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Warsaw Uprising

Warsaw Uprising
Part of Operation Tempest in the Eastern Front of World War II

Clockwise from top left:
Civilians construct an anti-tank ditch in Wola district; German anti-tank gun in Theatre Square; Home Army soldier defending a barricade; Ruins of Bielańska Street; Insurgents leave the city ruins after surrendering to German forces; Allied transport planes airdrop supplies near Holy Cross Church.
Date1 August – 2 October 1944
(63 days)
Location52°13′48″N 21°00′39″E / 52.23000°N 21.01083°E / 52.23000; 21.01083Coordinates: 52°13′48″N 21°00′39″E / 52.23000°N 21.01083°E / 52.23000; 21.01083
Result

German victory

Belligerents

Polish Underground State

Polish Army in the East
(from 14 September)[1]


Supported by:

 Germany

Commanders and leaders
T. Komorowski (POW)
Tadeusz Pełczyński (POW)
Antoni Chruściel (POW)
Karol Ziemski (POW)
Edward Pfeiffer (POW)
Leopold Okulicki
Jan Mazurkiewicz
Zygmunt Berling
Walter Model
Nikolaus von Vormann
Rainer Stahel
E. v.d. Bach-Zelewski
Heinz Reinefarth
Bronislav Kaminski
Oskar Dirlewanger
Petro Dyachenko
Robert von Greim
Paul Otto Geibel
Units involved

Home Army

  • City Center – North
  • City Center – South
  • Powiśle
  • Warsaw – North
  • Żoliborz
  • Kampinos Forest
  • Warsaw – South
  • Kedyw Units

Polish First Army


Warsaw Airlift:
Royal Air Force
(including Polish squadrons)
US Army Air Force
South African Air Force
Soviet Air Force

Warsaw Garrison

  • Kampfgruppe Rohr
  • Kampfgruppe Reinefarth
  • Sturmgruppe Reck
  • Sturmgruppe Schmidt
  • Sturmgruppe Dirlewanger
  • Schutzpolizei

Supported by:
Luftwaffe
Strength

20,000[3]–49,000[4] 2,500 equipped with guns (initially)
2 captured Panther tanks
1 captured Hetzer tank destroyer
2 captured armoured personnel carrier
Improvised armored vehicles


Warsaw Airlift:

US Army Air Force

  • 107 B-17s, P-51 Mustangs

13,000[5]–25,000[6] (initially) Throughout the course of uprising: ~ 50,000[citation needed]
Dozens of tanks


Luftwaffe
  • 6 Junkers Ju 87s
Casualties and losses

Polish resistance:
15,200 killed and missing[7]
5,000 WIA[7]
15,000 POW (Incl. capitulation agreement)[7]
Polish First Army: 5,660 casualties[7]


Warsaw Airlift: 41 aircraft destroyed

German forces:
2,000–17,000[8][9][10][11] killed and missing
9,000 WIA

Multiple tanks and armored vehicles
150,000[12]–200,000 civilians killed[13][14]
700,000 expelled from the city[7]

The Warsaw Uprising (Polish: powstanie warszawskie; German: Warschauer Aufstand) was a major World War II operation by the Polish underground resistance to liberate Warsaw from German occupation. It occurred in the summer of 1944, and it was led by the Polish resistance Home Army (Polish: Armia Krajowa). The uprising was timed to coincide with the retreat of the German forces from Poland ahead of the Soviet advance.[15] While approaching the eastern suburbs of the city, the Red Army temporarily halted combat operations, enabling the Germans to regroup and defeat the Polish resistance and to destroy the city in retaliation. The Uprising was fought for 63 days with little outside support. It was the single largest military effort taken by any European resistance movement during World War II.[16]

The Uprising began on 1 August 1944 as part of a nationwide Operation Tempest, launched at the time of the Soviet Lublin–Brest Offensive. The main Polish objectives were to drive the Germans out of Warsaw while helping the Allies defeat Germany. An additional, political goal of the Polish Underground State was to liberate Poland's capital and assert Polish sovereignty before the Soviet-backed Polish Committee of National Liberation could assume control. Other immediate causes included a threat of mass German round-ups of able-bodied Poles for "evacuation"; calls by Radio Moscow's Polish Service for uprising; and an emotional Polish desire for justice and revenge against the enemy after five years of German occupation.[17][18]

Initially, the Poles established control over most of central Warsaw, but the Soviets ignored Polish attempts to make radio contact with them and did not advance beyond the city limits. Intense street fighting between the Germans and Poles continued. By 14 September, the eastern bank of the Vistula River opposite the Polish resistance positions was taken over by the Polish troops fighting under the Soviet command; 1,200 men made it across the river, but they were not reinforced by the Red Army. This, and the lack of air support from the Soviet air base five-minutes flying time away, led to allegations that Joseph Stalin tactically halted his forces to let the operation fail and allow the Polish resistance to be crushed. Arthur Koestler called the Soviet attitude "one of the major infamies of this war which will rank for the future historian on the same ethical level with Lidice."[19] On the other hand, David Glantz argued that the uprising started too early and the Red Army could not realistically have aided it, regardless of Soviet intentions.[20]

Winston Churchill pleaded with Stalin and Franklin D. Roosevelt to help Britain's Polish allies, to no avail.[21] Then, without Soviet air clearance, Churchill sent over 200 low-level supply drops by the Royal Air Force, the South African Air Force, and the Polish Air Force under British High Command, in an operation known as the Warsaw Airlift. Later, after gaining Soviet air clearance, the U.S. Army Air Force sent one high-level mass airdrop as part of Operation Frantic, although 80% of these supplies landed in German-controlled territory.[22]

Although the exact number of casualties is unknown, it is estimated that about 16,000 members of the Polish resistance were killed and about 6,000 badly wounded. In addition, between 150,000 and 200,000 Polish civilians died, mostly from mass executions. Jews being harboured by Poles were exposed by German house-to-house clearances and mass evictions of entire neighbourhoods. German casualties totalled over 2,000 to 17,000 soldiers killed and missing.[11] During the urban combat, approximately 25% of Warsaw's buildings were destroyed. Following the surrender of Polish forces, German troops systematically levelled another 35% of the city block by block. Together with earlier damage suffered in the 1939 invasion of Poland and the Warsaw Ghetto Uprising in 1943, over 85% of the city was destroyed by January 1945 when the course of the events in the Eastern Front forced the Germans to abandon the city.

Background

 
A captured German Sd.Kfz. 251 from the 5th SS Panzer Division, being used by the 8th "Krybar" Regiment. Furthest right; commander Adam Dewicz "Grey Wolf", 14 August 1944.
 
Polish Home Army positions, outlined in red, on the western bank of the Vistula (4 August 1944)

In 1944, Poland had been occupied by Nazi Germany for almost five years. The Polish Home Army planned some form of rebellion against German forces. Germany was fighting a coalition of Allied powers, led by the Soviet Union, the United Kingdom and the United States. The initial plan of the Home Army was to link up with the invading forces of the Western Allies as they liberated Europe from the Nazis. However, when the Soviet Army began its offensive in 1943, it became clear that Poland would be liberated by it instead of the Western Allies.

In this country, we have one point from which every evil emanates. That point is Warsaw. If we didn't have Warsaw in the General Government, we wouldn't have four-fifths of the difficulties with which we must contend. – German Governor-General Hans Frank, Kraków, 14 December 1943[23]

The Soviets and the Poles had a common enemy—Germany—but were working towards different post-war goals: the Home Army desired a pro-Western, capitalist Poland, but the Soviet leader Stalin intended to establish a pro-Soviet, socialist Poland. It became obvious that the advancing Soviet Red Army might not come to Poland as an ally but rather only as "the ally of an ally".[24]

"The Home Commander was, in his political thinking, pledged to the doctrine of two enemies, in accordance with which both Germany and Russia were seen as Poland's traditional enemies, and it was expected that support for Poland, if any, would come from the West".[25]

 
Warsaw Old Town in flames during Warsaw Uprising

The Soviets and the Poles distrusted each other and Soviet partisans in Poland often clashed with a Polish resistance increasingly united under the Home Army's front.[26] Stalin broke off Polish–Soviet relations on 25 April 1943 after the Germans revealed the Katyn massacre of Polish army officers, and Stalin refused to admit to ordering the killings and denounced the claims as German propaganda. Afterwards, Stalin created the Rudenko Commission, whose goal was to blame the Germans for the war crime at all costs. The Western alliance accepted Stalin's words as truth in order to keep the Anti-Nazi alliance intact.[27] On 26 October, the Polish government-in-exile issued instructions to the effect that, if diplomatic relations with the Soviet Union were not resumed before the Soviet entry into Poland, Home Army forces were to remain underground pending further decisions.

However, the Home Army commander, Tadeusz Bór-Komorowski, took a different approach, and on 20 November, he outlined his own plan, which became known as Operation Tempest. On the approach of the Eastern Front, local units of the Home Army were to harass the German Wehrmacht in the rear and co-operate with incoming Soviet units as much as possible. Although doubts existed about the military necessity of a major uprising, planning continued.[28] General Bór-Komorowski and his civilian advisor were authorised by the government in exile to proclaim a general uprising whenever they saw fit.[29]

Eve of the battle

The situation came to a head on 13 July 1944 as the Soviet offensive crossed the old Polish border. At this point the Poles had to make a decision: either initiate the uprising in the current difficult political situation and risk a lack of Soviet support, or fail to rebel and face Soviet propaganda describing the Home Army as impotent or worse, Nazi collaborators. They feared that if Poland was liberated by the Red Army, then the Allies would ignore the London-based Polish government in the aftermath of the war. The urgency for a final decision on strategy increased as it became clear that, after successful Polish-Soviet co-operation in the liberation of Polish territory (for example, in Operation Ostra Brama), Soviet security forces behind the frontline shot or arrested Polish officers and forcibly conscripted lower ranks into the Soviet-controlled forces.[26][30] On 21 July, the High Command of the Home Army decided that the time to launch Operation Tempest in Warsaw was imminent.[31] The plan was intended both as a political manifestation of Polish sovereignty and as a direct operation against the German occupiers.[7] On 25 July, the Polish government-in-exile (without the knowledge and against the wishes of Polish Commander-in-Chief General Kazimierz Sosnkowski[32]) approved the plan for an uprising in Warsaw with the timing to be decided locally.[33]

In the early summer of 1944, German plans required Warsaw to serve as the defensive centre of the area and to be held at all costs. The Germans had fortifications constructed and built up their forces in the area. This process slowed after the failed 20 July plot to assassinate the Nazi leader Adolf Hitler, and around that time, the Germans in Warsaw were weak and visibly demoralized.[34][35] However, by the end of July, German forces in the area were reinforced.[34] On 27 July, the Governor of the Warsaw District, Ludwig Fischer, called for 100,000 Polish men and women to report for work as part of a plan which envisaged the Poles constructing fortifications around the city.[36] The inhabitants of Warsaw ignored his demand, and the Home Army command became worried about possible reprisals or mass round-ups, which would disable their ability to mobilize.[37] The Soviet forces were approaching Warsaw, and Soviet-controlled radio stations called for the Polish people to rise in arms.[34][38]

On 25 July, the Union of Polish Patriots, in a broadcast from Moscow, stated:

