russian Civil War almost two decades earlier 58 Soviet leaders believed that the old empire s extended borders provided territorial security and wanted Leningrad only 32 km 20 mi from the Finnish border to enjoy a similar level of security against the rising power of Nazi Germany 59 60 Negotiations Main article Molotov Ribbentrop Pact nbsp Finnish soldiers gather breakfast from a field kitchen during additional refresher training at the Karelian Isthmus on 10 October 1939 In April 1938 NKVD agent Boris Yartsev contacted Finnish Foreign Minister Rudolf Holsti and Finnish Prime Minister Aimo Cajander stating that the Soviets did not trust Germany and that war was considered possible between the two countries The Red Army would not wait passively behind the border but would rather advance to meet the enemy Finnish representatives assured Yartsev that Finland was committed to a policy of neutrality and that the country would resist any armed incursion Yartsev suggested that Finland cede or lease some islands in the Gulf of Finland along the seaward approaches to Leningrad but Finland refused 61 62 Negotiations continued throughout 1938 without results The Finnish reception of Soviet entreaties was decidedly cool as the violent collectivisation and purges in Stalin s Soviet Union resulted in a poor opinion of the country Most of the Finnish communist elite in the Soviet Union had been executed during the Great Purge further tarnishing the Soviets image in Finland Meanwhile Finland was attempting to negotiate a military co operation plan with Sweden and hoping to jointly defend Aland 63 The Soviet Union and Nazi Germany signed the Molotov Ribbentrop Pact in August 1939 It was publicly a non aggression treaty but it included a secret protocol in which eastern European countries were divided into spheres of interest Finland fell into the Soviet sphere On 1 September 1939 Germany began its invasion of Poland and two days later the United Kingdom and France declared war on Germany On 17 September the Soviets invaded Eastern Poland Estonia Latvia and Lithuania were soon forced to accept treaties that allowed the Soviets to establish military bases on their soil 64 Estonia accepted the ultimatum by signing the agreement on 28 September Latvia and Lithuania followed in October Unlike the three Baltic countries Finland started a gradual mobilisation under the guise of additional refresher training 65 The Soviets had already started intensive mobilisation near the Finnish border in 1938 39 58 Assault troops thought to be necessary for the invasion did not begin deployment until October 1939 Operational plans made in September called for the invasion to start in November 66 67 On 5 October 1939 the Soviets invited a Finnish delegation to Moscow for negotiations Juho Kusti Paasikivi the Finnish envoy to Sweden was sent to Moscow to represent the Finnish government 65 Furthermore the negotiations were attended by Stalin in person signalling the seriousness of the effort 68 Paasikivi would later recount his surprise over the friendly atmosphere in which the delegation was received and mentioned the pleasant manners of Stalin towards them 69 The meetings began on 12 October with Molotov s offer of a mutual assistance pact which the Finns immediately refused To the Finns surprise Molotov dropped the offer and instead proposed an exchange of territory 68 The offer stipulated that the Finnish Soviet border on the Karelian Isthmus be moved westward to a point only 30 km 19 mi east of Viipuri Russian Vyborg and that Finland destroy all existing fortifications on the Karelian Isthmus Likewise the delegation demanded the cession of islands in the Gulf of Finland as well as Rybachy Peninsula Finnish Kalastajasaarento The Finns would also have to lease the Hanko Peninsula for 30 years and to permit the Soviets to establish a military base there In exchange the Soviet Union would cede Repola and Porajarvi from Eastern Karelia 2120 square miles an area twice the size as that of the territory demanded from Finland 1000 square miles 65 70 71 The Soviet offer divided the Finnish government Gustaf Mannerheim had argued for an agreement being pessimistic of the Finnish prospects in a war against the Soviet Union 72 But the Finnish government was reticent in reaching an agreement out of mistrust for Stalin there was a fear of repeated follow up demands which would have put the future of Finnish sovereignty in danger There were also those such as Foreign Minister Eljas Erkko and Prime Minister Aimo Cajander and the Finnish intelligence in general who mistook the demands and the Soviet military build up as a mere bluff on the part of Stalin and were thus disinclined to reach an agreement 72 The Finns made two counteroffers to cede the Terijoki area to the Soviet Union That would double the distance between Leningrad and the Finnish border but was far less than the Soviets had demanded 73 The Finns would also cede the islands in the Gulf of Finland but they would not agree to lease any territory to the USSR for military purposes 74 75 On the next meeting on 23 October Stalin conceded to lessen his demands a reduction in the amount of land demanded in Karelia a reduction of the Hanko garrison from 5000 to 4000 men and reducing the length of lease from 30 years to whatever date the ongoing second world war in Europe would end 76 However this sudden change contrary to previous statements that Soviet demands were minimalist and thus unalterable had surprised the Finnish government and lead them to believe more concession may be forthcoming Thus Paasikivi s idea of reaching some sort of compromise by offering the Soviets the island of Jussaro and the fort of Ino were refused by Helsinki 77 On 31 October Molotov publicly announced the Soviet demands to the Supreme Soviet This surprised the Finns and lent credibility to Soviet claims that their demands were minimalist and thus unalterable as it would have been impossible to reduce them without a loss of prestige after having made them public 78 However the Soviet offer was eventually rejected with respect to the opinion of the public and Parliament 73 At the meeting on 9 November Paasikivi announced to the attending Stalin and Molotov the Finnish refusal to accept even their reduced demands The Soviets were visibly surprised Finnish Foreign Minister Vaino Tanner later wrote that the eyes of our opposite numbers opened wide Stalin had asked You don t even offer Ino 79 This would become the final meeting the Soviets stopped responding to further Finnish letters and on 13 November when the Finnish delegation was recalled from Moscow no Soviet officials came to see them off 80 The Finns had left under the expectation that the negotiations would continue 81 Instead the Soviet Union ramped up its military preparations 82 The negotiations had failed as neither side was willing to substantially reduce their demands nor was either side able to fully trust the other The Finns were fearful of an encroachment on their sovereignty while the Soviets were claiming to be fearful of a springboard for international enemies in Finland in close proximity to Leningrad No promises to the contrary managed to persuade the other 83 Additionally both sides had misunderstood the others position the Finns had assumed that the Soviets had opened up on a maximalist demand ready to be traded down smaller The Soviets instead had stressed the minimalist nature of their demands and were incredulous over Finnish reluctance to agree 75 Finally there was also Stalin s unwillingness or inability to accept that any territorial concessions on the part of Finland would have only been possible by a 4 5th majority in the Finnish parliament He had mocked such a requirement proposing that they count his and Molotov s votes too 84 Shelling of Mainila and Soviet intentions Main article Shelling of Mainila On 26 November 1939 an incident was reported near the Soviet village of Mainila near the border with Finland A Soviet border guard post had been shelled by an unknown party resulting according to Soviet reports in the deaths of four and injuries of nine border guards Research conducted by several Finnish and Russian historians later concluded that the shelling was a false flag operation since there were no artillery units there and it was carried out from the Soviet side of the border by an NKVD unit with the purpose of providing the Soviets with a casus belli and a pretext to withdraw from the non aggression pact 85 86 F 9 Soviet war games held in March 1938 and 1939 had been based on a scenario in which border incidents taking place at the village of Mainila would spark the war 89 nbsp 29 November 1939 foreign journalists at Mainila where a border incident between Finland and the Soviet Union escalated into the Winter War Molotov claimed that the incident was a Finnish artillery attack He demanded that Finland apologise for the incident and to move its forces beyond a line 20 25 km 12 16 mi from the border 90 Finland denied responsibility for the attack rejected the demands and called for a joint Finnish Soviet commission to examine the incident In turn the Soviet Union claimed that the Finnish response was hostile renounced the non aggression pact and severed diplomatic relations with Finland on 28 November In the following years Soviet historiography described the incident as Finnish provocation Doubt on the official Soviet version was cast only in the late 1980s during the policy of glasnost The issue has continued to divide Russian historiography even after the end of the Soviet Union in 1991 91 92 Soviet intentions In 2013 Russian President Vladimir Putin stated at a meeting with military historians that the Soviets had launched the Winter War to correct mistakes made in determining the border with Finland after 1917 93 Opinion on the scale of the initial Soviet invasion decision is divided The puppet Finnish communist government and the Molotov Ribbentrop Pact s secret protocol is used as proof that the Soviet Union had intended to conquer all of Finland F 10 On 1 December 1939 the Soviet Union formed a puppet government named the Finnish Democratic Republic to govern Finland after Soviet conquest F 11 A declaration delivered via TASS stated The People s Government in its present composition regards itself as a provisional government Immediately upon arrival in Helsinki capital of the country it will be reorganised and its composition enlarged by the inclusion of representatives of the various parties and groups participating in the people s front of toilers 98 Soviet leaflets dropped over Helsinki on the first day of the war stated Finnish Comrades We come to you not as conquerors but as liberators of the Finnish people from the oppression of the capitalists and the landlords 99 100 In 1939 Soviet military leadership had formulated a realistic and comprehensive plan for the occupation of Finland 101 However Joseph Stalin was not pleased with the conservative pace that the operation required and demanded new plans be drawn up With the new plans the key deadline for Finland s capitulation was to be Stalin s 60th birthday on 21 December 102 Convinced of the invasion s forthcoming success Andrei Zhdanov chairman of the highest legislative body in the Soviet Union commissioned a celebratory piece of music from Dmitri Shostakovich Suite on Finnish Themes intended to be performed as the marching bands of the Red Army paraded through Helsinki 103 104 Hungarian historian Istvan Ravasz wrote that the Soviet Central Committee had set out in 1939 that the former borders of the Tsarist Empire were to be restored including Finland 30 American political scientist Dan Reiter stated that the Soviets sought to impose a regime change and thus achieve absolute victory He quoted Molotov who had commented in November 1939 on the regime change plan to a Soviet ambassador that the new government will not be Soviet but one of a democratic republic Nobody is going to set up Soviets over there but we hope it will be a government we can come to terms with as to ensure the security of Leningrad 33 According to Russian historian Yuri Kilin the Soviet terms encompassed the strongest fortified approaches of the Finnish defences for a reason He claimed that Stalin had little hope for such a deal but would play for time for the ongoing mobilisation He stated the objective as being to secure Finland from being used as a staging ground by means of regime change 105 Others argue against the idea of a complete Soviet conquest American historian William R Trotter asserted that Stalin s objective was to secure Leningrad s flank from a possible German invasion through Finland He stated that the strongest argument against a Soviet intention of full conquest is that it did not happen in either 1939 