"The Polish Army of Polish Patriots ... calls on the thousands of brothers thirsting to fight, to smash the foe before he can recover from his defeat ... Every Polish homestead must become a stronghold in the struggle against the invaders ... Not a moment is to be lost."[39]

On 29 July, the first Soviet armoured units reached the outskirts of Warsaw, where they were counter-attacked by two German Panzer Corps: the 39th and 4th SS.[20] On 29 July 1944 Radio Station Kosciuszko located in Moscow emitted a few times its "Appeal to Warsaw" and called to "Fight The Germans!":

"No doubt Warsaw already hears the guns of the battle which is soon to bring her liberation. ... The Polish Army now entering Polish territory, trained in the Soviet Union, is now joined to the People's Army to form the Corps of the Polish Armed Forces, the armed arm of our nation in its struggle for independence. Its ranks will be joined tomorrow by the sons of Warsaw. They will all together, with the Allied Army pursue the enemy westwards, wipe out the Hitlerite vermin from Polish land and strike a mortal blow at the beast of Prussian Imperialism."[40][41]

Bór-Komorowski and several officers held a meeting on that day. Jan Nowak-Jeziorański, who had arrived from London, expressed the view that help from the Allies would be limited, but his views received no attention.[42]

"In the early afternoon of 31 July the most important political and military leaders of the resistance had no intention of sending their troops into battle on 1 August. Even so, another late afternoon briefing of Bor-Komorowski's Staff was arranged for five o'clock(...) At about 5.30 p.m. Col 'Monter' arrived at the briefing, reporting that the Russian tanks were already entering Praga and insisting on the immediate launching of the Home Army operations inside the city as otherwise it 'might be too late'. Prompted by 'Monter`s report, Bor-Komorowski decided that the time was ripe for the commencement of 'Burza' in Warsaw, in spite of his earlier conviction to the contrary, twice expressed during the course of that day".[43]

"Bor-Komorowski and Jankowski issued their final order for the insurrection when it was erroneously reported to them that the Soviet tanks were entering Praga. Hence they assumed that the Russo-German battle for Warsaw was approaching its climax and that this presented them with an excellent opportunity to capture Warsaw before the Red Army entered the capital. The Soviet radio appeals calling upon the people of Warsaw to rise against the Germans, regardless of Moscow's intentions, had very little influence on the Polish authorities responsible for the insurrection".[44]

Believing that the time for action had arrived, on 31 July, the Polish commanders General Bór-Komorowski and Colonel Antoni Chruściel ordered full mobilization of the forces for 17:00 the following day.[45]

Within the framework of the entire enemy intelligence operations directed against Germany, the intelligence service of the Polish resistance movement assumed major significance. The scope and importance of the operations of the Polish resistance movement, which was ramified down to the smallest splinter group and brilliantly organized, have been in (various sources) disclosed in connection with carrying out of major police security operations.

— Heinrich Himmler, 31 December 1942[46]

Opposing forces

 
Weapons used by the resistance, including the Błyskawica submachine gun—one of very few weapons designed and mass-produced covertly in occupied Europe.

Polish forces

The Home Army forces of the Warsaw District numbered between 20,000,[3][47] and 49,000 soldiers.[4] Other underground formations also contributed; estimates range from 2,000 in total,[48] to about 3,500 men including those from the National Armed Forces and the communist People's Army.[49] Most of them had trained for several years in partisan and urban guerrilla warfare, but lacked experience in prolonged daylight fighting. The forces lacked equipment,[6] because the Home Army had shuttled weapons to the east of the country before the decision to include Warsaw in Operation Tempest.[50] Other partisan groups subordinated themselves to Home Army command, and many volunteers joined during the fighting, including Jews freed from the Gęsiówka concentration camp in the ruins of the Warsaw Ghetto.[51] Morale among Jewish fighters was hurt by displays of antisemitism, with several former Jewish prisoners in combat units even killed by antisemitic Poles.[52]

 
Kubuś, an armoured car made by the Home Army during the Uprising. A single unit was built by the "Krybar" Regiment on the chassis of a Chevrolet 157 van.

Colonel Antoni Chruściel (codename "Monter") who commanded the Polish underground forces in Warsaw, divided his units into eight areas: the Sub-district I of Śródmieście (Area I) which included Warszawa-Śródmieście and the Old Town; the Sub-district II of Żoliborz (Area II) comprising Żoliborz, Marymont, and Bielany; the Sub-district III of Wola (Area III) in Wola; the Sub-district IV of Ochota (Area IV) in Ochota; the Sub-district V of Mokotów (Area V) in Mokotów; the Sub-district VI of Praga (Area VI) in Praga; the Sub-district VII of Warsaw suburbs (Area VII) for the Warsaw West County; and the Autonomous Region VIII of Okęcie (Area VIII) in Okęcie; while the units of the Directorate of Sabotage and Diversion (Kedyw) remained attached to the Uprising Headquarters.[53] On 20 September, the sub-districts were reorganized to align with the three areas of the city held by the Polish units. The entire force, renamed the Warsaw Home Army Corps (Polish: Warszawski Korpus Armii Krajowej) and commanded by General Antoni Chruściel – who was promoted from Colonel on 14 September – formed three infantry divisions (Śródmieście, Żoliborz and Mokotów).[53]

 
The 535th platoon of Slovaks under the command of Mirosław Iringh, part of the 1st company of the "Tur" battalion from the "Kryśka" Group fought in Czerniaków and Praga district during the uprising.[54]

The exact number of the foreign fighters (obcokrajowcy in Polish), who fought in Warsaw for Poland's independence, is difficult to determine, taking into consideration the chaotic character of the Uprising causing their irregular registration. It is estimated that they numbered several hundred and represented at least 15 countries – Slovakia, Hungary, the United Kingdom, Australia, France, Belgium, the Netherlands, Greece, Italy, the United States, the Soviet Union, South Africa, Romania, Germany, and even Nigeria. These people – emigrants who had settled in Warsaw before the war, escapees from numerous POW, concentration and labor camps, and deserters from the German auxiliary forces – were absorbed in different fighting and supportive formations of the Polish underground. They wore the underground's red-white armband (the colors of the Polish national flag) and adopted the Polish traditional independence fighters' slogan 'Za naszą i waszą wolność'. Some of the 'obcokrajowcy' showed outstanding bravery in fighting the enemy and were awarded the highest decorations of the AK and the Polish government in exile.[55]

During the fighting, the Poles obtained additional supplies through airdrops and by capture from the enemy, including several armoured vehicles, notably two Panther tanks and two Sd.Kfz. 251 armored personnel carriers.[56][57][58] Also, resistance workshops produced weapons throughout the fighting, including submachine guns, K pattern flamethrowers,[59] grenades, mortars, and even an armoured car (Kubuś).[60] As of 1 August, Polish military supplies consisted of 1,000 guns, 1,750 pistols, 300 submachine guns, 60 assault rifles, 7 heavy machine guns, 20 anti-tank guns, and 25,000 hand grenades.[61] "Such collection of light weapons might have been sufficient to launch an urban terror campaign, but not to seize control of the city".[62]

Germans

 
German soldiers fighting the Polish resistance at Theater Square in Warsaw, September 1944

In late July 1944 the German units stationed in and around Warsaw were divided into three categories. The first and the most numerous was the garrison of Warsaw. As of 31 July, it numbered some 11,000 troops under General Rainer Stahel.[63]

 
Commanding officers of the collaborationist Freiwillige (the Waffen-SS volunteers) brigade R.O.N.A. during the Warsaw Uprising, August 1944

These well-equipped German forces prepared for the defence of the city's key positions for many months. Several hundred concrete bunkers and barbed wire lines protected the buildings and areas occupied by the Germans. Apart from the garrison itself, numerous army units were stationed on both banks of the Vistula and in the city. The second category was composed of police and SS, under SS and Police Leader SS-Oberführer Paul Otto Geibel, numbering initially 5,710 men,[64] including Schutzpolizei and Waffen-SS.[65] The third category was formed by various auxiliary units, including detachments of the Bahnschutz (rail guard), Werkschutz (factory guard) and the Polish Volksdeutsche (ethnic Germans in Poland) and Soviet former POW of the Sonderdienst and Sonderabteilungen paramilitary units.[66]

During the uprising the German side received reinforcements on a daily basis. Stahel was replaced as overall commander by SS-General Erich von dem Bach in early August.[67] As of 20 August 1944, the German units directly involved with fighting in Warsaw comprised 17,000 men arranged in two battle groups:

The Nazi forces included about 5,000 regular troops; 4,000 Luftwaffe personnel (1,000 at Okęcie airport, 700 at Bielany, 1,000 in Boernerowo, 300 at Służewiec and 1,000 in anti-air artillery posts throughout the city); as well as about 2,000 men of the Sentry Regiment Warsaw (Wachtregiment Warschau), including four infantry battalions (Patz, Baltz, No. 996 and No. 997), and an SS reconnaissance squadron with ca. 350 men.[67][70]

Uprising

W-hour or "Godzina W"

After days of hesitation, at 17:00 on 31 July, the Polish headquarters scheduled "W-hour" (from the Polish wybuch, "explosion"), the moment of the start of the uprising for 17:00 on the following day.[71] The decision was a strategic miscalculation because the under-equipped resistance forces were prepared and trained for a series of coordinated surprise dawn attacks. In addition, although many units were already mobilized and waiting at assembly points throughout the city, the mobilization of thousands of young men and women was hard to conceal. Fighting started in advance of "W-hour", notably in Żoliborz,[72] and around Napoleon Square and Dąbrowski Square.[73] The Germans had anticipated the possibility of an uprising, though they had not realized its size or strength.[74] At 16:30 Governor Fischer put the garrison on full alert.[75]

 
Resistance fighter armed with a flamethrower, 22 August 1944

That evening the resistance captured a major German arsenal, the main post office and power station and the Prudential building. However, Castle Square, the police district, and the airport remained in German hands.[76] The first days were crucial in establishing the battlefield for the rest of the fight. The resistance fighters were most successful in the City Centre, Old Town, and Wola districts. However, several major German strongholds remained, and in some areas of Wola the Poles sustained heavy losses that forced an early retreat. In other areas such as Mokotów, the attackers almost completely failed to secure any objectives and controlled only the residential areas. In Praga, on the east bank of the Vistula, the Poles were sent back into hiding by a high concentration of German forces.[77] Most crucially, the fighters in different areas failed to link up with each other and with areas outside Warsaw, leaving each sector isolated from the others. After the first hours of fighting, many units adopted a more defensive strategy, while civilians began erecting barricades. Despite all the problems, by 4 August the majority of the city was in Polish hands, although some key strategic points remained untaken.[78]

My Führer, the timing is unfortunate, but from a historical perspective what the Poles are doing is a blessing. After five, six weeks we shall leave. But by then Warsaw, the capital, the head, the intelligence of this former 16–17 million Polish people will be extinguished, this Volk that has blocked our way to the east for seven hundred years and has stood in our way ever since the First Battle of Tannenberg [in 1410]. After this the Polish problem will no longer be a great historical problem for the children who come after us, nor indeed will it be for us.