or during the Continuation War in 1944 even though Stalin could have done so with comparative ease 35 Bradley Lightbody wrote that the entire Soviet aim had been to make the Soviet border more secure 36 In 2002 Russian historian A Chubaryan stated that no documents had been found in Russian archives that support a Soviet plan to annex Finland Rather the objective was to gain Finnish territory and to reinforce Soviet influence in the region 34 Another American historian Stephen Kotkin also shares the position that the Soviet Union did not aim for annexation He points out the different treatment Finland was given compared to the Baltics unlike the pacts of mutual assistance that the Baltics were pressured into resulting in their total Sovietization the Soviets demanded limited territorial concessions from Finland and even offered land in return which would not have made sense if full Sovietization was intended 106 And according to Kotkin Stalin seemed to be genuinely interested in reaching an agreement during the negotiations he had personally attended six of the seven meetings with the Finns and had multiple times reduced his demands 107 However mutual mistrust and misunderstandings would mar the negotiations producing an impasse 83 Opposing forcesSoviet military plan Before the war Soviet leadership had expected total victory within a few weeks The Red Army had just completed the invasion of eastern Poland at a cost of fewer than 4 000 casualties after Germany attacked Poland from the west Stalin s expectations of a quick Soviet triumph were backed up by politician Andrei Zhdanov and military strategist Kliment Voroshilov but other generals were more reserved Red Army Chief of Staff Boris Shaposhnikov advocated a narrow front assault right on the Karelian isthmus 108 Additionally Shaposhnikov argued for a fuller build up extensive fire support and logistical preparations a rational order of battle and the deployment of the army s best units Zhdanov s military commander Kirill Meretskov reported The terrain of coming operations is split by lakes rivers swamps and is almost entirely covered by forests The proper use of our forces will be difficult These doubts were not reflected in Meretskov s troop deployments and he publicly announced that the Finnish campaign would take two weeks at most Soviet soldiers had even been warned not to cross the border mistakenly into Sweden 109 Stalin s purges in the 1930s had devastated the officer corps of the Red Army those purged included three of its five marshals 220 of its 264 division or higher level commanders and 36 761 officers of all ranks Fewer than half of all the officers remained 110 111 They were commonly replaced by soldiers who were less competent but more loyal to their superiors Unit commanders were overseen by political commissars whose approval was needed to approve and ratify military decisions which they evaluated based on their political merits The dual system further complicated the Soviet chain of command 112 113 and annulled the independence of commanding officers 114 After the Soviet success at the Battles of Khalkhin Gol against Japan on the USSR s eastern border Soviet High Command had divided into two factions One side was represented by the Spanish Civil War veterans General Pavel Rychagov from the Soviet Air Forces the tank expert General Dmitry Pavlov and Stalin s favourite general Marshal Grigory Kulik the chief of artillery 115 The other faction was led by Khalkhin Gol veterans General Georgy Zhukov of the Red Army and General Grigory Kravchenko of the Soviet Air Forces 116 Under this divided command structure the lessons of the Soviet Union s first real war on a massive scale using tanks artillery and aircraft at Khalkin Gol went unheeded 117 As a result Russian BT tanks were less successful during the Winter War and it took the Soviet Union three months and over a million men to accomplish what Zhukov had managed at Khalkhin Gol in ten days albeit in completely different circumstances 117 118 Soviet order of battle See also Red Army nbsp Dense forests of Ladoga Karelia at Kollaa A Soviet tank on the road in the background according to the photographer Soviet generals were impressed by the success of German Blitzkrieg tactics but they had been tailored to conditions in Central Europe with its dense well mapped network of paved roads Armies fighting there had recognised supply and communications centres which could be easily targeted by armoured vehicle regiments Finnish Army centres in contrast were deep inside the country There were no paved roads and even gravel or dirt roads were scarce Most of the terrain consisted of trackless forests and swamps The war correspondent John Langdon Davies observed the landscape Every acre of its surface was created to be the despair of an attacking military force 119 Waging Blitzkrieg in Finland was a highly difficult proposition and according to Trotter the Red Army failed to meet the level of tactical co ordination and local initiative that would be required to execute such tactics in Finland 120 Commander of the Leningrad Military District Kiril Meretskov initially ran the overall operation against the Finns 121 The command was passed on 9 December 1939 to the General Staff Supreme Command later known as Stavka directly under Kliment Voroshilov chairman Nikolai Kuznetsov Stalin and Boris Shaposhnikov 122 123 On 28 December when Stalin asked for volunteers to take over military command Semyon Timoshenko offered himself on the condition that he be allowed to implement Shaposhnikov s initial plan of a focused attack on the Karelian Isthmus to break the Mannerhiem Line it was accepted 124 125 In January 1940 the Leningrad Military District was reformed and renamed North Western Front 125 The Soviet forces were organised as follows 126 The 7th Army comprising nine divisions a tank corps and three tank brigades was located on the Karelian Isthmus Its objective was to quickly overrun the Finnish defenses on the Karelian Isthmus and conquer Viipuri From there the 7th Army was to continue towards Lappeenranta then turn west towards Lahti before the final push to the capital Helsinki The force was later divided into the 7th and 13th Armies 127 128 The 8th Army comprising six divisions and a tank brigade was north of Lake Ladoga Its mission was to execute a flanking manoeuvre around the northern shore of Lake Ladoga to strike at the rear of the Mannerheim Line 127 The 9th Army was positioned to strike into Central Finland through the Kainuu region It was composed of three divisions with one more on its way Its mission was to thrust westward to cut Finland in half 127 The 14th Army comprising three divisions was based in Murmansk Its objectives were to capture the Arctic port of Petsamo and then advance to the town of Rovaniemi 127 Finnish order of battle See also Finnish Army nbsp Offensives of the four Soviet armies from 30 November to 22 December 1939 displayed in red 129 130 The Finnish strategy was dictated by geography The 1 340 km 830 mi border with the Soviet Union was mostly impassable except along a handful of unpaved roads In prewar calculations the Finnish Defence Command which had established its wartime headquarters at Mikkeli 126 had estimated seven Soviet divisions on the Karelian Isthmus and no more than five along the whole border north of Lake Ladoga In the estimation the manpower ratio would have favoured the attacker by three to one The true ratio was much higher however since for example 12 Soviet divisions were deployed north of Lake Ladoga 131 Finland had a large force of reservists which was trained in regular maneuvers some of which had experience from the recent Finnish Civil War The soldiers were also almost universally trained in basic survival techniques such as skiing The Finnish Army was not able to equip all its soldiers with proper uniforms at the outbreak of war but its reservists were equipped with warm civilian clothing However the sparsely populated highly agrarian Finland had to draft so many of its working men that the Finnish economy was massively strained because of a lack of workers An even greater problem than lack of soldiers was the lack of materiel since foreign shipments of anti tank weapons and aircraft were arriving only in small quantities The ammunition situation was alarming as stockpiles had cartridges shells and fuel to last only 19 to 60 days The ammunition shortage meant the Finns could seldom afford counter battery or saturation fire Finnish tank forces were operationally nonexistent 131 The ammunition situation was alleviated somewhat since Finns were largely armed with Mosin Nagant rifles dating from the Finnish Civil War which used the same 7 62 54mmR cartridge that was used by Soviet forces The situation was so severe that Finnish soldiers sometimes had to maintain their ammunition supply by looting the bodies of dead Soviet soldiers 132 The Finnish forces were positioned as follows 133 The Army of the Isthmus was composed of six divisions under the command of Hugo Osterman The II Army Corps was positioned on its right flank and the III Army Corps on its left flank The IV Army Corps was located north of Lake Ladoga It was composed of two divisions under Juho Heiskanen who was soon replaced by Woldemar Hagglund The North Finland Group was a collection of White Guards border guards and drafted reservist units under Wiljo Tuompo Soviet invasionStart of invasion and political operations On 30 November 1939 Soviet forces invaded Finland with 21 divisions totalling 450 000 men and bombed Helsinki 127 134 killing about 100 citizens and destroying more than 50 buildings In response to international criticism Soviet Foreign Minister Vyacheslav Molotov stated that the Soviet Air Force was not bombing Finnish cities but rather dropping humanitarian aid to the starving Finnish population the bombs were sarcastically dubbed Molotov bread baskets by Finns 135 136 The Finnish statesman J K Paasikivi commented that the Soviet attack without a declaration of war violated three separate non aggression pacts the Treaty of Tartu which was signed in 1920 the non aggression pact between Finland and the Soviet Union which was signed in 1932 and again in 1934 and also the Covenant of the League of Nations which the Soviet Union signed in 1934 88 Field Marshal C G E Mannerheim was appointed Commander in Chief of the Finnish Defence Forces after the Soviet attack In a further reshuffling Aimo Cajander s caretaker cabinet was replaced by Risto Ryti and his cabinet with Vaino Tanner as foreign minister because of opposition to Cajander s prewar politics 137 Finland brought the matter of the Soviet invasion before the League of Nations The League expelled the Soviet Union on 14 December 1939 and exhorted its members to aid Finland 138 139 Headed by Otto Wille Kuusinen the Finnish Democratic Republic puppet government operated in the parts of Finnish Karelia occupied by the Soviets and was also referred to as the Terijoki Government after the village of Terijoki the first settlement captured by the advancing Red Army 140 After the war the puppet government was reabsorbed into the Soviet Union From the very outset of the war working class Finns stood behind the legitimate government in Helsinki 138 Finnish national unity against the Soviet invasion was later called the spirit of the Winter War 141 First battles and Soviet advance to Mannerheim Line nbsp The situation on 7 December Soviets have reached the Mannerheim Line on the Karelian Isthmus Finnish division XX or corps XXX Soviet division XX corps XXX or army XXXX The array of Finnish defence structures that during the war started to be called the Mannerheim Line was located on the Karelian Isthmus approximately 30 to 75 km 19 to 47 mi from the Soviet border The Red Army soldiers on the Isthmus numbered 250 000 facing 130 000 Finns 142 The Finnish command deployed a defence in depth of about 21 000 men in the area in front of the Mannerheim Line to delay and damage the Red Army before it reached the line 143 In combat the most severe cause of confusion among Finnish soldiers was Soviet tanks The Finns had few anti tank weapons and insufficient training in modern anti tank tactics According to Trotter the favoured Soviet armoured tactic was a simple frontal charge the weaknesses of which could be exploited The Finns learned that at close range tanks could be dealt with in many ways for example logs and crowbars jammed into the bogie wheels would often immobilise a tank Soon Finns fielded a better ad hoc weapon the Molotov cocktail a glass bottle filled with flammable liquids and with a simple hand lit fuse Molotov cocktails were eventually mass produced by the Finnish Alko alcoholic beverage corporation and bundled with matches with which to