— SS Chief Heinrich Himmler to Adolf Hitler when he learned about the Warsaw Uprising[79][80]

First four days

 
The city's sewer system was used to move resistance fighters between the Old Town, Śródmieście and Żoliborz districts.
 
Home Army soldiers from Kolegium "A" of Kedyw formation on Stawki Street in the Wola District of Warsaw, September 1944

The uprising was intended to last a few days until Soviet forces arrived;[81] however, this never happened, and the Polish forces had to fight with little outside assistance. The results of the first two days of fighting in different parts of the city were as follows:

  • Area I (city centre and the Old Town): Units captured most of their assigned territory, but failed to capture areas with strong pockets of resistance from the Germans (the Warsaw University buildings, PAST skyscraper, the headquarters of the German garrison in the Saxon Palace, the German-only area near Szucha Avenue, and the bridges over the Vistula). They thus failed to create a central stronghold, secure communication links to other areas, or a secure land connection with the northern area of Żoliborz through the northern railway line and the Citadel.[citation needed]
  • Area II (Żoliborz, Marymont, Bielany): Units failed to secure the most important military targets near Żoliborz. Many units retreated outside of the city, into the forests. Although they captured most of the area around Żoliborz, the soldiers of Colonel Mieczysław Niedzielski ("Żywiciel") failed to secure the Citadel area and break through German defences at Warsaw Gdańsk railway station.[82]
  • Area III (Wola): Units initially secured most of the territory, but sustained heavy losses (up to 30%). Some units retreated into the forests, while others retreated to the eastern part of the area. In the northern part of Wola the soldiers of Colonel Jan Mazurkiewicz ("Radosław") managed to capture the German barracks, the German supply depot at Stawki Street, and the flanking position at the Okopowa Street Jewish Cemetery.[citation needed]
  • Area IV (Ochota): The units mobilized in this area did not capture either the territory or the military targets (the Gęsiówka concentration camp, and the SS and Sipo barracks on Narutowicz Square). After suffering heavy casualties most of the Home Army forces retreated to the forests west of Warsaw. Only two small units of approximately 200 to 300 men under Lieut. Andrzej Chyczewski ("Gustaw") remained in the area and managed to create strong pockets of resistance. They were later reinforced by units from the city centre. Elite units of the Kedyw managed to secure most of the northern part of the area and captured all of the military targets there. However, they were soon tied down by German tactical counter-attacks from the south and west.[citation needed]
  • Area V (Mokotów): The situation in this area was very serious from the start of hostilities. The partisans aimed to capture the heavily defended Police Area (Dzielnica policyjna) on Rakowiecka Street, and establish a connection with the city centre through open terrain at the former airfield of Mokotów Field. As both of the areas were heavily fortified and could be approached only through open terrain, the assaults failed. Some units retreated into the forests, while others managed to capture parts of Dolny Mokotów, which was, however, severed from most communication routes to other areas.[83]
  • Area VI (Praga): The Uprising was also started on the right bank of the Vistula, where the main task was to seize the bridges on the river and secure the bridgeheads until the arrival of the Red Army. It was clear that, since the location was far worse than that of the other areas, there was no chance of any help from outside. After some minor initial successes, the forces of Lt.Col. Antoni Żurowski ("Andrzej") were badly outnumbered by the Germans. The fights were halted, and the Home Army forces were forced back underground.[71]
  • Area VII (Powiat warszawski): this area consisted of territories outside Warsaw city limits. Actions here mostly failed to capture their targets.[citation needed]

An additional area within the Polish command structure was formed by the units of the Directorate of Sabotage and Diversion or Kedyw, an elite formation that was to guard the headquarters and was to be used as an "armed ambulance", thrown into the battle in the most endangered areas. These units secured parts of Śródmieście and Wola; along with the units of Area I, they were the most successful during the first few hours.[citation needed]

Among the most notable primary targets that were not taken during the opening stages of the uprising were the airfields of Okęcie and Mokotów Field, as well as the PAST skyscraper overlooking the city centre and the Gdańsk railway station guarding the passage between the centre and the northern borough of Żoliborz.[citation needed]

The leaders of the uprising counted only on the rapid entry of the Red Army in Warsaw ('on the second or third or, at the latest, by the seventh day of the fighting'[84]) and were more prepared for a confrontation with the Russians. At this time, the head of the government in exile Mikolajczyk met with Stalin on 3 August 1944 in Moscow and raised the questions of his imminent arrival in Warsaw, the return to power of his government in Poland, as well as the Eastern borders of Poland, while categorically refusing to recognize the Curzon Line as the basis for negotiations.[85] In saying this, Mikolajczyk was well aware that the USSR and Stalin had repeatedly stated their demand for recognition of the Curzon line as the basis for negotiations and categorically refused to change their position. 23 March 1944 Stalin said 'he could not depart from the Curzon Line; in spite of Churchill's post-Teheran reference to his Curzon Line policy as one 'of force', he still believed it to be the only legitimate settlement'.[86] Thus, the Warsaw uprising was actively used to achieve political goals. The question of assistance to the insurrection was not raised by Mikolajczyk, apparently for reasons that it might weaken the position in the negotiations. 'The substance of the two-and-a-half-hour discussion was a harsh disagreement about future of Poland, the Uprising – considered by the Poles as a bargaining chip – turned to be disadvantageous for Mikolajczyk's position since it made him seem like a supplicant (...) Nothing was agreed about the Uprising.'[87] The question of helping the "Home Army" with weapons was only raised, but Stalin refused to discuss this question until the formation of a new government was decided.[85]

Wola massacre

 
Home Army soldier armed with Błyskawica submachine gun defending a barricade in Powiśle District of Warsaw during the Uprising, August 1944

The Uprising reached its apogee on 4 August when the Home Army soldiers managed to establish front lines in the westernmost boroughs of Wola and Ochota. However, it was also the moment at which the German army stopped its retreat westwards and began receiving reinforcements. On the same day SS General Erich von dem Bach was appointed commander of all the forces employed against the Uprising.[71] German counter-attacks aimed to link up with the remaining German pockets and then cut off the Uprising from the Vistula river. Among the reinforcing units were forces under the command of Heinz Reinefarth.[71]

On 5 August Reinefarth's three attack groups started their advance westward along Wolska and Górczewska streets toward the main east–west communication line of Jerusalem Avenue. Their advance was halted, but the regiments began carrying out Heinrich Himmler's orders: behind the lines, special SS, police and Wehrmacht groups went from house to house, shooting the inhabitants regardless of age or gender and burning their bodies.[71] Estimates of civilians killed in Wola and Ochota range from 20,000 to 50,000,[88] 40,000 by 8 August in Wola alone,[89] or as high as 100,000.[90] The main perpetrators were Oskar Dirlewanger and Bronislav Kaminski, whose forces committed the cruelest atrocities.[91][92][93]

The policy was designed to crush the Poles' will to fight and put the uprising to an end without having to commit to heavy city fighting.[94] With time, the Germans realized that atrocities only stiffened resistance and that some political solution should be found, as the thousands of men at the disposal of the German commander were unable to effectively counter the resistance in an urban guerrilla setting.[95] They aimed to gain a significant victory to show the Home Army the futility of further fighting and induce them to surrender. This did not succeed. Until mid-September, the Germans shot all captured resistance fighters on the spot, but from the end of September, some of the captured Polish soldiers were treated as POWs.[96]

Stalemate

This is the fiercest of our battles since the start of the war. It compares to the street battles of Stalingrad.

— SS chief Heinrich Himmler to German generals on 21 September 1944.[97]
 
Jewish prisoners of Gęsiówka concentration camp liberated by Polish Home Army soldiers from "Zośka" Battalion, 5 August 1944
 
German Stuka Ju 87 bombing Warsaw's Old Town, August 1944; the rebels were unable to capture the airfields and only 6 German aircraft could make a large number of sorties, causing great destruction to the city[98]
 
Warsaw's Old Town Market Place, August 1944

Despite the loss of Wola, the Polish resistance strengthened. Zośka and Wacek battalions managed to capture the ruins of the Warsaw Ghetto and liberate the Gęsiówka concentration camp, freeing about 350 Jews.[71] The area became one of the main communication links between the resistance fighting in Wola and those defending the Old Town. On 7 August German forces were strengthened by the arrival of tanks using civilians as human shields.[71] After two days of heavy fighting they managed to bisect Wola and reach Bankowy Square. However, by then the net of barricades, street fortifications, and tank obstacles were already well-prepared; both sides reached a stalemate, with heavy house-to-house fighting.[citation needed]

Between 9 and 18 August pitched battles raged around the Old Town and nearby Bankowy Square, with successful attacks by the Germans and counter-attacks from the Poles. German tactics hinged on bombardment through the use of heavy artillery[99] and tactical bombers, against which the Poles were unable to effectively defend, as they lacked anti-aircraft artillery weapons. Even clearly marked hospitals were dive-bombed by Stukas.[100]

Although the Battle of Stalingrad had already shown the danger a city can pose to armies which fight within it and the importance of local support, the Warsaw Uprising was probably the first demonstration that in an urban terrain, a vastly under-equipped force supported by the civilian population can hold its own against better-equipped professional soldiers—though at the cost of considerable sacrifice on the part of the city's residents.[citation needed]

The Poles held the Old Town until a decision to withdraw was made at the end of August. On successive nights until 2 September, the defenders of the Old Town withdrew through the sewers, which were a major means of communication between different parts of the Uprising.[101] Thousands of people were evacuated in this way. Those that remained were either shot or transported to concentration camps like Mauthausen and Sachsenhausen once the Germans regained control.[102]

Berling's landings

Soviet attacks on the 4th SS Panzer Corps east of Warsaw were renewed on 26 August, and the Germans were forced to retreat into Praga. The Soviet army under the command of Konstantin Rokossovsky captured Praga and arrived on the east bank of the Vistula in mid-September. By 13 September, the Germans had destroyed the remaining bridges over the Vistula, signalling that they were abandoning all their positions east of the river.[103] In the Praga area, Polish units under the command of General Zygmunt Berling (thus sometimes known as berlingowcy – "the Berling men") fought on the Soviet side. Three patrols of his First Polish Army (1 Armia Wojska Polskiego) landed in the Czerniaków and Powiśle areas and made contact with Home Army forces on the night of 14/15 September. The artillery cover and air support provided by the Soviets was unable to effectively counter enemy machine-gun fire as the Poles crossed the river, and the landing troops sustained heavy losses.[104] Only small elements of the main units made it ashore (I and III battalions of 9th infantry regiment, 3rd Infantry Division).[105]

 
Monument to General Berling in Warsaw

The limited landings by the 1st Polish Army represented the only external ground force which arrived to physically support the uprising; and even they were curtailed by the Soviet High Command due to the losses they took.[105]

The Germans intensified their attacks on the Home Army positions near the river to prevent any further landings, but were not able to make any significant advances for several days while Polish forces held those vital positions in preparation for a new expected wave of Soviet landings. Polish units from the eastern shore attempted several more landings, and from 15 to 23 September sustained heavy losses (including the destruction of all their landing boats and most of their other river crossing equipment).[105] Red Army support was inadequate.[105] After the failure of repeated attempts by the 1st Polish Army to link up with the resistance, the Soviets limited their assistance to sporadic artillery and air support. Conditions that prevented the Germans from dislodging the resistance also acted to prevent the Poles from dislodging the Germans. Plans for a river crossing were suspended "for at least 4 months", since operations against the 9th Army's five panzer divisions were problematic at that point, and the commander of the 1st Polish Army, General Berling was relieved of his duties by his Soviet superiors.[26][106]

On the night of 19 September, after no further attempts from the other side of the river were made and the promised evacuation of wounded did not take place, Home Army soldiers and landed elements of the 1st Polish Army were forced to begin a retreat from their positions on the bank of the river.[105] Out of approximately 900 men who made it ashore only a handful made it back to the eastern shore of the Vistula.[107] Berling's Polish Army losses in the attempt to aid the Uprising were 5,660 killed, missing or wounded.[7] From this point on, the Warsaw Uprising can be seen as a one-sided war of attrition or, alternatively, as a fight for acceptable terms of surrender. The Poles were besieged in three areas of the city: Śródmieście, Żoliborz and Mokotów.[citation needed]

Life behind the lines

 
Tadeusz Rajszczak "Maszynka" (left), Ryszard Michał Lach, and one other young soldier from "Miotła" Battalion, 2 September 1944
 
Home Army soldiers Henryk Ożarek "Henio" (left) holding a Vis pistol and Tadeusz Przybyszewski "Roma" (right) firing a Błyskawica submachine gun, from "Anna" Company of the "Gustaw" Battalion fighting on Kredytowa-Królewska Street, 3 October 1944; the use of pistols in street battles indicates a very poor equipment of weapons of the rebels

In 1939 Warsaw had roughly 1,350,000 inhabitants. Over a million were still living in the city at the start of the Uprising. In Polish-controlled territory, during the first weeks of the Uprising, people tried to recreate the normal day-to-day life of their free country. Cultural life was vibrant, both among the soldiers and civilian population, with theatres, post offices, newspapers and similar activities.[108] Boys and girls of the Polish Scouts acted as couriers for an underground postal service, risking their lives daily to transmit any information that might help their people.[71][109] Near the end of the Uprising, lack of food and medicine, overcrowding and indiscriminate German air and artillery assault on the city made the civilian situation more and more desperate.[citation needed] Booby traps, such as thermite-laced candy pieces, may have also been used in German-controlled districts of Warsaw; targeting Polish youth.[citation needed]

Food shortages

As the Uprising was supposed to be relieved by the Soviets in a matter of days, the Polish underground did not predict food shortages would be a problem. However, as the fighting dragged on, the inhabitants of the city faced hunger and starvation. A major break-through took place on 6 August, when Polish units recaptured the Haberbusch i Schiele brewery complex at Ceglana Street. From that time on the citizens of Warsaw lived mostly on barley from the brewery's warehouses. Every day up to several thousand people organized into cargo teams reported to the brewery for bags of barley and then distributed them in the city centre. The barley was then ground in coffee grinders and boiled with water to form a so-called spit-soup (Polish: pluj-zupa). The "Sowiński" Battalion managed to hold the brewery until the end of the fighting.[citation needed]

Another serious problem for civilians and soldiers alike was a shortage of water.[71] By mid-August most of the water conduits were either out of order or filled with corpses. In addition, the main water pumping station remained in German hands.[71] To prevent the spread of epidemics and provide the people with water, the authorities ordered all janitors to supervise the construction of water wells in the backyards of every house. On 21 September the Germans blew up the remaining pumping stations at Koszykowa Street and after that the public wells were the only source of potable water in the besieged city.[110] By the end of September, the city centre had more than 90 functioning wells.[71]

Polish media

Before the Uprising the Bureau of Information and Propaganda of the Home Army had set up a group of war correspondents. Headed by Antoni Bohdziewicz, the group made three newsreels and over 30,000 meters of film tape documenting the struggles. The first newsreel was shown to the public on 13 August in the Palladium cinema at Złota Street.[71] In addition to films, dozens of newspapers appeared from the very first days of the uprising. Several previously underground newspapers started to be distributed openly.[111][112] The two main daily newspapers were the government-run Rzeczpospolita Polska and military Biuletyn Informacyjny. There were also several dozen newspapers, magazines, bulletins and weeklies published routinely by various organizations and military units.[111]

The Błyskawica long-range radio transmitter, assembled on 7 August in the city centre, was run by the military, but was also used by the recreated Polish Radio from 9 August.[71] It was on the air three or four times a day, broadcasting news programmes and appeals for help in Polish, English, German and French, as well as reports from the government, patriotic poems and music.[113] It was the only such radio station in German-held Europe.[114] Among the speakers appearing on the resistance radio were Jan Nowak-Jeziorański,[115] Zbigniew Świętochowski, Stefan Sojecki, Jeremi Przybora,[116] and John Ward, a war correspondent for The Times of London.[117]

Outside support

 
Captured German Panther tank by resistance fighters from "Zośka" Battalion under the command of Wacław Micuta, 2 August 1944

According to many historians, a major cause of the eventual failure of the uprising was the almost complete lack of outside support and the late arrival of that which did arrive.[7][20] The Polish government-in-exile carried out frantic diplomatic efforts to gain support from the Western Allies prior to the start of battle but the allies would not act without Soviet approval. The Polish government in London asked the British several times to send an allied mission to Poland.[26] However, the British mission did not arrive until December 1944.[118] Shortly after their arrival, they met up with Soviet authorities, who arrested and imprisoned them.[119] In the words of the mission's deputy commander, it was "a complete failure".[120] Nevertheless, from August 1943 to July 1944, over 200 British Royal Air Force (RAF) flights dropped an estimated 146 Polish personnel trained in Great Britain, over 4,000 containers of supplies, and $16 million in banknotes and gold to the Home Army.[121]

The only support operation which ran continuously for the duration of the Uprising were night supply drops by long-range planes of the RAF, other British Commonwealth air forces, and units of the Polish Air Force, which had to use distant airfields in Italy, reducing the amount of supplies they could carry. The RAF made 223 sorties and lost 34 aircraft. The effect of these airdrops was mostly psychological—they delivered too few supplies for the needs of the resistance, and many airdrops landed outside Polish-controlled territory.[citation needed]

Airdrops

There was no difficulty in finding Warsaw. It was visible from 100 kilometers away. The city was in flames but with so many huge fires burning, it was almost impossible to pick up the target marker flares.

— William Fairly, a South African pilot, from an interview in 1982[122]
 
Home Army soldiers from "Zośka" Battalion liberating Gęsiówka concentration camp. Only Juliusz Deczkowski (centre) survived. Tadeusz Milewski "Ćwik" (right) was killed later in the day and Wojciech Omyła "Wojtek" (left) was killed several days later, 5 August 1944

From 4 August the Western Allies began supporting the Uprising with airdrops of munitions and other supplies.[123] Initially the flights were carried out mostly by the 1568th Polish Special Duties Flight of the Polish Air Force (later renamed No. 301 Polish Bomber Squadron) stationed in Bari and Brindisi in Italy, flying B-24 Liberator, Handley Page Halifax and Douglas C-47 Dakota planes. Later on, at the insistence of the Polish government-in-exile,[citation needed] they were joined by the Liberators of 2 Wing –No.31 and No. 34 Squadrons of the South African Air Force based at Foggia in Southern Italy, and Halifaxes, flown by No. 148 and No. 178 RAF Squadrons. The drops by British, Polish and South African forces continued until 21 September. The total weight of allied drops varies according to source (104 tons,[124] 230 tons[123] or 239 tons[26]), over 200 flights were made.[125]

The Soviet Union did not allow the Western Allies to use its airports for the airdrops[7] for several weeks,[126] so the planes had to use bases in the United Kingdom and Italy which reduced their carrying weight and number of sorties. The Allies' specific request for the use of landing strips made on 20 August was denied by Stalin on 22 August.[122] Stalin referred to the Polish resistance as "a handful of criminals"[127] and stated that the Uprising was inspired by "enemies of the Soviet Union".[22] Thus, by denying landing rights to Allied aircraft on Soviet-controlled territory the Soviets vastly limited effectiveness of Allied assistance to the Uprising, and even fired at Allied airplanes which carried supplies from Italy and strayed into Soviet-controlled airspace.[122]

American support was also limited. After Stalin's objections to supporting the uprising, British Prime Minister Winston Churchill telegraphed U.S. President Franklin D. Roosevelt on 25 August and proposed sending planes in defiance of Stalin, to "see what happens". Unwilling to upset Stalin before the Yalta Conference, Roosevelt replied on 26 August: "I do not consider it advantageous to the long-range general war prospect for me to join you".[122][128]

 
Soldier from the "Kiliński" Battalion pictured aiming his rifle at the German-occupied PAST building, 20 August 1944

Finally on 18 September the Soviets allowed a USAAF flight of 107 B-17 Flying Fortresses of the Eighth Air Force's 3rd Division to re-fuel and reload at Soviet airfields used in Operation Frantic, but it was too little too late. The planes dropped 100 tons of supplies but only 20 were recovered by the resistance due to the wide area over which they were spread.[22] The vast majority of supplies fell into German-held areas.[129] The USAAF lost two B-17s[130] with a further seven damaged. The aircraft landed at the Operation Frantic airbases in the Soviet Union, where they were rearmed and refueled, and the next day 100 B-17s and 61 P-51s left the USSR to bomb the marshalling yard at Szolnok in Hungary on their way back to bases in Italy.[131] Soviet intelligence reports show that Soviet commanders on the ground near Warsaw estimated that 96% of the supplies dropped by the Americans fell into German hands.[132] From the Soviet perspective, the Americans were supplying the Nazis instead of aiding the Polish resistance.[133] The Soviets refused permission for any further American flights until 30 September, by which time the weather was too poor to fly, and the Uprising was nearly over.[134]

Between 13 and 30 September Soviet aircraft commenced their own re-supply missions, dropping arms, medicines and food supplies. Initially these supplies were dropped in canisters without parachutes[135] which led to damage and loss of the contents.[136] Also, a large number of canisters fell into German hands. The Soviet Air Forces flew 2,535 re-supply sorties with small bi-plane Polikarpov Po-2's, delivering a total of 156 50-mm mortars, 505 anti-tank rifles, 1,478 sub-machine guns, 520 rifles, 669 carbines, 41,780 hand grenades, 37,216 mortar shells, over 3 million cartridges, 131.2 tons of food and 515 kg of medicine.[137]

Although German air defence over the Warsaw area itself was almost non-existent, about 12% of the 296 planes taking part in the operations were lost because they had to fly 1,600 kilometres (990 miles) out and the same distance back over heavily defended enemy territory (112 out of 637 Polish and 133 out of 735 British and South African airmen were shot down).[22] Most of the drops were made during the night, at no more than 30–90 m (100–300 ft) altitude, and poor accuracy left many parachuted packages stranded behind German-controlled territory (only about 50 tons of supplies, less than 50% delivered, was recovered by the resistance).[123]

The level of losses during the operation was very high, especially for the conditions of mid-1944. In the first flight on 4–5 August, 5 out of 7 aircraft were lost.[138] In subsequent flights, the level of losses decreased, but remained very high. For example, on 13–14 August, 3 planes out of 28 were shot down, and 4 planes were forced to make forced landings in territories occupied by the USSR due to damage.[139]

Soviet stance

 
Soviet advances from 1 August 1943 to 31 December 1944:
  to 1 December 1943
  to 30 April 1944
  to 19 August 1944
  to 31 December 1944

Fight The Germans! No doubt Warsaw already hears the guns of the battle which is soon to bring her liberation ... The Polish Army now entering Polish territory, trained in the Soviet Union, is now joined to the People's Army to form the Corps of the Polish Armed Forces, the armed arm of our nation in its struggle for independence. Its ranks will be joined tomorrow by the sons of Warsaw. They will all together, with the Allied Army pursue the enemy westwards, wipe out the Hitlerite vermin from Polish land and strike a mortal blow at the beast of Prussian Imperialism.