light them 80 Soviet tanks were destroyed in the border zone engagements 144 By 6 December all of the Finnish covering forces had withdrawn to the Mannerheim Line The Red Army began its first major attack against the Line in Taipale the area between the shore of Lake Ladoga the Taipale river and the Suvanto waterway Along the Suvanto sector the Finns had a slight advantage of elevation and dry ground to dig into The Finnish artillery had scouted the area and made fire plans in advance anticipating a Soviet assault The Battle of Taipale began with a forty hour Soviet artillery preparation After the barrage Soviet infantry attacked across open ground but was repulsed with heavy casualties From 6 to 12 December the Red Army continued to try to engage using only a single division Next the Red Army strengthened its artillery and deployed tanks and the 150th Rifle Division forward to the Taipale front On 14 December the bolstered Soviet forces launched a new attack but were pushed back again A third Soviet division entered the fight but performed poorly and panicked under shell fire The assaults continued without success and the Red Army suffered heavy losses One typical Soviet attack during the battle lasted just an hour but left 1 000 dead and 27 tanks strewn on the ice 145 North of Lake Ladoga on the Ladoga Karelia front the defending Finnish units relied on the terrain Ladoga Karelia a large forest wilderness did not have road networks for the modern Red Army 146 The Soviet 8th Army had extended a new railroad line to the border which could double the supply capability on the front On 12 December the advancing Soviet 139th Rifle Division supported by the 56th Rifle Division was defeated by a much smaller Finnish force under Paavo Talvela in Tolvajarvi the first Finnish victory of the war 147 In Central and Northern Finland roads were few and the terrain hostile The Finns did not expect large scale Soviet attacks but the Soviets sent eight divisions heavily supported by armour and artillery The 155th Rifle Division attacked at Lieksa and further north the 44th attacked at Kuhmo The 163rd Rifle Division was deployed at Suomussalmi and ordered to cut Finland in half by advancing on the Raate road In Finnish Lapland the Soviet 88th and 122nd Rifle Divisions attacked at Salla The Arctic port of Petsamo was attacked by the 104th Mountain Rifle Division by sea and land supported by naval gunfire 148 Operations from December to JanuaryWeather conditions See also Climate of Finland and Cold weather warfare nbsp Swedish volunteer with a Carl Gustaf M 96 rifle wearing a face wool mask 149 The winter of 1939 40 was exceptionally cold with the Karelian Isthmus experiencing a record low temperature of 43 C 45 F on 16 January 1940 150 At the beginning of the war only those Finnish soldiers who were in active service had uniforms and weapons The rest had to make do with their own clothing which for many soldiers was their normal winter clothing with a semblance of insignia added Finnish soldiers were skilled in cross country skiing 151 The cold snow forest and long hours of darkness were factors that the Finns could use to their advantage The Finns dressed in layers and the ski troopers wore a lightweight white snow cape This snow camouflage made the ski troopers almost invisible so that they could more easily execute guerrilla attacks against Soviet columns At the beginning of the war Soviet tanks were painted in standard olive drab and men dressed in regular khaki uniforms Not until late January 1940 did the Soviets paint their equipment white and issue snowsuits to their infantry 152 Most Soviet soldiers had proper winter clothes but this was not the case with every unit In the Battle of Suomussalmi thousands of Soviet soldiers died of frostbite The Soviet troops also lacked skill in skiing so soldiers were restricted to movement by road and were forced to move in long columns The Red Army lacked proper winter tents and troops had to sleep in improvised shelters 153 Some Soviet units incurred frostbite casualties as high as ten per cent even before crossing the Finnish border 152 However the cold weather did give an advantage to Soviet tanks as they could move over frozen terrain and bodies of water rather than being immobilised in swamps and mud 153 According to Krivosheev at least 61 506 Soviet troops were sick or frostbitten during the war 19 Finnish guerrilla tactics See also Sissi Finnish light infantry nbsp Soviet tracks at Kianta Lake Suomussalmi during a Finnish pursuit in December 1939 Nordic combined skier Timo Murama is pictured In battles from Ladoga Karelia to the Arctic port of Petsamo the Finns used guerrilla tactics The Red Army was superior in numbers and material but Finns used the advantages of speed manoeuvre warfare and economy of force Particularly on the Ladoga Karelia front and during the Battle of Raate Road the Finns isolated smaller portions of numerically superior Soviet forces With Soviet forces divided into smaller groups the Finns dealt with them individually and attacked from all sides 154 For many of the encircled Soviet troops in a pocket called a motti in Finnish originally meaning 1 m3 35 cu ft of firewood staying alive was an ordeal comparable to combat The men were freezing and starving and endured poor sanitary conditions Historian William R Trotter described these conditions as follows The Soviet soldier had no choice If he refused to fight he would be shot If he tried to sneak through the forest he would freeze to death And surrender was no option for him Soviet propaganda had told him how the Finns would torture prisoners to death 155 The problem however was that the Finns were mostly too weak to fully exploit their success Some of the pockets of encircled Soviet soldiers held out for weeks and even months binding a huge number of Finnish forces Battles of the Mannerheim Line The terrain on the Karelian Isthmus did not allow guerrilla tactics so the Finns were forced to resort to the more conventional Mannerheim Line with its flanks protected by large bodies of water Soviet propaganda claimed that it was as strong as or even stronger than the Maginot Line Finnish historians for their part have belittled the line s strength insisting that it was mostly conventional trenches and log covered dugouts 156 The Finns had built 221 strong points along the Karelian Isthmus mostly in the early 1920s Many were extended in the late 1930s Despite these defensive preparations even the most fortified section of the Mannerheim Line had only one reinforced concrete bunker per kilometre Overall the line was weaker than similar lines in mainland Europe 157 According to the Finns the real strength of the line was the stubborn defenders with a lot of sisu a Finnish idiom roughly translated as guts fighting spirit 156 On the eastern side of the Isthmus the Red Army attempted to break through the Mannerheim Line at the battle of Taipale On the western side Soviet units faced the Finnish line at Summa near the city of Viipuri on 16 December The Finns had built 41 reinforced concrete bunkers in the Summa area making the defensive line in this area stronger than anywhere else on the Karelian Isthmus Because of a mistake in planning the nearby Munasuo swamp had a 1 kilometre 0 62 mi wide gap in the line 158 During the First Battle of Summa a number of Soviet tanks broke through the thin line on 19 December but the Soviets could not benefit from the situation because of insufficient co operation between branches of service The Finns remained in their trenches allowing the Soviet tanks to move freely behind the Finnish line as the Finns had no proper anti tank weapons The Finns succeeded in repelling the main Soviet assault The tanks stranded behind enemy lines attacked the strongpoints at random until they were eventually destroyed 20 in all By 22 December the battle ended in a Finnish victory 159 The Soviet advance was stopped at the Mannerheim Line Red Army troops suffered from poor morale and a shortage of supplies eventually refusing to participate in more suicidal frontal attacks The Finns led by General Harald Ohquist decided to launch a counter attack and encircle three Soviet divisions into a motti near Viipuri on 23 December Ohquist s plan was bold however it failed The Finns lost 1 300 men and the Soviets were later estimated to have lost a similar number 160 Battles in Ladoga Karelia nbsp Simo Hayha the legendary Finnish sniper known as the White Death by Soviets The strength of the Red Army north of Lake Ladoga in Ladoga Karelia surprised the Finnish Headquarters Two Finnish divisions were deployed there the 12th Division led by Lauri Tiainen and the 13th Division led by Hannu Hannuksela They also had a support group of three brigades bringing their total strength to over 30 000 The Soviets deployed a division for almost every road leading west to the Finnish border The 8th Army was led by Ivan Khabarov who was replaced by Grigory Shtern on 13 December 161 The Soviets mission was to destroy the Finnish troops in the area of Ladoga Karelia and advance into the area between Sortavala and Joensuu within 10 days The Soviets had a 3 1 advantage in manpower and a 5 1 advantage in artillery as well as air supremacy 162 Finnish forces panicked and retreated in front of the overwhelming Red Army The commander of the Finnish IV Army Corps Juho Heiskanen was replaced by Woldemar Hagglund on 4 December 163 On 7 December in the middle of the Ladoga Karelian front Finnish units retreated near the small stream of Kollaa The waterway itself did not offer protection but alongside it there were ridges up to 10 m 33 ft high The ensuing battle of Kollaa lasted until the end of the war A memorable quote Kollaa holds Finnish Kollaa kestaa became a legendary motto among Finns 164 Further contributing to the legend of Kollaa was the sniper Simo Hayha dubbed the White Death by Soviets and credited with over 500 kills 165 Captain Aarne Juutilainen dubbed the Terror of Morocco also became a living legend in the Battle of Kollaa 166 To the north the Finns retreated from Aglajarvi to Tolvajarvi on 5 December and then repelled a Soviet offensive in the battle of Tolvajarvi on 11 December 167 In the south two Soviet divisions were united on the northern side of the Lake Ladoga coastal road As before these divisions were trapped as the more mobile Finnish units counterattacked from the north to flank the Soviet columns On 19 December the Finns temporarily ceased their assaults due to exhaustion 168 It was not until the period of 6 16 January 1940 that the Finns resumed their offensive dividing Soviet divisions into smaller mottis 169 Contrary to Finnish expectations the encircled Soviet divisions did not try to break through to the east but instead entrenched They were expecting reinforcements and supplies to arrive by air As the Finns lacked the necessary heavy artillery equipment and were short of men they often did not directly attack the mottis they had created instead they worked to eliminate only the most dangerous threats Often the motti tactic was not applied as a strategy but as a Finnish adaptation to the behaviour of Soviet troops under fire 170 In spite of the cold and hunger the Soviet troops did not surrender easily but fought bravely often entrenching their tanks to be used as pillboxes and building timber dugouts Some specialist Finnish soldiers were called in to attack the mottis the most famous of them was Major Matti Aarnio or Motti Matti as he became known 171 In North Karelia Soviet forces were outmanoeuvred at Ilomantsi and Lieksa The Finns used effective guerrilla tactics taking special advantage of their superior skiing skills and snow white layered clothing and executing surprise ambushes and raids By the end of December the Soviets decided to retreat and transfer resources to more critical fronts 172 Battles in Kainuu nbsp Dead Soviet soldiers and their equipment at Raate Road Suomussalmi after being encircled at the Battle of Raate RoadThe Suomussalmi Raate engagement was a double operation 173 which would later be used by military academics as a classic example of what well led troops and innovative tactics can do against a much larger adversary Suomussalmi was a municipality of 4 000 with long lakes wild forests and few roads The Finnish command believed that the Soviets would not attack there but the Red Army committed two divisions to the Kainuu area with orders to cross the wilderness capture the city of Oulu and effectively cut Finland in two There were two roads leading to Suomussalmi from the frontier the northern Juntusranta road and the southern Raate road 174 The Battle of Raate Road which occurred during the month long Battle of Suomussalmi resulted in one of the largest Soviet losses in the Winter War The