— Moscow Radio Station Kosciuszko, 29 July 1944 broadcast[40]

The role of the Red Army during the Warsaw Uprising remains controversial and is still disputed by historians.[20] The Uprising started when the Red Army appeared on the city's doorstep, and the Poles in Warsaw were counting on Soviet front capturing or forwarding beyond the city in a matter of days. This basic scenario of an uprising against the Germans, launched a few days before the arrival of Allied forces, played out successfully in a number of European capitals, such as Paris[140] and Prague. However, despite easy capture of area south-east of Warsaw barely 10 kilometres (6.2 miles) from the city centre and holding these positions for about 40 days, the Soviets did not extend any effective aid to the resistance within Warsaw. At that time city outskirts were defended by the under-manned and under-equipped German 73rd Infantry Division which was destroyed many times on the Eastern Front and was yet-again being reconstituted.[141] The weak German defence forces did not experience any significant Soviet pressure during that period, which effectively allowed them to strengthen German forces fighting against uprising in the city itself.

 
Soldier from "Pięść" Battalion led by Stanisław Jankowski "Agaton", pictured on a rooftop of a house near the Evangelic Cemetery in Wola District of Warsaw, 2 August 1944

The Red Army was fighting intense battles further to the south of Warsaw, to seize and maintain bridgeheads over the Vistula river, and to the north of the city, to gain bridgeheads over the river Narew. The best German armoured divisions were fighting on those sectors. Despite the fact, both of these objectives had been mostly secured by September. Yet the Soviet 47th Army did not move into Praga (Warsaw's suburbs) on the right bank of the Vistula, until 11 September (when the Uprising was basically over). In three days the Soviets quickly gained control of the suburb, a few hundred meters from the main battle on the other side of the river, as the resistance by the German 73rd Division collapsed quickly. Had the Soviets done this in early August, the crossing of the river would have been easier, as the Poles then held considerable stretches of the riverfront. However, by mid-September a series of German attacks had reduced the Poles to holding one narrow stretch of the riverbank, in the district of Czerniaków. The Poles were counting on the Soviet forces to cross to the left bank where the main battle of the uprising was occurring. Though Berling's communist 1st Polish Army did cross the river, their support from the Soviets was inadequate and the main Soviet force did not follow them.[142]

One of the reasons given for the collapse of the Uprising was the reluctance of the Soviet Red Army to help the Polish resistance. On 1 August, the day of Uprising, the Soviet advance was halted by a direct order from the Kremlin.[143] Soon afterwards the Soviet tank units stopped receiving any oil from their depots.[143] Soviets knew of the planned outbreak from their agents in Warsaw and, more importantly, directly from the Polish Prime Minister Stanisław Mikołajczyk, who informed them of the Polish Home Army uprising plans:[143][144] The Soviet side was informed post-factum. "The Russians learned about possibility for the first time from Mikolajczyk, at about 9 p.m. on 31 July, that is about 3 hours after Bor-Komorowski had given the order for the insurrection to begin".[145]

 
Polish-controlled areas of Warsaw after the fall of the Old Town, around 10 September 1944

One way or the other, the presence of Soviet tanks in nearby Wołomin 15 kilometers to the east of Warsaw had sealed the decision of the Home Army leaders to launch the Uprising. However, as a result of the initial battle of Radzymin in the final days of July, these advance units of the Soviet 2nd Tank Army were pushed out of Wołomin and back about 10 kilometres (6.2 miles).[146][147][148] On 9 August, Stalin informed Premier Mikołajczyk that the Soviets had originally planned to be in Warsaw by 6 August, but a counter-attack by four Panzer divisions had thwarted their attempts to reach the city.[149] By 10 August, the Germans had enveloped and inflicted heavy casualties on the Soviet 2nd Tank Army at Wołomin.[20]

On 1 August 1944, the underground Polish Home Army, being in contact with and loyal to the Polish government-in-exile in London, began offensive operations in Warsaw, in an attempt to free the city from the occupying German forces before the Red Army could secure the capital. Zygmunt Berling became the deputy commander of the Polish Army in the USSR on 22 July 1944. With his own army stopped on the Vistula River and facing Warsaw itself, and without first consulting his Soviet superiors, Berling may have independently issued orders to engage the German enemy and to come to the aid of the Polish resistance but it was a small landing without any tactical support from Berling or other Soviet units that could not make a difference in the situation of Warsaw. Yet this behaviour may have caused Berlings' dismissal from his post soon after.[150]

When Stalin and Churchill met face-to-face in October 1944, Stalin told Churchill that the lack of Soviet support was a direct result of a major reverse in the Vistula sector in August, which had to be kept secret for strategic reasons.[151] All contemporary German sources assumed that the Soviets were trying to link up with the resistance, and they believed it was their defence that prevented the Soviet advance rather than a reluctance to advance on the part of the Soviets.[152] Nevertheless, as part of their strategy the Germans published propaganda accusing both the British and Soviets of abandoning the Poles.[153]

 
Picture of the Uprising taken from the opposite side of the Vistula river. Kierbedź Bridge viewed from Praga District towards Royal Castle and the Old Town, 1944; the rebels were unable to capture the bridges over the Vistula river and thus lost a light hope of connecting with the Red Army

The Soviet units which reached the outskirts of Warsaw in the final days of July 1944 had advanced from the 1st Belorussian Front in Western Ukraine as part of the Lublin–Brest Offensive, between the Lvov–Sandomierz Offensive on its left and Operation Bagration on its right.[20] These two flanking operations were colossal defeats for the German army and completely destroyed a large number of German formations.[20] As a consequence, the Germans at this time were desperately trying to put together a new force to hold the line of the Vistula, the last major river barrier between the Red Army and Germany proper, rushing in units in various stages of readiness from all over Europe. These included many infantry units of poor quality,[154] and 4–5 high quality Panzer Divisions in the 39th Panzer Corps and 4th SS Panzer Corps[20] pulled from their refits.[154]

Other explanations for Soviet conduct are possible. The Red Army geared for a major thrust into the Balkans through Romania in mid-August and a large proportion of Soviet resources was sent in that direction, while the offensive in Poland was put on hold.[155] Stalin had made a strategic decision to concentrate on occupying Eastern Europe, rather than on making a thrust toward Germany.[156] The capture of Warsaw was not essential for the Soviets, as they had already seized a series of convenient bridgeheads to the south of Warsaw, and were concentrating on defending them against vigorous German counterattacks.[20] Finally, the Soviet High Command may not have developed a coherent or appropriate strategy with regard to Warsaw because they were badly misinformed.[157] Propaganda from the Polish Committee of National Liberation minimized the strength of the Home Army and portrayed them as Nazi sympathizers.[158] Information submitted to Stalin by intelligence operatives or gathered from the frontline was often inaccurate or omitted key details.[159] Possibly because the operatives were unable, due to the harsh political climate, to express opinions or report facts honestly, they "deliberately resorted to writing nonsense".[160]

According to David Glantz (military historian and a retired US Army colonel, as well as a member of the Russian Federation's Academy of Natural Sciences), the Red Army was simply unable to extend effective support to the uprising, which began too early, regardless of Stalin's political intentions.[20] German military capabilities in August—early September were sufficient to halt any Soviet assistance to the Poles in Warsaw, were it intended.[20] In addition, Glantz argued that Warsaw would be a costly city to clear of Germans and an unsuitable location as a start point for subsequent Red Army offensives.[20]

Declassified documents from Soviet archives reveal that Stalin gave instructions to cut off the Warsaw resistance from any outside help. The urgent orders issued to the Red Army troops in Poland on 23 August 1944 stipulated that the Home Army units in Soviet-controlled areas should be prevented from reaching Warsaw and helping the Uprising, their members apprehended and disarmed. Only from mid-September, under pressure from the Western Allies, the Soviets began to provide some limited assistance to the resistance.[161]

Modern Russian historians generally hold the view that the failure of the uprising in Warsaw was caused primarily by the mistakes of the leadership of the uprising. They point out that in July 1944, according to the Directive of the command, the Soviet troops did not have the goal of attacking Warsaw, but only to the suburbs of Warsaw – Praga with access to the Vistula river line. Since the Soviet command understood that it was unlikely to be possible to capture the bridges over the Vistula and the Germans would blow them up. The Soviet forces aimed to advance in the northern direction with the capture of East Prussia and with the priority task of reaching the line of the Vistula and Narew rivers and capturing bridgeheads. Then the offensive against East Prussia was to begin from these bridgeheads. ("on the West Bank of the Narew river in the area of Pultusk, Serotsk and South and North of Warsaw – on the West Bank of the Vistula river in the area of Demblin, Zvolen, Solec. In the future keep in mind to advance in the General direction of Thorn and Lodz"[162]).

Directive of the Headquarters of the Supreme high command to the commander of the 1st Belorussian front Moscow July 27, 1944 The headquarters of the Supreme command ORDERS: 1. After capturing the area of Brest and Siedlec by the right wing of the front to develop an offensive in the General direction of Warsaw with the task no later than August 5–8 to capture Praga and capture the bridgehead on the West Bank of the Narev river in the area of Pultusk, Serotsk. The left wing of the front to capture a bridgehead on the West Bank of the Vistula river in the area of Demblin, Zvolen, solets. The captured bridgeheads should be used for a strike in the North-West direction in order to collapse the enemy's defenses along the Narev and Vistula rivers and thus facilitate the crossing of the Narev river to the left wing of the 2nd Belorussian front and the Vistula river. The Vistula – to the Central armies of its front. In the future, keep in mind to advance in the General direction of Torn and Lodz. 2. Establish from 24.00 29.7 the following dividing lines: with the 2nd Belorussian front – to Rozhan former and further Ciechanow, Strasburg, Graudenz; all points for the 2nd Belorussian inclusive. With the 1st Ukrainian front to konske former and then Piotrkow, ostruv (South-West. Kalish, 20 km); both points for the 1st Belorussian front inclusive. 3. The responsibility for providing joints with the adjacent fronts remain the same. 4. About given orders to convey. The Supreme Commander I. Stalin Antonov[163]

The liberation of Warsaw was planned by a flanking maneuver after the start of a General offensive in the direction of East Prussia and Berlin. This is exactly how it happened, only in January 1945. The AK leadership made a mistake, it took the left flank of the 2nd Tank army, which was advancing to north, for the vanguard, which was allegedly advancing on Warsaw and the order was given to start the uprising, which led to defeat. A terrible mistake, but in essence inevitable, if the leadership of the uprising took a political line about the lack of coordination with the Soviet command, if the goal was that Warsaw should be freed from the Germans 'by Polish effort alone 12 hours before the entry of the Soviets into the capital'.[164] The Soviet command had no deliberate purpose against the Warsaw uprising and categorically denied such accusations.[165]

Aftermath

 
Home Army soldier from the Mokotów District surrenders to German troops.