Soviet 44th and parts of the 163rd Rifle Division comprising about 14 000 troops 175 were almost completely destroyed by a Finnish ambush as they marched along the forest road A small unit blocked the Soviet advance while Finnish Colonel Hjalmar Siilasvuo and his 9th Division cut off the retreat route split the enemy force into smaller mottis and then proceeded to destroy the remnants in detail as they retreated The Soviets suffered 7 000 9 000 casualties 176 the Finnish units 400 177 The Finnish troops captured dozens of tanks artillery pieces anti tank guns hundreds of trucks almost 2 000 horses thousands of rifles and much needed ammunition and medical supplies 178 So sure of their victory had the Soviets been that a military band complete with instruments banners and notes was traveling with the 44th Division to perform in a victory parade The Finns found their instruments among the captured materiel 179 Battles in Finnish Lapland nbsp A Finnish soldier on guard near Kemijarvi in February 1940 The Finnish area of Lapland bestriding the Arctic Circle is sparsely developed with little daylight and persistent snow cover during winter the Finns expected nothing more than raiding parties and reconnaissance patrols Instead the Soviets sent full divisions 180 On 11 December the Finns rearranged the defence of Lapland and detached the Lapland Group from the North Finland Group The group was placed under the command of Kurt Wallenius 181 In southern Lapland near the village of Salla the Soviet 88th and 122nd Divisions totaling 35 000 men advanced In the Battle of Salla the Soviets proceeded easily to Salla where the road split Further ahead was Kemijarvi while the fork to Pelkosenniemi led northwest On 17 December the Soviet northern group comprising an infantry regiment a battalion and a company of tanks was outflanked by a Finnish battalion The 122nd retreated abandoning much of its heavy equipment and vehicles Following this success the Finns shuttled reinforcements to the defensive line in front of Kemijarvi The Soviets hammered the defensive line without success The Finns counter attacked and the Soviets retreated to a new defensive line where they stayed for the rest of the war 182 183 To the north was Finland s only ice free port in the Arctic Petsamo The Finns lacked the manpower to defend it fully as the main front was distant at the Karelian Isthmus In the battle of Petsamo the Soviet 104th Division attacked the Finnish 104th Independent Cover Company The Finns abandoned Petsamo and concentrated on delaying actions The area was treeless windy and relatively low offering little defensible terrain The almost constant darkness and extreme temperatures of the Lapland winter benefited the Finns who executed guerrilla attacks against Soviet supply lines and patrols As a result the Soviet movements were halted by the efforts of one fifth as many Finns 180 Aerial warfareMain article Aerial warfare in the Winter War Soviet Air Force The USSR enjoyed air superiority throughout the war The Soviet Air Force supporting the Red Army s invasion with about 2 500 aircraft the most common type being Tupolev SB was not as effective as the Soviets might have hoped The material damage by the bomb raids was slight as Finland offered few valuable targets for strategic bombing For example the city of Tampere was one of the most important targets because it was an important railway junction and also housed State Aircraft Factory and the Tampere Linen and Iron Industry premises which manufactured munitions and weapons including grenade launchers 184 185 Often targets were village depots with little value The country had few modern highways in the interior therefore making the railways the main targets for bombers Rail tracks were cut thousands of times but the Finns hastily repaired them and service resumed within a matter of hours 10 The Soviet Air Force learned from its early mistakes and by late February instituted more effective tactics 186 The largest bombing raid against the capital of Finland Helsinki occurred on the first day of the war The capital was bombed only a few times thereafter All in all Soviet bombings cost Finland five per cent of its total man hour production Nevertheless Soviet air attacks affected thousands of civilians killing 957 11 The Soviets recorded 2 075 bombing attacks in 516 localities The city of Viipuri a major Soviet objective close to the Karelian Isthmus front was almost levelled by nearly 12 000 bombs 187 No attacks on civilian targets were mentioned in Soviet radio or newspaper reports In January 1940 the Soviet Pravda newspaper continued to lie that no civilian targets in Finland had been struck even accidentally 188 It is estimated that the Soviet air force lost about 400 aircraft because of inclement weather lack of fuel and tools and during transport to the front The Soviet Air Force flew approximately 44 000 sorties during the war 186 Finnish Air Force nbsp March 1940 a Finnish Bristol Blenheim Mk IV bomber of the No 44 Squadron refuelling at its air base on a frozen lake in Tikkakoski On the fuselage is the swastika which the Finnish Air Force had adopted as their symbol in 1918 Despite the similarity it was not a Nazi design but was based on the personal owner Eric von Rosen had donated the first aircraft to the Air Force At the beginning of the war Finland had a small air force with only 114 combat planes fit for duty Missions were limited and fighter aircraft were mainly used to repel Soviet bombers Strategic bombings doubled as opportunities for military reconnaissance Old fashioned and few in number aircraft offered little support for Finnish ground troops In spite of losses the number of planes in the Finnish Air Force rose by over 50 per cent by the end of the war 189 The Finns received shipments of British French Italian Swedish and American aircraft 190 Finnish fighter pilots often flew their motley collection of planes into Soviet formations that outnumbered them 10 or even 20 times Finnish fighters shot down 200 Soviet aircraft while losing 62 of their own on all causes 14 Finnish anti aircraft guns downed more than 300 enemy aircraft 14 Often a Finnish forward air base consisted of a frozen lake a windsock a telephone set and some tents Air raid warnings were given by Finnish women organised by the Lotta Svard 191 The top scoring fighter ace was Jorma Sarvanto with 12 83 victories He would increase his tally during the Continuation War Naval warfareMain article Naval warfare in the Winter War Naval activity There was little naval activity during the Winter War The Baltic Sea began to freeze over by the end of December impeding the movement of warships by mid winter only ice breakers and submarines could still move The other reason for low naval activity was the nature of Soviet Navy forces in the area The Baltic Fleet was a coastal defence force which did not have the training logistical structure or landing craft to undertake large scale operations The Baltic Fleet possessed two battleships one heavy cruiser almost 20 destroyers 50 motor torpedo boats 52 submarines and other miscellaneous vessels The Soviets used naval bases in Paldiski Tallinn and Liepaja for their operations 192 The Finnish Navy was a coastal defence force with two coastal defence ships five submarines four gunboats seven motor torpedo boats one minelayer and six minesweepers and at least 5 icebreakers The two coastal defence ships Ilmarinen and Vainamoinen were moved to harbour in Turku where they were used to bolster the air defence Their anti aircraft guns shot down one or two planes over the city and the ships remained there for the rest of the war 137 At 18 January Finnish armed icebreaker Tarmo was severely damaged at Kotka received 2 bombs from a Soviet bomber with 39 Finnish troops killed in action As well as coastal defence the Finnish Navy protected the Alandish and Finnish merchant vessels in the Baltic Sea 193 Soviet aircraft bombed Finnish vessels and harbours and dropped mines into Finnish seaways Still only five merchant ships were lost to Soviet action World War II which had started before the Winter War proved more costly for the Finnish merchant vessels with 26 lost due to hostile action in 1939 and 1940 194 Coastal artillery Finnish coastal artillery batteries defended important harbours and naval bases Most batteries were left over from the Imperial Russian period with 152 mm 6 0 in guns being the most numerous Finland attempted to modernise its old guns and installed a number of new batteries the largest of which featured a 305 mm 12 0 in gun battery on the island of Kuivasaari in front of Helsinki originally intended to block the Gulf of Finland to Soviet ships with the help of batteries on the Estonian side 195 The first naval battle occurred in the Gulf of Finland on 1 December near the island of Russaro 5 km 3 1 mi south of Hanko That day the weather was fair and visibility was excellent The Finns spotted the Soviet cruiser Kirov and two destroyers When the ships were at a range of 24 km 13 nmi 15 mi the Finns opened fire with four 234 mm 9 2 in coastal guns After five minutes of firing by the coastal guns the cruiser had been damaged by near misses and retreated The destroyers remained undamaged but the Kirov suffered 17 dead and 30 wounded The Soviets already knew the locations of the Finnish coastal batteries but were surprised by their range 196 Coastal artillery had a greater effect on land by reinforcing defence in conjunction with army artillery Two sets of fortress artillery made significant contributions to the early battles on the Karelian Isthmus and in Ladoga Karelia These were located at Kaarnajoki on the Eastern Isthmus and at Mantsi on the northeastern shore of Lake Ladoga The fortress of Koivisto provided similar support from the southwestern coast of the Isthmus 197 Soviet breakthrough in FebruaryRed Army reforms and offensive preparations nbsp Finnish officers inspecting Soviet skiing manuals gained as loot from the Battle of SuomussalmiJoseph Stalin was not pleased with the results of December in the Finnish campaign The Red Army had been humiliated By the third week of the war Soviet propaganda was already working to explain the failures of the Soviet military to the populace blaming bad terrain and harsh climate and falsely claiming that the Mannerheim Line was stronger than the Maginot Line and that the Americans had sent 1 000 of their best pilots to Finland However the Soviets were confronted with the unavoidable reality of the poor performance of their troops against the Finns Stalin in particular was concerned about the effects of the war on Soviet reputation 198 In late December the Soviets decided to reduce their strategic objectives and focused on bringing the war to an end 199 Chief of Staff Boris Shaposhnikov was given full authority over operations in the Finnish theatre and he ordered the suspension of frontal assaults in late December Kliment Voroshilov was replaced with Semyon Timoshenko as the commander of the Soviet forces in the war on 7 January 200 The main focus of the Soviet attack was switched to the Karelian Isthmus Timoshenko and Zhdanov reorganised and tightened control between different branches of service in the Red Army They also changed tactical doctrines to meet the realities of the situation 201 The Soviet forces on the Karelian Isthmus were divided into two armies the 7th and the 13th Army The 7th Army now under Kirill Meretskov would concentrate 75 per cent of its strength against the 16 km 9 9 mi stretch of the Mannerheim Line between Taipale and the Munasuo swamp Tactics would be basic an armoured wedge for the initial breakthrough followed by the main infantry and vehicle assault force The Red Army would prepare by pinpointing the Finnish frontline fortifications The 123rd Rifle Division then rehearsed the assault on life size mock ups The Soviets shipped large numbers of new tanks and artillery pieces to the theatre Troops were increased from ten divisions to 25 26 divisions with six or seven tank brigades and several independent tank platoons as support totalling 600 000 soldiers 201 On 1 February the Red Army began a large offensive firing 300 000 shells into the Finnish line in the first 24 hours of the bombardment 202 Soviet offensive on the Karelian Isthmus Although the Karelian Isthmus front was less active in January than in December the Soviets increased bombardments wearing down the defenders and softening their fortifications During daylight hours the Finns took shelter inside their fortifications from the bombardments and repaired damage during the night The situation led quickly to war exhaustion among the Finns who lost over 3 000 soldiers in trench warfare The Soviets also made occasional small infantry assaults with one or