Capitulation

The 9th Army has crushed the final resistance in the southern Vistula circle. The resistance fought to the very last bullet.

— German report, 23 September (T 4924/44)[166]

By the first week of September both German and Polish commanders realized that the Soviet army was unlikely to act to break the stalemate. The Germans reasoned that a prolonged Uprising would damage their ability to hold Warsaw as the frontline; the Poles were concerned that continued resistance would result in further massive casualties. On 7 September, General Rohr proposed negotiations, which Bór-Komorowski agreed to pursue the following day.[167] Over 8, 9 and 10 September about 20,000 civilians were evacuated by agreement of both sides, and Rohr recognized the right of Home Army soldiers to be treated as military combatants.[168] The Poles suspended talks on the 11th, as they received news that the Soviets were advancing slowly through Praga.[169] A few days later, the arrival of the 1st Polish army breathed new life into the resistance and the talks collapsed.[170]

 
Surrender of the Warsaw Uprising resistance, 5 October 1944

However, by the morning of 27 September, the Germans had retaken Mokotów.[171] Talks restarted on 28 September.[172] In the evening of 30 September, Żoliborz fell to the Germans.[173] The Poles were being pushed back into fewer and fewer streets, and their situation was ever more desperate.[174] On the 30th, Hitler decorated von dem Bach, Dirlewanger and Reinefarth, while in London General Sosnkowski was dismissed as Polish commander-in-chief. Bór-Komorowski was promoted in his place, even though he was trapped in Warsaw.[175] Bór-Komorowski and Prime Minister Mikołajczyk again appealed directly to Rokossovsky and Stalin for a Soviet intervention.[176] None came. According to Soviet Marshal Georgy Zhukov, who was by this time at the Vistula front, both he and Rokossovsky advised Stalin against an offensive because of heavy Soviet losses.[177]

The capitulation order of the remaining Polish forces was finally signed on 2 October. All fighting ceased that evening.[71][178] According to the agreement, the Wehrmacht promised to treat Home Army soldiers in accordance with the Geneva Convention, and to treat the civilian population humanely.[71]

The next day the Germans began to disarm the Home Army soldiers. They later sent 15,000 of them to POW camps in various parts of Germany. Between 5,000 and 6,000 resistance fighters decided to blend into the civilian population hoping to continue the fight later. The entire civilian population of Warsaw was expelled from the city and sent to a transit camp Durchgangslager 121 in Pruszków.[179] Out of 350,000–550,000 civilians who passed through the camp, 90,000 were sent to labour camps in the Third Reich, 60,000 were shipped to death and concentration camps (including Ravensbrück, Auschwitz, and Mauthausen, among others), while the rest were transported to various locations in the General Government and released.[179]

The Eastern Front remained static in the Vistula sector, with the Soviets making no attempt to push forward, until the Vistula–Oder Offensive began on 12 January 1945. Almost entirely destroyed, Warsaw was liberated from the Germans on 17 January 1945 by the Red Army and the First Polish Army.[71]

Destruction of the city

The city must completely disappear from the surface of the earth and serve only as a transport station for the Wehrmacht. No stone can remain standing. Every building must be razed to its foundation.

— SS chief Heinrich Himmler, 17 October, SS officers conference[97]
 
Warsaw Old Town; after the Warsaw Uprising, 85% of the city was deliberately destroyed by the German forces.

The destruction of the Polish capital was planned before the start of World War II. On 20 June 1939, while Adolf Hitler was visiting an architectural bureau in Würzburg am Main, his attention was captured by a project of a future German town – "Neue deutsche Stadt Warschau". According to the Pabst Plan Warsaw was to be turned into a provincial German city. It was soon included as a part of the great Germanization plan of the East; the genocidal Generalplan Ost. The failure of the Warsaw Uprising provided an opportunity for Hitler to begin the transformation.[180]

After the remaining population had been expelled, the Germans continued the destruction of the city.[7] Special groups of German engineers were dispatched to burn and demolish the remaining buildings. According to German plans, after the war Warsaw was to be turned into nothing more than a military transit station,[97] or even an artificial lake[181] – the latter of which the Nazi leadership had already intended to implement for the Soviet/Russian capital of Moscow in 1941.[182][183] The Brandkommandos (arson squads) used flamethrowers and Sprengkommandos (demolition squads) explosives to methodically destroy house after house. They paid special attention to historical monuments, Polish national archives and places of interest.[184]

By January 1945, 85% of the buildings were destroyed: 25% as a result of the Uprising, 35% as a result of systematic German actions after the uprising, and the rest as a result of the earlier Warsaw Ghetto Uprising, and the September 1939 campaign.[7] Material losses are estimated at 10,455 buildings, 923 historical buildings (94%), 25 churches, 14 libraries including the National Library, 81 primary schools, 64 high schools, University of Warsaw and Warsaw University of Technology, and most of the historical monuments.[7] Almost a million inhabitants lost all of their possessions.[7] The exact amount of losses of private and public property as well as pieces of art, monuments of science and culture is unknown but considered enormous. Studies done in the late 1940s estimated total damage at about US$30 billion.[185] In 2004, President of Warsaw Lech Kaczyński, later President of Poland, established a historical commission to estimate material losses that were inflicted upon the city by German authorities. The commission estimated the losses as at least US$31.5 billion at 2004 values.[186] Those estimates were later raised to US$45 billion 2004 US dollars and in 2005, to $54.6 billion.[187]

 
Warsaw c. 1950, still witness to the massive World War II destruction of the city. Northwest view of the Krasiński Gardens and Świętojerska Street.

Casualties (including both Uprising civilian soldiers and civilians)

The exact number of casualties on both sides is unknown. Estimates of Polish casualties fall into roughly similar ranges.

Side Civilians KIA WIA MIA POW
Polish 150,000–200,000[188] 15,200[7]
16,000[189]
16,200[190]
5,000[7]
6,000[191]
25,000[188]
all declared dead[189] 15,000[7][189]
German[192] unknown 2,000 to 17,000 9,000 0 to 7,000 2,000[7] to 5,000[189]

Estimates of German casualties differ widely. Though the figure of 9,000 German WIA is generally accepted and generates no controversy, there is little agreement as to German irrecoverable losses (KIA+MIA). Until the 1990s the Eastern and the Western historiography stuck to two widely different estimates, the former claiming 17,000 and the latter 2,000.[original research?] The 17,000 figure was first coined by a 1947 issue of a Warsaw historical journal Dzieje Najnowsze, allegedly based on estimates made by Bach Zelewski when interrogated by his Polish captors (and divided into 10,000 KIA and 7,000 MIA). This figure was initially repeated in West Germany.[193] However, in 1962 a scholarly monograph by Hanns Krannhals coined the 2,000 estimate.[194]

Until the late 20th century the 17,000 figure was consistently and unequivocally quoted in the Polish, though also in the East German and Soviet historiography,[original research?] be it encyclopedias,[195] scientific monographs[196] or more popular works.[197] It was at times paired or otherwise related to the figure of 16,000 German Warsaw KIA+MIA listed by the so-called Gehlen report of April 1945.[198] The 2,000 figure was accepted in West Germany and generally spilled over to Western historiography;[199] exceptions were studies written in English by the Poles[200] and some other works.[201]

Komorowski, who in 1995 opted for 16,000, changed his mind and 10 years later cautiously subscribed to the 2,000 figure;[202] also scholars like Sawicki[203] and Rozwadowski[204] tentatively followed suit. A popular work of Bączyk,[205] who concludes that 3,000 is the maximum conceivable (though not the most probable) figure. In his 2016 analysis Sowa dismissed the 17,000 figure as "entirely improbable" and suggested that its longevity and popularity resulted from manipulation on part of apologists of the Rising.[206]

In the Russian historiography it is given clear preference,[original research?] be it in encyclopedias and dictionaries[207] or general works;[208] the same opinion might be found in Belorussia.[209] The 17,000 estimate made it also to the English literature, quoted with no reservations in popular compendia,[210] warfare manuals[211] and a handful of other works.[212] The figure is advanced also by established institutions like BBC.[213] Other works in English offer a number of approaches; some quote both sides with no own preference,[214] some provide ambiguous descriptions,[215] some set 17,000 irrecoverable losses as an upper limit,[216] some provide odd numbers perhaps resulting from incompetent quotations[217] and some remain silent on the issue altogether, which is the case of the only major English monograph.[218]

A key argument supporting the 17,000 figure – apart from quotations from Bach and Gehlen – are total (KIA+MIA+WIA) losses sustained by Kampfgruppe Dirlewanger, one of a few operational units forming German troops fighting the Poles. They are currently calculated at some 3,500;[219] if extrapolated, they might support the overall 25,000 German casualty estimate.[original research?]

After the war

 
Mały Powstaniec ("Little Insurrectionist") Monument erected just outside Warsaw's medieval city walls in 1981, commemorates the children who fought in the Warsaw Uprising, against the German occupation.

I want to protest against the mean and cowardly attitude adopted by the British press towards the recent rising in Warsaw. ... One was left with the general impression that the Poles deserved to have their bottoms smacked for doing what all the Allied wirelesses had been urging them to do for years past,. ... First of all, a message to English left-wing journalists and intellectuals generally: 'Do remember that dishonesty and cowardice always have to be paid for. Don't imagine that for years on end you can make yourself the boot-licking propagandist of the Soviet régime, or any other régime, and then suddenly return to mental decency. Once a whore, always a whore.'

— George Orwell, 1 September 1944[220][221]

By deciding to act without co-ordinating their plans with the Soviet High Command, authors of the insurrection assumed heavy responsibility for the fate of Warsaw and greatly contributed to the ensuing tragedy of this city and its people. They failed to realise that a badly armed Home Army could not, in the summer of 1944 successfully do battle with the Germans while simultaneously trying to oppose the Russians and the Polish Communists politically. Bor-Komorowski's and Jankowski's plans were too complicated and too hazardous to succeed in the existing political and military situation'

— Jan. M. Ciechanowski, Historian, participant of the Warsaw uprising.[44]

Most soldiers of the Home Army (including those who took part in the Warsaw Uprising) were persecuted after the war; captured by the NKVD or UB political police. They were interrogated and imprisoned on various charges, such as that of fascism.[222][223] Many of them were sent to Gulags, executed or disappeared.[222] Between 1944 and 1956, all of the former members of Battalion Zośka were incarcerated in Soviet prisons.[224] In March 1945, a staged trial of 16 leaders of the Polish Underground State held by the Soviet Union took place in Moscow – (the Trial of the Sixteen).[225][226][227][228] The Government Delegate, together with most members of the Council of National Unity and the C-i-C of the Armia Krajowa, were invited by Soviet general Ivan Serov with agreement of Joseph Stalin to a conference on their eventual entry to the Soviet-backed Provisional Government.