two companies 203 Because of the shortage of ammunition Finnish artillery emplacements were under orders to fire only against directly threatening ground attacks On 1 February the Soviets further escalated their artillery and air bombardments 202 Although the Soviets refined their tactics and morale improved the generals were still willing to accept massive losses to reach their objectives Attacks were screened by smoke heavy artillery and armour support but the infantry charged in the open and in dense formations 202 Unlike their tactics in December Soviet tanks advanced in smaller numbers The Finns could not easily eliminate tanks if infantry troops protected them 204 After 10 days of constant artillery barrage the Soviets achieved a breakthrough on the Western Karelian Isthmus in the Second Battle of Summa 205 By 11 February the Soviets had approximately 460 000 soldiers 3 350 artillery pieces 3 000 tanks and 1 300 aircraft deployed on the Karelian Isthmus The Red Army was constantly receiving new recruits after the breakthrough 206 Opposing them the Finns had eight divisions totalling about 150 000 soldiers One by one the defenders strongholds crumbled under the Soviet attacks and the Finns were forced to retreat On 15 February Mannerheim authorised a general retreat of the II Corps to a fallback line of defence 207 On the eastern side of the isthmus the Finns continued to resist Soviet assaults achieving a stalemate in the battle of Taipale 208 Peace negotiations Although the Finns attempted to re open negotiations with Moscow by every means during the war the Soviets did not respond In early January Finnish communist Hella Wuolijoki contacted the Finnish Government She offered to contact Moscow through the Soviet Union s ambassador to Sweden Alexandra Kollontai Wuolijoki departed for Stockholm and met Kollontai secretly at a hotel On 29 January Molotov put an end to the puppet Terijoki Government and recognized the Ryti Tanner government as the legal government of Finland informing it that the USSR was willing to negotiate peace 39 209 By mid February it became clear that the Finnish forces were rapidly approaching exhaustion For the Soviets casualties were high the situation was a source of political embarrassment to the Soviet regime and there was a risk of Franco British intervention which was overestimated by Soviet intelligence in February and March 1940 210 With the spring thaw approaching the Soviet forces risked becoming bogged down in the forests Finnish Foreign Minister Vaino Tanner arrived in Stockholm on 12 February and negotiated the peace terms with the Soviets through the Swedes German representatives not aware that the negotiations were underway suggested on 17 February that Finland negotiate with the Soviet Union 211 Both Germany and Sweden were keen to see an end to the Winter War The Germans feared losing the iron ore fields in Northern Sweden and threatened to attack at once if the Swedes granted the Allied forces right of passage The German invasion plan named Studie Nord was later implemented as Operation Weserubung 212 Leon Trotsky opined after the war that Hitler would view a Soviet occupation of Finland as a threat to this plan Any potential German plans for bases in Finland would also be thwarted if the Soviets occupied Finland though Trotsky himself believed that Hitler was not interested in occupying Finland but rather its role as a buffer between Germany and the USSR 213 As the Finnish Cabinet hesitated in the face of harsh Soviet conditions Sweden s King Gustav V made a public statement on 19 February in which he confirmed having declined Finnish pleas for support from Swedish troops On 25 February the Soviet peace terms were spelt out in detail On 29 February the Finnish Government accepted the Soviet terms in principle and was willing to enter into negotiations 214 Red Army commanders wished to continue the war whereas the Communist Party pointed out that the war had been too costly and called for the signing of a peace treaty The party believed that Finland could be taken over later by means of a revolution The heated discussion that ensued failed to yield any clear result and the matter went to a vote in which the party s opinion prevailed and the decision was taken to bring hostilities to an end 213 End of war in March nbsp Situation on the Karelian Isthmus on 13 March 1940 the last day of the war 215 Finnish corps XXX or Oesch s coast group Soviet corps XXX or army XXXX On 5 March the Red Army advanced 10 to 15 km 6 2 to 9 3 mi past the Mannerheim Line and entered the suburbs of Viipuri The same day the Red Army established a beachhead on the Western Gulf of Viipuri The Finns proposed an armistice on 6 March but the Soviets wanting to keep the pressure on the Finnish government declined the offer The Finnish peace delegation travelled to Moscow via Stockholm and arrived on 7 March They were disappointed to find that Stalin was not present during peace negotiations likely due to the Red Army s humiliation by the Finns 213 The Soviets had further demands as their military position was strong and improving On 9 March the Finnish military situation on the Karelian Isthmus was dire as troops were experiencing heavy casualties Artillery ammunition was exhausted and weapons were wearing out The Finnish government realizing that the hoped for Franco British military expedition would not arrive in time as Norway and Sweden had not given the Allies right of passage had little choice but to accept the Soviet terms 216 Finnish President Kyosti Kallio resisted the idea of giving up any territory to the Soviet Union but eventually agreed to sign the Moscow Peace Treaty When he signed the document the tormented president uttered the well known words Let the hand wither that signs this monstrous treaty 217 Moscow Peace Treaty Main article Moscow Peace Treaty nbsp Finland s territorial concessions to the Soviet Union displayed in redThe Moscow Peace Treaty was signed in Moscow on 12 March 1940 A cease fire took effect the next day at noon Leningrad time 11 a m Helsinki time 218 219 With it Finland ceded a portion of Karelia the entire Karelian Isthmus and land north of Lake Ladoga The area included Viipuri Finland s second largest city Population Register or fourth largest city Church and Civil Register depending on the census data 220 much of Finland s industrialised territory and significant land still held by Finland s military all in all nine per cent of Finnish territory The ceded territory included 13 per cent of Finland s economic assets 221 12 per cent of Finland s population 422 000 to 450 000 Karelians were evacuated and lost their homes 222 223 224 Finland ceded a part of the region of Salla Rybachy Peninsula in the Barents Sea and four islands in the Gulf of Finland The Hanko peninsula was leased to the Soviet Union as a military base for 30 years The region of Petsamo captured by the Red Army during the war was returned to Finland according to the treaty 225 Finnish concessions and territorial losses exceeded Soviet pre war demands Before the war the Soviet Union demanded for the frontier with Finland on the Karelian Isthmus to be moved westward to a point 30 kilometres 19 mi east of Viipuri to the line between Koivisto and Lipola for existing fortifications on the Karelian Isthmus to be demolished and for the islands of Suursaari Tytarsaari and Koivisto in the Gulf of Finland and Rybachy Peninsula to be ceded In exchange the Soviet Union proposed to cede Repola and Porajarvi from Eastern Karelia an area twice as large as the territories that were originally demanded from the Finns 226 65 227 Foreign supportMain article Foreign support of Finland in the Winter War Foreign volunteers nbsp Norwegian volunteers somewhere in Northern FinlandWorld opinion largely supported the Finnish cause and the Soviet aggression was generally deemed unjustified World War II had not yet directly affected France the United Kingdom or the United States the Winter War was practically the only conflict in Europe at that time and thus held major world interest Several foreign organisations sent material aid and many countries granted credit and military materiel to Finland Nazi Germany allowed arms to pass through its territory to Finland but after a Swedish newspaper made this public Adolf Hitler initiated a policy of silence towards Finland as part of improved German Soviet relations following the signing of the Molotov Ribbentrop Pact 228 The largest foreign contingent came from neighboring Sweden which provided nearly 8 760 volunteers during the war The Volunteer Corps was formed of predominantly Swedes as well as 1 010 Danes and 727 Norwegians They fought on the northern front at Salla during the last days of the war A Swedish unit of Gloster Gladiator fighters named the Flight Regiment 19 also participated Swedish anti air batteries with Bofors 40 mm 1 6 in guns were responsible for air defence in northern Finland and the city of Turku 229 Volunteers arrived from Hungary Italy and Estonia 350 American nationals of Finnish background volunteered and 210 volunteers of other nationalities arrived in Finland before the war ended 229 Max Manus a Norwegian fought in the Winter War before returning to Norway and later achieved fame as a resistance fighter during the German occupation of Norway In total Finland received 12 000 volunteers 50 of whom died during the war 230 The British actor Christopher Lee volunteered in the war for two weeks but did not face combat 231 White emigres and Russian prisoners of war Finland officially refused overtures from the anti Soviet Russian All Military Union ROVS for aid Nevertheless Mannerheim eventually agreed to establish a small Russian detachment Russkaya narodnaya armiya RNA of 200 men after being introduced to Boris Bazhanov a high ranking ROVS member in person in January 1940 The project was deemed top secret and was under the auspices of the intelligence division of the Finnish army headquarters 232 The ranks of RNA were to be filled by prisoners of war but it would be commanded by White emigres instead of captured Soviet Army officers who were deemed unreliable Bazhanov s Finnish assistant Feodor Schulgin chose Captain Vladimir Kiseleff Lieutenant Vladimir Lugovskoy Anatoly Budyansky and brothers Nikolay and Vladimir Bastamov as officers for the unit Of the five the Bastamovs were not Finnish citizens but had Nansen passports The prisoners of war were trained in Huittinen although it is possible that some were also trained in Lempaala 232 RNA never participated in battle despite Boris Bazhanov s later claims to the contrary in his memoirs About 35 to 40 members of it were present during a battle in Ruskeala in early March 1940 where they spread flyers and broadcast propaganda to encircled Soviet troops but did not carry weapons The men were subsequently detained by Finnish forces who mistook them for Soviet infiltrators After the war s end Bazhanov was immediately asked to leave Finland which he did Finnish military historian Carl Geust presumes that most members of the RNA were executed after they were returned to the Soviet Union after the war Additionally Vladimir Bastamov was later extradited into the Soviet Union as one of the Leino prisoners in 1945 and was sentenced to 20 years of hard labour He was released after Stalin s death and returned to Finland in 1956 232 Franco British intervention plans Main article Franco British plans for intervention in the Winter War nbsp Franco British support was offered on the condition their forces could pass freely from Narvik through neutral Norway and Sweden instead of the difficult passage through Soviet occupied Petsamo France had been one of the earliest supporters of Finland during the Winter War The French saw an opportunity to weaken Germany s resource imports via a Finnish counteroffensive as both Sweden and the Soviet Union were strategic trading partners to Germany France had another motive preferring to have a major war in a remote part of Europe rather than on French soil France planned to re arm the Polish exile units and transport them to the Finnish Arctic port of Petsamo Another proposal was a massive air strike with Turkish co operation against the Caucasus oil fields 233 The British for their part wanted to block the flow of iron ore from Swedish mines to Germany as the Swedes supplied up to 40 per cent of Germany s iron demand 233 The matter was raised by British Admiral Reginald Plunkett on 18 September 1939 and the next day Winston Churchill brought up the subject in the Chamberlain War Cabinet 234 On 11 December Churchill opined that the British should gain a foothold in Scandinavia with the objective to help the Finns but without a war with the Soviet Union 235 Because of the heavy German reliance on Northern Sweden s iron ore Hitler had made it clear to the Swedish government in December that any Allied troops on Swedish soil would immediately provoke a German invasion 236 On 19 December French Prime Minister Edouard Daladier introduced his plan to the General Staff and the War Cabinet In his plan Daladier created linkage between the war in Finland and the iron ore in Sweden 235 There was a danger of Finland s possible fall under Soviet hegemony In turn Nazi Germany could occupy both Norway and Sweden These two powers could divide Scandinavia between them as they had already done with Poland The main motivation of the French and the British was to reduce German war making ability 237 The Military Co ordination Committee met on 20 December in London and two days later the French plan was put forward 237 The Anglo French Supreme War Council elected to send notes to Norway and Sweden on 27 December urging the Norwegians and Swedes to help Finland and offer the Allies their support Norway and Sweden rejected the offer on 5 January 1940 236 The Allies came up with a new plan in which they would demand that Norway and Sweden give them right of passage by citing a League of Nations resolution as justification The expedition troops would disembark at the Norwegian port of Narvik and proceed by rail toward Finland passing through the Swedish ore fields on the way This demand was sent to Norway and Sweden on 6 January but it was likewise rejected six days later 238 Stymied but not yet dissuaded from the possibility of action the Allies formulated a final plan on 29 January First the Finns would make a formal request for assistance Then the Allies would ask Norway and Sweden for permission to move the volunteers across their territory Finally to protect the supply line from German actions the Allies would send units ashore at Namsos Bergen and Trondheim The operation would have required 100 000 British and 35 000 French soldiers with naval and air support The supply convoys would sail on 12 March and the landings would begin on 20 March 239 The end of the war on 13 March cancelled Franco British plans to send troops to Finland through Northern Scandinavia 240 Aftermath and casualtiesMain articles Aftermath of the Winter War Continuation War and Lapland War See also Cross of Sorrow Finland nbsp Heroes Memorial Day in Joensuu 19 5 1940 The 105 day war had a profound and depressing effect in Finland Meaningful international support was minimal and arrived late and the German blockade had prevented most armament shipments 241 The 15 month period between the Winter War and Operation Barbarossa part of which was the Continuation War was later called the Interim Peace 225 After the end of the war the situation of the Finnish Army on the Karelian Isthmus became a subject of debate in Finland Orders had already been issued to prepare a retreat to the next line of defence in the Taipale sector Estimates of how long the Red Army could have been delayed by retreat and stand operations varied from a few days to a few weeks 242 243 or to a couple of months at most 244 Immediately after the war Helsinki officially announced 19 576 dead 245 According to revised estimates in 2005 by Finnish historians 25 904 people died or went missing and 43 557 were wounded on the Finnish side during the war F 12 Finnish and Russian researchers have estimated that there were 800 1 100 Finnish prisoners of war of whom between 10 and 20 per cent died The Soviet Union repatriated 847 Finns after the War 13 Air raids killed 957 civilians 11 Between 20 and 30 tanks were destroyed and 62 aircraft were lost 14 Also Finland had to cede all ships of the Finnish Ladoga Naval Detachment to the Soviet Union by virtue of the Moscow Peace Treaty During the Interim Peace Finland aimed to improve its defensive capabilities and conducted negotiations with Sweden on a military alliance but negotiations ended once it became clear that both Germany and the Soviet Union opposed such an alliance 246 On 31 July 1940 German Chancellor Adolf Hitler gave the order to plan an assault on the Soviet Union and so Germany had to reassess its position regarding Finland Until then Germany had rejected Finnish appeals to purchase arms However the prospect of an invasion of the Soviet Union reversed the policy In August the secret sale of weapons to Finland was permitted 247 Karelian evacuees established an interest group the Finnish Karelian League to defend Karelian rights and interests and to find a way to return ceded regions of Karelia to Finland 224 248 Finland wished to re enter the war mainly because of the Soviet invasion of Finland during the Winter War which had taken place after Finland had failed by relying on the League of Nations and on Nordic neutrality 249 Finland aimed primarily to reverse its territorial losses from the Moscow Peace Treaty and depending on the success of the German invasion of the Soviet Union possibly to expand its borders especially into East Karelia Some right wing groups such as the Academic Karelia Society supported a Greater Finland ideology 250 The Continuation War began in June 1941 and led to Finnish participation in the Siege of Leningrad as well as the Finnish occupation of East Karelia 251 252 Soviet Union nbsp Monument devoted to the victims of the Winter War in St PetersburgThe Soviet General Staff Supreme Command Stavka met in April 1940 reviewed the lessons of the Finnish campaign and recommended reforms The role of frontline political commissars was reduced and old fashioned ranks and forms of discipline were reintroduced Clothing equipment and tactics for winter operations were improved Not all of the reforms had been completed when Germans initiated Operation Barbarossa 14 months later 253 Between the Winter War and perestroika in the late 1980s Soviet historiography relied solely on Molotov s speeches on the Winter War In his radio speech of 29 November 1939 Molotov argued that the Soviet Union had tried to negotiate guarantees of security for Leningrad for two months The Finns had taken a hostile stance to please foreign imperialists Finland had undertaken military provocation and the Soviet Union could no longer abide by the non aggression pacts According to Molotov the Soviet Union did not want to occupy or annex Finland but the goal was purely to secure Leningrad 254 The official Soviet figure with reference to the command of the Leningrad Military District was published at a session of the Supreme Soviet on 26 March 1940 with 48 475 dead and 158 863 sick and wounded 18 More recent Russian estimates vary in 1990 Mikhail Semiryaga claimed 53 522 dead and N I Baryshnikov 53 500 In 1997 Grigoriy Krivosheyev claimed 126 875 dead and missing and total casualties of 391 783 with 188 671 wounded 15 In 1991 Yuri Kilin claimed 63 990 dead and total casualties of 271 528 In 2007 he revised the estimate of dead to 134 000 16 and in 2012 he updated the estimate to 138 533 255 In 2013 Pavel Petrov stated that the Russian State Military Archive has a database confirming 167 976 killed or missing along with the soldiers names dates of birth and ranks 17 There were 5 572 Soviet prisoners of war in Finland 20 256 257 After the Winter War the Soviet prisoners were returned to the USSR in accordance with the Moscow Peace Treaty Of these 450 were released 4 354 were sentenced to imprisonment in labour camps ranging from 3 to 10 years and 414 were exposed to be active in traitorous activities while in captivity with 334 criminal cases being transferred to the Supreme Court of the Soviet Union 232 of those cases ended in a death penalty 258 Between 1 200 and 3 543 Soviet tanks were destroyed The official figure was 611 tank casualties but Yuri Kilin found a note received by the head of the Soviet General Staff Boris Shaposhnikov reporting 3 543 tank casualties and 316 tanks destroyed According to Finnish historian Ohto Manninen the 7th Soviet Army lost 1 244 tanks during the breakthrough battles of the Mannerheim Line in mid winter In the immediate aftermath of the war the Finnish estimate of the number of lost Soviet tanks was 1 000 to 1 200 21 22 23 The Soviet Air Forces lost around 1 000 aircraft but fewer than half of them were combat casualties 23 24 According to Carl Fredrik Geust based on the studies of Soviet air force units Finnish anti aircraft units shot down 119 and Finnish fighter pilots 131 Soviet aircraft though all Soviet aircraft losses had been more than 900 Germany The Winter War was a political success for the Germans Both the Red Army and the League of Nations were humiliated and the Anglo French Supreme War Council had been revealed to be chaotic and powerless The German policy of neutrality was unpopular in the homeland and relations with Italy had suffered After the Moscow Peace Treaty Germany improved its ties with Finland and within two weeks Finnish German relations were at the top of the agenda 259 36 More importantly the very poor performance of the Red Army convinced Hitler that an invasion on the Soviet Union would be successful In June 1941 Hitler declared we have only to kick in the door and the whole rotten structure will come crashing down 260 Allies The Winter War laid bare the disorganisation and ineffectiveness of the Red Army and that of the Allies The Anglo French Supreme War Council was unable to formulate a workable plan revealing its unsuitability to make effective war in either Britain or France This failure led to the collapse of the Third Daladier Government in France and the nomination of Paul Reynaud as the new Prime Minister of France 261 See also nbsp Finland portal nbsp Soviet Union portalList of Finnish military equipment of World War II List of Soviet Union military equipment of World War II List of Finnish corps in the Winter War List of Finnish divisions in the Winter War Military history of Finland during World War II Winter War in popular cultureExplanatory notes At the beginning of the war the Finns had 300 000 soldiers The Finnish Army had only 250 028 rifles total 281 594 firearms but White Guards brought their own rifles over 114 000 rifles total 116 800 firearms to the war The Finnish Army reached its maximum strength at the beginning of March 1940 with 346 000 soldiers in uniform 1 2 From 1919 onwards the Finns possessed 32 French Renault FT tanks and a few lighter tanks These were unsuitable for the war and they were subsequently used as fixed pillboxes The Finns bought 32 British Vickers 6 Ton tanks during 1936 39 but without weapons Weapons were intended to be manufactured and installed in Finland Only 10 tanks were fit for combat at the beginning of the conflict 3 On 1 December 1939 the Finns had 114 combat aeroplanes fit for duty and seven aeroplanes for communication and observation purposes Almost 100 aeroplanes were used for flight training purposes unsuitable for combat or under repair In total the Finns had 173 aircraft and 43 reserve aircraft 4 5 550 757 soldiers on 1 January 1940 and 760 578 soldiers by the beginning of March 6 In the Leningrad Military District 1 000 000 soldiers 7 and 20 divisions one month before the war and 58 divisions two weeks before its end 8 At the beginning of the war the Soviets had 2 514 tanks and 718 armoured cars The main battlefield was the Karelian Isthmus where the Soviets deployed 1 450 tanks At the end of the war the Soviets had 6 541 tanks and 1 691 armoured cars The most common tank type was T 26 but also BT type was very common 9 This name is translated as follows Finnish talvisota Swedish Vinterkriget Russian Zi mnyaya vojna tr Zimnyaya voyna The names Soviet Finnish War 1939 1940 Russian Sove tsko finskaya vojna 1939 1940 and Soviet Finland War 1939 1940 Russian Sove tsko finlyandskaya vojna 1939 1940 are often used in Russian historiography 25 26 27 Russo Finnish War 1939 1940 or Finno Russian War 1939 1940 are used by the U S Library of Congress catalogue see authority control See the relevant section and the following sources 28 29 30 31 32 33 See the relevant section and the following sources 34 35 36 37 The Soviet role is confirmed in Nikita Khrushchev s memoirs which states that Artillery Marshal Grigory Kulik had personally supervised the bombardment of the Soviet village 87 88 See the following sources 28 29 30 31 32 See the following sources 94 95 96 97 A detailed classification of dead and missing is as follows 11 12 Dead buried 16 766 Wounded died of wounds 3 089 Dead not buried later declared as dead 3 503 Missing declared as dead 1 712 Died as a prisoner of war 20 Other reasons diseases accidents suicides 677 Unknown 137 Died during the additional refresher training diseases accidents suicides 34 Citations Palokangas 1999 pp 299 300 Juutilainen amp Koskimaa 2005 p 83 Palokangas 1999 p 318 Peltonen 1999 Meltiukhov 2000 ch 4 Table 