They were presented with a warrant of safety, yet they were arrested in Pruszków by the NKVD on 27 and 28 March.[229][230] Leopold Okulicki, Jan Stanisław Jankowski and Kazimierz Pużak were arrested on the 27th with 12 more the next day. A. Zwierzynski had been arrested earlier. They were brought to Moscow for interrogation in the Lubyanka.[231][232][233] After several months of brutal interrogation and torture,[234] they were presented with the forged accusations of collaboration with Nazis and planning a military alliance with Germany.[235][236] Many resistance fighters, captured by the Germans and sent to POW camps in Germany, were later liberated by British, American and Polish forces and remained in the West. Among those were the leaders of the uprising Tadeusz Bór-Komorowski and Antoni Chruściel.[237]

The Soviet government labelled all S.S. Sturmbrigade R.O.N.A. Russkaya Osvoboditelnaya Narodnaya Armiya soldiers as traitors, and those who were repatriated were tried and sentenced to detention in Soviet prisons or executed. In the 1950s and 1960s in the USSR, dozens of other former R.O.N.A. members were found, some of them also sentenced to death.[238]

 
Monument to the resistance fighters who fought in the Warsaw Uprising.

The facts of the Warsaw Uprising were inconvenient to Stalin, and were twisted by propaganda of the People's Republic of Poland, which stressed the failings of the Home Army and the Polish government-in-exile, and forbade all criticism of the Red Army or the political goals of Soviet strategy.[239] In the immediate post-war period, the very name of the Home Army was censored, and most films and novels covering the 1944 Uprising were either banned or modified so that the name of the Home Army did not appear.[239] From the 1950s on, Polish propaganda depicted the soldiers of the Uprising as brave, but the officers as treacherous, reactionary and characterized by disregard of the losses.[239][240] The first publications on the topic taken seriously in the West were not issued until the late 1980s. In Warsaw no monument to the Home Army was built until 1989. Instead, efforts of the Soviet-backed People's Army were glorified and exaggerated.[citation needed]

By contrast, in the West the story of the Polish fight for Warsaw was told as a tale of valiant heroes fighting against a cruel and ruthless enemy. It was suggested that Stalin benefited from Soviet non-involvement, as opposition to eventual Soviet control of Poland was effectively eliminated when the Nazis destroyed the partisans.[241] The belief that the Uprising failed because of deliberate procrastination by the Soviet Union contributed to anti-Soviet sentiment in Poland. Memories of the Uprising helped to inspire the Polish labour movement Solidarity, which led a peaceful opposition movement against the Communist government during the 1980s.[242]

1989 to present

Until the 1990s, historical analysis of the events remained superficial because of official censorship and lack of academic interest.[243] Research into the Warsaw Uprising was boosted by the revolutions of 1989, due to the abolition of censorship and increased access to state archives. As of 2004, however, access to some material in British, Polish and ex-Soviet archives was still restricted.[244] Further complicating the matter is the British claim that the records of the Polish government-in-exile were destroyed,[245] and material not transferred to British authorities after the war was burnt by the Poles in London in July 1945.[246][247]

In Poland, 1 August is now a celebrated anniversary. On 1 August 1994, Poland held a ceremony commemorating the 50th anniversary of the Uprising to which both the German and Russian presidents were invited.[15] Though the German President Roman Herzog attended, the Russian President Boris Yeltsin declined the invitation; other notable guests included the U.S. Vice President Al Gore.[15][248] Herzog, on behalf of Germany, was the first German statesman to apologize for German atrocities committed against the Polish nation during the Uprising.[248] During the 60th anniversary of the Uprising in 2004, official delegations included: German Chancellor Gerhard Schröder, UK deputy Prime Minister John Prescott and US Secretary of State Colin Powell; Pope John Paul II sent a letter to the mayor of Warsaw, Lech Kaczyński on this occasion.[249] Russia once again did not send a representative.[249] A day before, 31 July 2004, the Warsaw Uprising Museum opened in Warsaw.[249]

At present, Poland largely lacks a critical view of the leaders of the 1944 Warsaw uprising. The reasons for the defeat of the uprising are mainly seen in external factors, the lack of sufficient support from the USSR and to a lesser extent from the United States and Great Britain. The poor relations between modern Russia and Poland in this case are an additional argument for such views. Meanwhile, in Poland, there is a different view of the Warsaw uprising, presented, for example, in 1974 by Jan. M. Ciechanowski, the historian and participant of the Warsaw uprising. His views were already widely spread in the 1970s, although he was not a Communist historian. In this view, the Warsaw uprising is seen as a manifestation of a long-standing historical tradition of Poland in the form of anti-Russian discourse using an external factor in this discourse. From this point of view, the Warsaw uprising was most directed against Russia-USSR and was designed to create a confrontation between the United States-Britain and the USSR. 'By undertaking the struggle against the Germans', said Gen Pelczynski in 1965, 'the Home Army was defending the independence of Poland threatened by the Russians. . . If the Russians were our allies there would not have been so great an insurrection.. .'* To its authors the insurrection was 'a form of political struggle against the entering Muscovites... (Muscovites – a pejorative name for Russians in Poland)... Jankowski and Bor-Komorowski hoped that a strong, resolute and unconciliatory attitude to the Russians would produce more fruitful results. They believed that only by assuming an intransigent attitude to Stalin and by confronting him as the leaders of insurgent Warsaw would they be able to compel him to treat them as equals and allow them to govern the country after liberation. In their view, the adoption of any less robust course of action would amount to political suicide. The insurrection was to be their moment of triumph; in the event, it was precisely the absence of military co-operation between the Polish and Russian forces which turned it, instead, into a time of defeat and destruction".[250]

Piotr Zychowicz caused a storm of outrage in with his book The Madness of '44 for calling the Uprising "a gigantic, useless sacrifice". Zychowicz criticized the leadership of the Home Army for an exercise of poor judgment that led to the death of thousands of people.[251]

A well-known Polish publicist and philosopher, Bronislaw Lagowski, in one of his interviews called the approach in which the Warsaw uprising is considered a "moral victory" and is associated with the democratization of Polish society, absurd. According to him, "the cult of an event that caused huge losses, especially a cult that is not sad, but joyful—it is so disconnected from life that we can talk about a painful state [of minds]."

Recently, the attitude towards the Warsaw events has begun to change in Poland. According to Piskorsky (Director of the European center for geopolitical analysis in Warsaw), this was a reaction to the way right-wing politicians used the symbolism associated with the uprising for their purely practical purposes.

According to Radziwinowicz (chief correspondent Bureau of "Gazeta Wyborcza" in Moscow), now part of Polish society is beginning to rethink much of what concerns the Warsaw uprising.

"This is a reflection on the terrible tragedy of the people. Suddenly, at the very end of the war, when it seemed that everything was already over, the city is dying, the capital is dying, 200 thousand people are dying," says a Polish journalist.

"I myself was brought up on the tradition of the Warsaw uprising, and it was something sacred for me for a long time. There was heroism, tragedy. However, now is the time to ask questions: who is to blame and whether it was necessary to start the uprising at all?" said Radzivinovich.[252]

Photo gallery

Popular culture: music, television and cinema

Numerous works have been influenced by and devoted to the Uprising. In literature, they include: Kolumbowie. Rocznik 20 novel by Polish writer Roman Bratny.[253]

In television, they include documentary film The Ramparts of Warsaw 1943–44, produced for the 70th anniversary of the Warsaw Uprising with support from the European Commission. The Warsaw Uprising is often confused with the revolt in the Warsaw Ghetto which took place a year earlier in the Spring of 1943. Three young Europeans, Alexandra (France), Maria (Poland) and Roman (Germany) meet in Warsaw to enquire into these events; here they meet witnesses who took part in the Warsaw Uprising or lived in the ghetto. Beneath their white hair we can recognise the men and women who formed the living ramparts of freedom in the face of Nazism. Meanwhile, the Polish World War II TV drama series Time of Honor (Czas honoru; Series 7), which aired in 2014, was entirely devoted to the Warsaw Uprising.[citation needed]

In cinema, they include:

  • Kanał, a 1956 Polish film directed by Andrzej Wajda. It was the first film made about the Warsaw Uprising, telling the story of a company of Home Army resistance fighters escaping the Nazi onslaught through the city's sewers.[254]
  • A 2014 film, Warsaw Uprising, directed by Jan Komasa and produced by the Warsaw Uprising Museum, was created entirely from restored and colourised film footage taken during the uprising.[255] Komasa followed this up with Warsaw 44 (also known as Miasto 44, "City 44"), a story of love, friendship and the pursuit of adventure during the bloody and brutal reality of the uprising, which was a huge box office success in Poland in 2014.[256]
  • Roman Polanski's film The Pianist also briefly shows the uprising through the eyes of its main character Władysław Szpilman. Polish director Małgorzata Brama stated he intends to shoot a docudrama about the Warsaw Uprising.[257]
  • Niki Caro's 2017 film The Zookeeper's Wife depicts the Warsaw Uprising and Jan Żabiński's participation in it. At the end of the film, the viewer is informed that Warsaw was destroyed during the war and that only six percent of the Polish capital's prewar population was still in the city after the uprising.[citation needed]
  • Warsaw, a 2019 turn-based tactical role-playing videogame developed and published by Polish studio Pixelated Milk, set during the uprising.[258]
  • The second film of Yuri Ozerov's epic Soldiers of Freedom of 1977 is mostly devoted to the uprising in Warsaw. The presentation of historical events is given from the Soviet point of view.