10 Krivosheyev 1997 p 63 Kilin 1999 p 383 Manninen 1994 p 43 Kantakoski 1998 p 260 a b Trotter 2002 p 187 a b c d Kurenmaa and Lentila 2005 p 1152 a b Lentila and Juutilainen 1999 p 821 a b Malmi 1999 p 792 a b c d Tillotson 1993 p 160 a b c Krivosheyev 1997 pp 77 78 a b c Kilin 2007b p 91 a b Petrov 2013 a b Sokolov 2000 p 340 a b ROSSIYa I SSSR V VOJNAH XX VEKA Glava III LYuDSKIE POTERI KRASNOJ ARMII ZA VREMYa GRAZhDANSKOJ VOJNY I INOSTRANNOJ VOENNOJ INTERVENCII rus sky com Archived from the original on 12 May 2021 Retrieved 11 September 2018 a b Manninen 1999b p 815 a b Kilin 1999 p 381 a b Kantakoski 1998 p 286 a b c d Manninen 1999b pp 810 811 a b Kilin 1999 p 381 Baryshnikov 2005 Kovalyov 2006 Shirokorad 2001 a b Manninen 2008 pp 37 42 43 46 49 a b Rentola 2003 pp 188 217 a b c Ravasz 2003 p 3 a b Clemmesen and Faulkner 2013 p 76 a b Zeiler and DuBois 2012 p 210 a b Reiter 2009 p 124 a b Chubaryan 2002 p xvi a b Trotter 2002 p 17 a b c Lightbody 2004 p 55 Kotkin 2017 pp 966 974 1008 Reiter 2009 pp 126 127 a b Trotter 2002 pp 234 235 Mannerheim Carl Gustaf Emil 1953 Memoirs E P Dutton amp Company pp 364 365 Massari Ivano 18 August 2015 The Winter War When the Finns Humiliated the Russians War History Online Archived from the original on 19 December 2021 Retrieved 19 December 2021 Kilin and Raunio 2007 p 10 Hough 2019 Trotter 2002 pp 3 5 a b Trotter 2002 pp 4 6 Jowett amp Snodgrass 2006 p 3 Turtola 1999a pp 21 24 Turtola 1999a pp 33 34 Edwards 2006 pp 26 27 Edwards 2006 p 18 Polvinen 1987 pp 156 161 237 238 323 454 Engman 2007 pp 452 454 a b c Turtola 1999a pp 30 33 Edwards 2006 p 31 Edwards 2006 pp 43 46 Van Dyke 1997 p 13 Edwards 2006 pp 32 33 a b Murphy 2021 p 7 Lightbody 2004 p 52 Trotter 2002 p 15 Trotter 2002 pp 12 13 Turtola 1999a pp 32 33 Turtola 1999a pp 34 35 Engle and Paananen 1985 p 6 a b c d Turtola 1999a pp 38 41 Ries 1988 pp 55 56 Manninen 1999a pp 141 148 a b Kotkin 2017 pp 960 Kotkin 2017 pp 963 Trotter 2002 pp 14 16 Kotkin 2017 pp 962 a b Kotkin 2017 p 970 a b Turtola 1999a pp 41 43 Tanner 1950 a b Kotkin 2017 p 964 Kotkin 2017 pp 965 Kotkin 2017 pp 963 971 Kotkin 2017 p 966 Kotkin 2017 p 971 Kotkin 2017 p 973 Turtola Martti 1999 Kansainvalinen kehitys Euroopassa ja Suomessa 1930 luvulla In Leskinen Jari Juutilainen Antti eds Talvisodan pikkujattilainen pp 41 43 Kotkin 2017 p 975 a b Kotkin 2017 pp 961 974 Kotkin 2017 pp 974 Ries 1988 pp 77 78 Murphy 2021 p 9 Edwards 2006 p 105 a b Turtola 1999a pp 44 45 Leskinen Jari 1997 Suomenlahden sulku ja Neuvostoliitto Blockade of the Gulf of Finland and the Soviet Union Vaiettu Suomen silta Hushed bridge of Finland in Finnish Helsinki Hakapaino Oy pp 406 407 ISBN 951 710 050 7 Tanner 1950 pp 85 86 Kilin 2007a pp 99 100 Aptekar 2009 Yle News 2013 Tanner 1950 p 114 Trotter 2002 pp 58 61 Kokoshin 1998 p 93 Killham 1993 p 78 Coates 1940 Elliston 1940 p 237 Sander 2013 pp 38 39 Nenye 2015 p 50 Nenye 2015 pp 50 51 Edwards 2006 p 98 Nenye 2015 p 51 Iltasanomat 2019 Kotkin 2017 pp 966 974 Kotkin 2017 pp 974 975 Kotkin 2017 pp 981 994 Trotter 2002 p 34 Conquest 2007 p 450 Bullock 1993 p 489 Glanz 1998 p 58 Ries 1988 p 56 Edwards 2006 p 189 Coox 1985 p 996 Coox 1985 pp 994 995 a b Coox 1985 p 997 Goldman 2012 p 167 Langdon Davies 1941 p 7 Trotter 2002 pp 35 36 Edwards 2006 p 93 Edwards 2006 p 125 Manninen 2008 p 14 Kotkin 2017 p 994 a b Trotter 2002 p 204 a b Trotter 2002 pp 38 39 a b c d e Kilin and Raunio 2007 p 13 Nenye 2015 p 54 Trotter 2002 Leskinen and Juutilainen 1999 a b Trotter 2002 pp 42 44 Laemlein 2013 pp 95 99 Trotter 2002 p 47 Jowett amp Snodgrass 2006 p 6 Paskhover 2015 Russian State Military Archive F 34980 Op 14 D 108 a b Trotter 2002 pp 48 51 a b Trotter 2002 p 61 League of Nations 1939 pp 506 540 Trotter 2002 p 58 Soikkanen 1999 p 235 Geust Uitto 2006 p 54 Trotter 2002 p 69 Trotter 2002 pp 72 73 Trotter 2002 pp 76 78 Trotter 2002 pp 51 55 Trotter 2002 p 121 Trotter 2002 pp 53 54 Swedish volunteer in position during the Soviet Finnish War Second World War the Military Photo Archive 29 April 2019 Archived from the original on 10 February 2023 Retrieved 10 February 2023 Paulaharju 1999 p 292 Paulaharju 1999 pp 289 290 a b Trotter 2002 pp 145 146 a b Paulaharju 1999 pp 297 298 Trotter 2002 pp 131 132 Trotter 2002 pp 148 149 a b Trotter 2002 pp 62 63 Vuorenmaa 1999 pp 494 495 Laaksonen 1999 p 407 Laaksonen 1999 pp 411 412 Trotter 2002 pp 87 89 Kilin and Raunio 2007 p 113 Juutilainen 1999a pp 504 505 Juutilainen 1999a p 506 Juutilainen 1999a p 520 Kauppinen 2017 YLE Marokon Kauhu nousi legendaksi Kollaalla Archived 3 November 2020 at the Wayback Machine in Finnish Trotter 2002 p 110 Juutilainen 1999a pp 510 511 Juutilainen 1999a p 514 Jowett amp Snodgrass 2006 p 44 Juutilainen 1999a pp 516 517 Vuorenmaa 1999 pp 559 561 Vuorenmaa 1999 p 550 Trotter 2002 p 150 Kulju 2007 p 230 Kulju 2007 p 229 Kantakoski 1998 p 283 Kulju 2007 pp 217 218 Pontinen P Jaatynyt helvetti Tallainen on Raatteen tie tanaan Archived 3 September 2019 at the Wayback Machine Suomen Kuvalehti 2015 a b Trotter 2002 pp 171 174 Leskinen and Juutilainen 1999 p 164 Trotter 2002 pp 178 180 Vuorenmaa 1999 pp 545 549 Esko Lammi Talvisodan Tampere Vammala Haijaa Invest Vammaspaino 1990 ISBN 9529017073 in Finnish Jouko Juonala Ilmahalytys Talvisota Ilta Sanomien erikoislehti 2019 pp 62 66 Helsinki Sanoma Media Finland Oy in Finland a b Trotter 2002 p 193 Trotter 2002 pp 187 188 Tillotson 1993 p 157 Peltonen 1999 pp 607 608 Trotter 2002 p 189 Trotter 2002 pp 191 192 Elfvegren 1999 p 681 Elfvegren 1999 p 678 Elfvegren 1999 p 692 Leskinen 1999 p 130 Silvast 1999 pp 694 696 Tillotson 1993 pp 152 153 Reiter 2009 p 126 Reiter 2009 pp 126 127 Trotter 2002 pp 203 204 a b Laaksonen 1999 pp 424 425 a b c Trotter 2002 pp 214 215 Laaksonen 1999 pp 426 427 Laaksonen 1999 p 430 Trotter 2002 p 218 Geust Uitto 2006 p 77 Trotter 2002 p 233 Laaksonen 1999 p 452 Enkenberg 2020 p 215 Rentola Kimmo 1 October 2013 Intelligence and Stalin s Two Crucial Decisions in the Winter War 1939 40 The International History Review 35 5 1089 1112 doi 10 1080 07075332 2013 828637 ISSN 0707 5332 S2CID 155013785 Archived from the original on 6 August 2022 Retrieved 6 August 2022 Trotter 2002 pp 246 247 Edwards 2006 p 261 a b c Lahteenmaki Maria 1 January 2014 Bad blood and humiliation Finns experiences of the Moscow peace negotiations in 1940 Nordia Geographical Publications 43 1 101 113 ISSN 2736 9722 Archived from the original on 6 August 2022 Retrieved 6 August 2022 Trotter 2002 pp 247 248 Kilin and Raunio 2007 pp 260 295 Trotter 2002 pp 249 251 Fadiman 1985 p 320 Trotter 2002 p 254 70th Anniversary of the End of the Winter War Yle News 13 March 2010 Archived from the original on 13 March 2022 Retrieved 13 March 2022 Statistics Finland 1940 Kirby 2006 p 215 Gadolin 1952 p 7 Engle and Paananen 1985 pp 142 143 a b Ahtiainen 2000 a b Jowett amp Snodgrass 2006 p 10 Van Dyke 1997 pp 189 190 Trotter 2002 pp 14 16 Trotter 2002 pp 194 202 a b Jowett amp Snodgrass 2006 pp 21 22 Juutilainen 1999b p 776 Rigby 2003 pp 59 60 a b c Jormanainen Heli 15 March 2020 Venalaisemigranttien talvisota Mannerheim hyvaksyi huippusalaisen suunnitelman bolsevikkien vastaisen sotavankiarmeijan perustamisesta Yle Archived from the original on 17 February 2022 Retrieved 8 June 2022 a b Trotter 2002 pp 235 236 Edwards 2006 p 141 a b Edwards 2006 p 145 a b Trotter 2002 p 237 a b Edwards 2006 p 146 Trotter 2002 pp 237 238 Trotter 2002 pp 238 239 Trotter 2002 p 239 Edwards 2006 pp 272 273 Laaksonen 2005 p 365 Paasikivi 1958 p 177 Halsti 1955 p 412 Dallin 1942 p 191 Turtola 1999b p 863 Reiter 2009 p 132 Finnish Karelian League Lunde 2011 p 9 Jokipii 1999 pp 145 146 Rutherford 2014 p 190 Yarov 2009 p 7 Trotter 2002 p 264 Vihavainen 1999 pp 893 896 Kilin 2012 pp 21 24 Van Dyke 1997 p 191 Trotter 2002 p 263 Bichekhvost 2012 Edwards 2006 pp 277 279 Sedlar 2007 p 8 Edwards 2006 pp 13 14General and cited referencesEnglish Ahtiainen Ilkka 16 July 2000 The Never Ending Karelia Question Helsinki Times Archived from the original on 29 June 2011 Retrieved 5 November 2009 Bullock Alan 1993 Hitler and Stalin Parallel Lives Vintage Books ISBN 978 0 679 72994 5 Chubaryan A 2002 Foreword In Kulkov E Rzheshevskii O Shukman H eds Stalin and the Soviet Finnish War 1939 1940 Frank Cass ISBN 978 0 7146 5203 0 Clemmesen Michael H Faulkner Marcus eds 2013 Northern European Overture to War 1939 1941 From Memel to Barbarossa Brill ISBN 978 90 04 24908 0 Coates William Peyton Coates Zelda Kahan 1940 Russia Finland and the Baltic London Lawrence amp Wishart Conquest Robert 2007 1991 The Great Terror A Reassessment 40th Anniversary ed Oxford University Press US ISBN 978 0 19 531700 8 Coox Alvin D 1985 Nomonhan Japan against Russia 1939 Stanford University Press ISBN 0 8047 1160 7 Dallin David 1942 Soviet Russia s Foreign Policy 1939 1942 Translated by Leon Dennen Yale University Press Edwards Robert 2006 White Death Russia s War on Finland 1939 40 Weidenfeld amp Nicolson ISBN 978 0 297 84630 7 Elliston H B 1940 Finland Fights London G Harrap Engle Eloise Paananen Lauri 1985 1973 The Winter War The Russo Finnish Conflict 1939 40 Westview Press ISBN 0 8133 0149 1 Fadiman Clifton 1985 The Little Brown book of anecdotes Boston Little Brown ISBN 978 0 316 08472 7 OCLC 759509883 Gadolin Axel 1952 The Solution of the Karelian Refugee Problem in Finland Dordrecht Springer Netherlands ISBN 978 9401179645 OCLC 9401179646 Glanz David 1998 Stumbling Colossus The Red Army on the Eve of World War University Press of Kansas ISBN 978 0 7006 0879 9 Goldman Stuart D 2012 Nomonhan 1939 The Red Army s Victory That Shaped World War II Naval Institute Press ISBN 978 1 59114 329 1 Hough William J H 10 September 2019 The Annexation of the Baltic States and Its Effect on the Development of Law Prohibiting Forcible Seizure of Territory DigitalCommons NYLS Retrieved 29 September 2020 dead link Jowett Philip Snodgrass Brent 2006 Finland at War 1939 45 Osprey ISBN 978 1 84176 969 1 Karjalan Liitto Briefly in English Finnish Karelian League Archived from the original on 20 August 2009 Retrieved 18 October 2009 Killham EdwardL 1993 The Nordic Way A Path to Baltic Equilibrium Howells House Kirby David 2006 A Concise History of Finland Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 53989 0 Kokoshin Andrei 1998 Soviet Strategic Thought 1917 91 MIT Press Kotkin Stephen 2017 Stalin Waiting for Hitler 1929 1941 Penguin Press Krivosheyev Grigoriy 1997b Soviet Casualties and Combat Losses in the Twentieth Century 1st ed Greenhill Books ISBN 1 85367 280 7 Archived from the original on 18 January 2023 Retrieved 12 October 2015 Laemlein Tom October 2013 Where Will We Bury Them All American Rifleman 161 Langdon Davies John 1941 Invasion in the Snow A Study of Mechanized War Houghton Mifflin Company OCLC 1535780 League of Nations 14 December 1939 Expulsion of the U S S R League of Nations Official Journal Lightbody Bradley 2004 The Second World War Ambitions to Nemesis Routledge ISBN 0 415 22404 7 Lunde Henrik O 2011 Finland s War of Choice The Troubled German Finnish Alliance in World War II Newbury Casemate Publishers ISBN 978 1612000374 Murphy David 2021 The Finnish Soviet Winter War 1939 40 Stalin s Hollow Victory Johnny Shumate London Bloomsbury Publishing Plc ISBN 978 1 4728 4394 4 OCLC 1261364794 Archived from the original on 7 February 2022 Retrieved 22 December 2021 Nenye Vesa Munter Peter Wirtanen Toni Birks Chris eds 2015 Finland at War The Winter War 1939 1945 Osprey ISBN 978 1 4728 2718 0 Reiter Dan 2009 How Wars End Illustrated ed Princeton University Press ISBN 978 0691140605 Archived from the original on 19 April 2023 Retrieved 29 October 2010 Ries Tomas 1988 Cold Will The Defense of Finland 1st ed Brassey s Defence Publishers ISBN 0 08 033592 6 Rigby Jonathan 2003 Christopher Lee The Authorised Screen History Reynolds amp Hearn ISBN 978 1903111642 Rutherford Jeff 2014 Combat and Genocide on the Eastern Front The German Infantry s War 1941 1944 Cambridge University Press p 190 ISBN 978 1107055711 Archived from the original on 27 February 2018 The ensnaring of Leningrad between the German and Finnish armies did not end the combat in the region as the Soviets launched repeated and desperate attempts to regain contact with the city Sander Gordon F 2013 The Hundred Day Winter War Finland s Gallant Stand against the Soviet Army University Press of Kansas Sedlar Jean W 2007 Hitler s Central European Empire 1938 1945 BookLocker ISBN 978 1591139102 Tanner Vaino 1957 1950 The Winter War Finland against Russia 1939 1940 Stanford University Press ISBN 978 0 8047 0482 3 Archived from the original on 19 April 2023 Retrieved 3 October 2020 Tillotson H M 1993 Finland at Peace amp War 1918 1993 Michael Russell ISBN 0 85955 196 2 Trotter William R 2002 1991 The Winter War The Russo Finnish War of 1939 40 5th ed Aurum Press ISBN 1 85410 881 6 Van Dyke Carl 1997 The Soviet Invasion of Finland 1939 40 Routledge ISBN 0 7146 4314 9 Yarov Sergey 2017 Leningrad 1941 42 Morality in a City under Siege Foreword by John Barber John Wiley amp Sons p 7 ISBN 978 1509508020 Archived from the original on 27 February 2018 While the exact number who died during the siege by the German and Finnish armies from 8 September 1941 to 27 January 1944 will never be known available data point to 900 000 civilian deaths over half a million of whom died in the winter of 1941 2 alone Yle News 15 March 2013 Putin Winter War aimed at correcting border mistakes Archived from the original on 14 December 2017 Retrieved 14 December 2017 Iltasanomat 22 December 2019 Yuri Kilin interview Archived from the original on 30 November 2021 Retrieved 3 December 2021 Zeiler Thomas W DuBois Daniel M eds 2012 A Companion to World War II Wiley Blackwell Companions to World History Vol 11 Wiley Blackwell ISBN 978 1 4051 9681 9 Finnish Russian and other languages Aptekar Pavel Casus Belli o Majnilskom incidente posluzhivshim povodom dlya nachala Zimnej vojny 1939 40 gg Casus Belli about the Mainila incident which served as a pretext for the beginning of the Winter War of 1939 40 Raboche Krest yanskaya Krasnaya Armiya website in Russian Archived from the original on 2 December 2022 Retrieved 2 September 2009 Baryshnikov N Salomaa E 2005 Vovlechenie Finlyandii vo Vtoruyu Mirovuyu vojnu Finland s Entrance into World War II In Chernov M ed Krestovyj pohod na Rossiyu Crusade Against Russia in Russian Yauza ISBN 5 87849 171 0 Archived from the original on 6 November 2008 Retrieved 1 July 2008 Bichekhvost Alexander Fedorovich 2012 Vy tochno chelovek The Repressive Policy of the Soviet State and the Fate of the Red Army Prisoners of War Participants in the Soviet Finnish War 1939 1940 Izvestiya Saratovskogo Universiteta Novaya Seriya Seriya Istoriya Mezhdunarodnye Otnosheniya in Russian 12 4 99 108 Archived from the original on 8 July 2022 Retrieved 23 August 2020 Elfvegren Eero 1999 Merisota talvisodassa Naval Warfare in the Winter War Talvisodan pikkujattilainen in Finnish Engman Max 2007 Raja Karjalankannas 1918 1920 Border The Karelian Isthmus 1918 1920 WSOY ISBN 978 951 0 32765 4 Enkenberg Ilkka 2020 Talvisota Vareissa in Finnish Readme fi ISBN 978 952 373 053 3 Geust Carl Fredrik Uitto Antero 2006 Mannerheim linja Talvisodan legenda The Mannerheim Line Legend of the Winter War in Finnish Ajatus ISBN 951 20 7042 1 Hallberg Torsten ed 2006 Karelen ett gransland i Norden in Swedish Foreningen Norden ISBN 978 9185276806 Halsti Wolfgang Hallsten 1955 Talvisota 1939 1940 The Winter War 1939 1940 in Finnish Otava Jokipii Mauno 1999 Finlyandiya na puti k vojne Issledovanie o voennom sotrudnichestve Germanii i Finlyandii v 1940 1941 gg Birth of the Continuation War Research of German Finnish Military Collaboration 1940 1941 in Russian Petrozavodsk Karelia ISBN 5754507356 Juutilainen Antti Koskimaa Matti 2005 Maavoimien joukkojen perustaminen Establishing the Army Forces Jatkosodan pikkujattilainen in Finnish Juutilainen Antti 1999a Laatokan Karjalan taistelut Battles in Ladoga Karelia Talvisodan pikkujattilainen in Finnish Juutilainen Antti 1999b Talvisodan ulkomaalaiset vapaaehtoiset Foreign Volunteers in the Winter War Talvisodan pikkujattilainen in Finnish Kantakoski Pekka 1998 Punaiset panssarit Puna armeijan panssarijoukot 1918 1945 Red Armour The Red Army s Tank Forces 1918 1945 in Finnish PS Elso ISBN 951 98057 0 2 Kauppinen Kari 18 July 2017 Sotasankari Simo Hayhan ennennakematon paivakirja loytyi Tassa on minun syntilistani Iltalehti in Finnish Helsinki Archived from the original on 12 June 2018 Retrieved 15 September 2020 Kilin Juri 2007a Leningradin sotilaspiirin rajakahakka In Jokisipila Markku ed Sodan totuudet Yksi suomalainen vastaa 5 7 ryssaa Truths of War One Finn equals 5 7 Russians in Finnish Ajatus Kilin Juri 2007b Rajakahakan hidas jaiden lahto In Jokisipila Markku ed Sodan totuudet Yksi suomalainen vastaa 5 7 ryssaa Truths of War One Finn equals 5 7 Russians in Finnish Kilin Juri Raunio Ari 2007 Talvisodan taisteluja Winter War Battles in Finnish Karttakeskus ISBN 978 951 593 068 2 Kilin Yuri 1999 Puna armeijan Stalinin tahdon toteuttajana The Red Army as an Executor of Stalin s Will Talvisodan pikkujattilainen in Finnish Kilin Yu M 2012 Soviet Finish War 1939 1940 and Red Army s Losses Proceedings of Petrozavodsk State University Social Sciences amp Humanities 5 126 21 24 ISSN 1998 5053 Archived from the original on 6 October 2022 Retrieved 27 June 2018 Kovalyov E 2006 7 Zimnyaya vojna baltijskih podvodnyh lodok 1939 1940 gg Winter War and the Baltic Submarines 1939 1940 Koroli podplava v more chervonnyh valetov Submarine Kings of the Knave of Hearts Sea in Russian Tsentrpoligraf ISBN 5 9524 2324 8 Archived from the original on 1 November 2022 Retrieved 1 July 2008 Kulju Mika 2007 Raatteen tie Talvisodan pohjoinen sankaritarina The Raate Road Tale of Northern Heroism during the Winter War in Finnish Ajatus ISBN 978 951 20 7218 7 Kurenmaa Pekka Lentila Riitta 2005 Sodan tappiot Casualties of the War Jatkosodan pikkujattilainen in Finnish Laaksonen Lasse 2005 1999 Todellisuus ja harhat Reality and Illusions in Finnish Ajatus ISBN 951 20 6911 3 Laaksonen Lasse 1999 Kannaksen taistelut Battles in the Isthmus Talvisodan pikkujattilainen in Finnish Lentila Riitta Juutilainen Antti 1999 Talvisodan uhrit Victims of the Winter War Talvisodan pikkujattilainen Leskinen Jari Juutilainen Antti 2005 Jatkosodan pikkujattilainen Continuation War Guidebook in Finnish 1st ed WSOY ISBN 951 0 28690 7 Leskinen Jari 1999 Suomen ja Viron salainen sotilaallinen yhteistyo Neuvostoliiton hyokkayksen varalta 1930 luvulla The Clandestine Finnish Estonian Military Collaboration against a Possible Soviet Invasion in the 1930s In Leskinen Jari Juutilainen Antti eds Talvisodan pikkujattilainen in Finnish Leskinen Jari Juutilainen Antti 1999 Suomen kunnian paivat Glory Days of Finland Talvisodan pikkujattilainen in Finnish Malmi Timo 1999 Suomalaiset sotavangit Finnish Prisoners of War Talvisodan pikkujattilainen in Finnish Manninen Ohto 2008 Miten Suomi valloitetaan Puna armeijan operaatiosuunnitelmat 1939 1944 How to Conquer Finland Operational Plans of the Red Army 1939 1944 in Finnish Edita ISBN 978 951 37 5278 1 Manninen Ohto 1999a Neuvostoliiton tavoitteet ennen talvisotaa ja sen aikana Soviet objectives before and during the Winter War Talvisodan pikkujattilainen in Finnish Manninen Ohto 1999b Venalaiset sotavangit ja tappiot Russian Prisoners of War and Casualties Talvisodan pikkujattilainen in Finnish Manninen Ohto 1994 Talvisodan salatut taustat Hidden background of the Winter War in Finnish Kirjaneuvos ISBN 952 90 5251 0 Meltiukhov Mikhail 2000 Upushennyj shans Stalina Sovetskij Soyuz i borba za Evropu Stalin s Missed Chance in Russian Veche Archived from the original on 9 December 2020 Retrieved 29 October 2010 Paasikivi Juho Kusti 1958 Toimintani Moskovassa ja Suomessa 1939 41 My Actions in Moscow and Finland 1939 1941 in Finnish WSOY Palokangas Markku 1999 Suomalaisjoukkojen aseistus ja varustus Armament and Equipment of the Finnish Forces Talvisodan pikkujattilainen in Finnish Paulaharju Jyri 1999 Pakkastalven kourissa In the Grip of Winter Talvisodan pikkujattilainen in Finnish Paskhover A 3 June 2015 Krasnaya Armiya samaya mirolyubivaya samaya geroicheskaya Red Army the most peaceful the most heroic Ukrayinska Pravda in Russian Archived from the original on 27 June 2022 Retrieved 21 June 2015 Peltonen Martti 1999 Ilmasota talvisodassa Aerial Warfare in the Winter Wari Talvisodan pikkujattilainen in Finnish Petrov Pavel 2013 Venalainen talvisotakirjallisuus Bibliografia 1939 1945 Russian Winter War Literature Bibliography 1939 1945 in Finnish Docendo ISBN 978 952 5912 97 5 Polvinen Tuomo 1987 1971 Venajan vallankumous ja Suomi 1917 1920 II toukokuu 1918 joulukuu 1920 Russian Revolution and Finland 1917 1920 II May 1918 December 1920 WSOY ISBN 951 0 14299 9 Shirokorad A 2001 IX Zimnyaya vojna 1939 1940 gg Winter War 1939 1940 Severnye vojny Rossii Russia s Northern Wars in Russian ACT ISBN 5 17 009849 9 Archived from the original on 7 December 2019 Retrieved 1 July 2008 Ravasz Istvan 2003 Finnorszag fuggetlensegi harca 1917 1945 Magyar onkentesek Finnorszagban Finland s struggle for independence from 1917 to 1945 Hungarian volunteers in Finland PDF in Hungarian Wysocki Legio Hagyomanyorzo Egyesuletnek Archived from the original PDF on 20 October 2017 Retrieved 26 January 2015 Rentola Kimmo 2003 Holtsmark Sven G Pharo Helge O Tamnes Rolf eds Motstroms Olav Riste og norsk internasjonal historieskrivning Counter Currents Olav Riste and Norwegian international historiography in Norwegian Cappelen Akademisk Forlag ISBN 8202218284 Russian State Military Archive Rossijskij gosudarstvennyj voennyj arhiv RGVA Russian State Military Archive in Russian Silvast Pekka 1999 Merivoimien ensimmainen voitto Russaro The Navy s First Victory Russaro Talvisodan pikkujattilainen in Finnish Soikkanen Timo 1999 Talvisodan henki The Spirit of the Winter War Talvisodan pikkujattilainen in Finnish Statistics Finland 1941 Suomenmaan Tilastollinen Vuosikirja 1940 Finnish Statistics Yearbook 1940 PDF in Finnish pp 14 15 Archived PDF from the original on 7 March 2022 Retrieved 13 March 2022 Turtola Martti 1999a Kansainvalinen kehitys Euroopassa ja Suomessa 1930 luvulla International Developments in Europe and Finland in the 1930s Talvisodan pikkujattilainen in Finnish Turtola Martti 1999b Katkera rauha ja Suomen ulkopoliittinen asema sodan jalkeen Bitter Peace and the Post War Position of Finnish Foreign Policy Talvisodan pikkujattilainen in Finnish Vihavainen Timo 1999 Talvisota neuvostohistoriakirjoituksessa The Winter War in Soviet historiography Talvisodan pikkujattilainen in Finnish Sokolov Boris 2000 Put k miru Secrets of the Russo Finnish War Tajny finskoj vojny in Russian Veche ISBN 5 7838 0583 1 Vuorenmaa Anssi Juutilainen Antti 1999 Myytti Mannerheim linjasta Talvisodan pikkujattilainen in Finnish Myth of the Mannerheim Line Further readingCampbell David 2016 Finnish Soldier vs Soviet Soldier Winter War 1939 40 Osprey Publishing ISBN 978 1472813244 Chew Allen F The White Death The Epic of the Soviet Finnish Winter War ISBN 0 87013 167 2 Cox Geoffrey 1941 The Red Army Moves Victor Gollancz OCLC 502873 Engle Eloise and Paananen Pauri The Winter War The Soviet Attack on Finland 1939 1940 ISBN 0 8117 2433 6 Hill Alexander 2017 The Red Army and the Second World War Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 1 1070 2079 5 Kolomyjec Maksim 2011 Tanks in the Winter War 1939 1940 Translated by Dinan Tim Leandoer amp Ekholm ISBN 978 9197589529 Nenye Vesa Munter Peter Wirtanen Toni 2015 Finland at War The Winter War 1939 1945 Osprey Publishing ISBN 978 1472806314 OCLC 899228795 Rahikainen Paavo Vainio Ein 1996 Artillery barrage at Taipaleenjoki Paavo Rahikainen The battle of Sikniemi Translated by Mayow Nicholas Helsinki Finnish War Veterans Association ISBN 978 951 97557 0 0 OCLC 41278218 Reese Roger R 2008 Lessons of the Winter War a study in the military effectiveness of the Red Army 1939 1940 Journal of Military History 72 3 825 852 doi 10 1353 jmh 0 0004 S2CID 110326295 Saarelainen Tapio 2016 The White Sniper Simo Hayha Casemate ISBN 978 1612004297 Sander Gordon F 2013 The Hundred Day Winter War Finland s Gallant Stand against the Soviet Army University Press of Kansas ISBN 978 0700619108 online review Soviet Information Bureau 1948 Falsifiers of History Historical Survey 1st ed Gospolitizdat amp Foreign Languages Publishing House OCLC 155723998 Taylor Alan 23 May 2013 Finland in World War II The Atlantic Trotter William R A Frozen Hell The Russo Finnish Winter War of 1939 1940 ISBN 1 56512 249 6 Tuunainen Pasi 2016 Finnish Military Effectiveness in the Winter War 1939 1940 Palgrave Macmillan doi 10 1057 978 1 137 44606 0 ISBN 978 1 137 44606 0 Tuuri Antti 2003 1984 The Winter War Aspasia Books Inc ISBN 097310533X Weeks Jessica L 2014 Dictators at War and Peace Ch 4 Cornell University Press Woody Christopher 1 December 2017 These 17 photos show Finland s brutally cold World War II battle with the Soviet Union Business Insider UK External links nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Winter War nbsp Look up motti in Wiktionary the free dictionary Voennyj albom photographs of the Soviet Finnish War 1939 1940 Finna search service for information from Finnish archives libraries and museums Finnish Wartime Photograph Archive under CC BY 4 0 Fire and Ice The Winter War of Finland and Russia Winter War history from a documentary film s website National Archives of the United Kingdom Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Winter War amp oldid 1216309242, 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.