Notable people

See also

Notes and references

  1. ^ Davies, Norman (2008) [2004]. "Outbreak". Rising '44. The Battle for Warsaw. London: Pan Books. ISBN 978-0330475747 – via Google Books, preview.
  2. ^ Neil Orpen (1984). Airlift to Warsaw. The Rising of 1944. University of Oklahoma. ISBN 83-247-0235-0.
  3. ^ a b Borodziej, Włodzimierz (2006). The Warsaw Uprising of 1944. Translated by Barbara Harshav. University of Wisconsin Press. ISBN 978-0-299-20730-4 p. 74.
  4. ^ a b Borowiec, Andrew (2001). Destroy Warsaw! Hitler's punishment, Stalin's revenge. Westport, Connecticut: Praeger. ISBN 0-275-97005-1. p. 6.
  5. ^ Borodziej, p. 75.
  6. ^ a b Comparison of Forces, Warsaw Rising Museum
  7. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q "FAQ". Warsaw Uprising. Retrieved 3 February 2009.
  8. ^ Tadeusz Sawicki: Rozkaz zdławić powstanie. Niemcy i ich sojusznicy w walce z powstaniem warszawskim. Warszawa: Bellona, 2010. ISBN 978-83-11-11892-8. pp. 189.
  9. ^ Tadeusz Bór-Komorowski: Armia Podziemna. Warszawa: Bellona, 1994. ISBN 83-11-08338-X. pp. 443.
  10. ^ Marek Getter. Straty ludzkie i materialne w Powstaniu Warszawskim. "Biuletyn IPN". 8–9 (43–44), sierpień – wrzesień 2004., s. 70.
  11. ^ a b Ilu Niemców naprawdę zginęło w Powstaniu Warszawskim? Paweł Stachnik, ciekawostkihistoryczne.pl 31.07.2017 Accessed 12 September 2019
  12. ^ Meng, Michael (2011). Shattered Spaces. Encountering Jewish Ruins in Postwar Germany and Poland. Harvard University Press. p. 69. ISBN 9780674053038.
  13. ^ Bartrop, Paul R.; Grimm, Eve E. (2019). Perpetrating the Holocaust: Leaders, Enablers, and Collaborators. ABC-CLIO. p. 12. ISBN 9781440858963.
  14. ^ Wolfson, Leah (2015). Jewish Responses to Persecution: 1944–1946. Rowman&Littlefield. p. 534. ISBN 978144224337-8.
  15. ^ a b c Stanley Blejwas, A Heroic Uprising in Poland , 2004
  16. ^ Duraczyński, Eugeniusz; Terej, Jerzy Janusz (1974). Europa podziemna: 1939–1945 [Europe underground: 1939–1945] (in Polish). Warszawa: Wiedza Powszechna. OCLC 463203458.
  17. ^ Davies 2008, pp. 268, 271.
  18. ^ Warsaw Uprising 1944 www.warsawuprising.com, accessed 12 September 2019
  19. ^ Koestler, letter in Tribune magazine 15 September 1944, reprinted in Orwell, Collected Works, I Have Tried to Tell the Truth, p.374
  20. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l David M. Glantz (2001). The Soviet-German War 1941–1945: Myths and Realities: A Survey Essay 29 October 2013 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved on 24 October 2013
  21. ^ Kochanski, Halik (2013). The Eagle Unbowed: Poland and the Poles in the Second World War. pp. 417–418. ISBN 978-1846143588.
  22. ^ a b c d Stalin's Private Airfields; The diplomacy surrounding the AAF mission to aid the Poles and the mission itself is extensively covered in Richard C. Lukas's The Strange Allies: The United States and Poland, 1941–1945, pp. 61–85. Warsaw Rising Museum
  23. ^ Frank's diary quoted in Davies, Norman (2004). Rising '44. The Battle for Warsaw. London: Pan Books. ISBN 0-330-48863-5. p. 367.
  24. ^ sojusznik naszych sojuszników: Instytut Zachodni, Przegląd zachodni, v. 47 no. 3–4 1991
  25. ^ Jan. M. Ciechanowski. The Warsaw Rising of 1944. Cambridge University Press. Cambridge. London. 1974. p. 137
  26. ^ a b c d e The Warsaw Rising, polandinexile.com
  27. ^ Davies, pp. 48, 115.
  28. ^ Davies, pp. 206–208.
  29. ^ Winston S Churchill, The Second World War, Vol. 6, Chapter IX, The Martyrdom of Warsaw, 1955, Cassel
  30. ^ The NKVD Against the Home Army (Armia Krajowa), Warsaw Uprising, based on Andrzej Paczkowski. Poland, the "Enemy Nation", pp. 372–375, in Black Book of Communism. Crimes, Terror, Repression. Harvard University Press, London, 1999.
  31. ^ Davies, p. 209.
  32. ^ Borowiec, p. 4; Davies, p. 213.
  33. ^ Davies, pp. 210–211.
  34. ^ a b c . Poloniatoday.com. Archived from the original on 28 January 2008. Retrieved 3 February 2009.
  35. ^ "Muzeum Powstania Warszawskiego". 1944.pl.
  36. ^ Davies, p. 117.
  37. ^ Borowiec, p. 5.
  38. ^ Borowiec, p. 4; Davies, pp. 164–165.
  39. ^ The Tragedy of Warsaw and its Documentation, by the Duchess of Atholl,. D.B.E., Hon. D.C.L., LL.D., F.R.C.M. 1945, London
  40. ^ a b Pomian, Andrzej. The Warsaw Rising: A Selection of Documents. London, 1945
  41. ^ "Warsaw Uprising Documents: Radio Station Kosciuszko". warsawuprising.com.
  42. ^ Włodzimierz Borodziej (2006). The Warsaw Uprising of 1944. University of Wisconsin Press. pp. 69, 70. ISBN 978-0-299-20730-4.
  43. ^ Jan. M. Ciechanowski. The Warsaw Rising of 1944. Cambridge University Press. Cambridge. London. 1974. pp. 239–240
  44. ^ a b Ciechanowski, Jan. M. (1974). The Warsaw Rising of 1944. London, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. p. 313.
  45. ^ Davies, p. 232.
  46. ^ Forgotten Holocaust. The Poles under German Occupation 1939–1944 Richard C. Lukas Hippocrene Books New York 1997, ISBN 0-7818-0901-0
  47. ^ Arnold-Forster, Mark (1973; repr. 1983). The World at War. London: Collins/Thames Television repr. Thames Methuen. ISBN 0-423-00680-0. p. 178.
  48. ^ Borkiewicz, p. 31.
  49. ^ Chodakiewicz, Marek (April 2002). "Der Warschauer Aufstand 1944". The Sarmatian Review Issue 02/2002 pp.875–880.
  50. ^ Borowiec, p. 70.
  51. ^ The exact number of Poles of Jewish ancestry and Jews to take part in the uprising is a matter of controversy. General Tadeusz Bór-Komorowski estimated the number of Jewish Poles in Polish ranks at 1,000, other authors place it at between several hundred and 2,000. See for example: Edward Kossoy. "Żydzi w Powstaniu Warszawskim" (in Polish). Task Force for International Cooperation on Holocaust Education, Remembrance and Research. {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  52. ^ The United States Holocaust Memorial Museum Encyclopedia of Camps and Ghettos, 1933–1945, Geoffrey P. Megargee, Martin Dean, and Mel Hecker, Volume I, part B, pages 1514, quote: "The vast majority of liberated prisoners volunteered to fight in the uprising and served the revolt in various capacities. A special Jewish fighting platoon and a Jewish brigade to construct barricades were formed from liberated prisoners. These units sustained heavy losses. The morale of the former prisoners was corroded, however, when antisemitism reared its ugly head in the fighting units; antisemitic Poles even killed several liberated prisoners who volunteered for combat units".
  53. ^ a b (in Polish) Stowarzyszenie Pamięci Powstania Warszawskiego 1944, Struktura oddziałów Armii Krajowej
  54. ^ poczytaj.pl. "Słowacy w Powstaniu Warszawskim. Wybór źródeł – Książka | Księgarnia internetowa Poczytaj.pl" [Slovaks in the Warsaw Uprising.]. poczytaj.pl. Retrieved 5 May 2021.
  55. ^ Yaacov Falkov, "'For our freedom and yours’: Discovering the transnational dimension of the Warsaw Uprising (August–October 1944)", Transnational Resistance Blog, 24.8.2016[permanent dead link]
  56. ^ NW36. . Mailer.fsu.edu. Archived from the original on 18 April 2009. Retrieved 3 February 2009.
  57. ^ . Achtung Panzer!. Archived from the original on 14 February 2009. Retrieved 3 February 2009.
  58. ^ . Poloniatoday.com. Archived from the original on 28 January 2008. Retrieved 3 February 2009.
  59. ^ Mariusz Skotnicki, Miotacz ognia wzór "K", in: Nowa Technika Wojskowa 7/98, p. 59. ISSN 1230-1655
  60. ^ . Achtung Panzer!. Archived from the original on 14 February 2009. Retrieved 3 February 2009.
  61. ^ All figures estimated by Aleksander Gieysztor and quoted in Bartoszewski, Władysław T. (1984). Dni Wałczacej Stolicy: kronika Powstania Warszawskiego (in Polish). Warsaw: Muzeum Powstania Warszawskiego; Świat Książki. pp. 307–309. ISBN 978-83-7391-679-1.
  62. ^ M.House, Jonathan (2012). A Military History of the Cold War, 1944–1962. University of Oklahoma Press.
  63. ^ Adam Borkiewicz (1957). Powstanie Warszawskie 1944 (in Polish). Warsaw: Wydawnictwo PAX. p. 40.
  64. ^ Borkiewicz, p. 41.
  65. ^ Borowiec, p. 93.
  66. ^ Borowiec, p. 94.
  67. ^ a b Davies, pp. 666–667.
  68. ^ "Warsaw Uprising: RONA, Bronislaw Kaminski". warsawuprising.com.
  69. ^ Rolf Michaelis Die SS-Sturmbrigade „Dirlewanger“. Vom Warschauer Aufstand bis zum Kessel von Halbe. Band II. 1. Auflage. Verlag Rolf Michaelis, 2003, ISBN 3-930849-32-1
  70. ^ Borowiec, Andrew (2014). Warsaw Boy: A Memoir of a Wartime Childhood. Penguin UK. p. 204. ISBN 978-0241964040.
  71. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p "Timeline". Warsaw Uprising. Retrieved 3 February 2009.
  72. ^ Borowiec, p. 79; Davies, p. 245.
  73. ^ Borowiec, p. 80.
  74. ^ Borowiec, pp. 95–97.
  75. ^ Borowiec, pp. 86–87; Davies, p. 248.
  76. ^ Davies, pp. 245–247.
  77. ^ Bartelski, Lesław M. (2000). Praga (in Polish). Warsaw: Fundacja "Wystawa Warszawa Wałczy 1939–1945". p. 182. ISBN 83-87545-33-3.
  78. ^ Hanson, Joanna (2004). The Civilian Population and the Warsaw Uprising. Google Books: Cambridge University Press. p. 79. ISBN 9780521531191. Retrieved 29 July 2014.
  79. ^ Wlodzimierz Borodziej: Der Warschauer Aufstand 1944. Fischer, Frankfurt am Main 2004, p. 121.
  80. ^ Richie, Alexandra (2013). Warsaw 1944: Hitler, Himmler, and the Warsaw Uprising. Farrar, Straus and Giroux. p. 242. ISBN 978-1466848474.
  81. ^ (in Polish and German) various authors; Czesław Madajczyk (1999). "Nie rozwiązane problemy powstania warszawskiego". In Stanisława Lewandowska, Bernd Martin (ed.). Powstanie Warszawskie 1944. Warsaw: Wydawnictwo Polsko-Niemieckie. p. 613. ISBN 83-86653-08-6.
  82. ^ Borowiec, pp. 89–90.
  83. ^ Borowiec, p. 89.
  84. ^ Jan. M. Ciechanowski. The Warsaw Rising of 1944. Cambridge University Press. Cambridge. London. 1974. p. 247
  85. ^ a b Geoffrey Roberts. Stalin`s war. Yale university press. 2008. p. 212
  86. ^ Message from Mr Churchill to Marshal Stalin, 21 March 1944, No. 256. Correspondence, vol. i, pp. 211–12
  87. ^ Warsaw Uprising of 1944. Włodzimierz Borodziej. The University of Wisconsin Press. 2006. p. 88
  88. ^ Davies, p. 252.
  89. ^ "Muzeum Powstania otwarte" (in Polish). BBC Polish edition. 2 October 2004.
  90. ^ Jerzy Kłoczowski (1 August 1998). "O Powstaniu Warszawskim opowiada prof. Jerzy Kłoczowski". Gazeta Wyborcza (in Polish) (Warsaw ed.).
  91. ^ . Poloniatoday.com. 5 August 1944. Archived from the original on 28 January 2008. Retrieved 3 February 2009.
  92. ^ "The Rape of Warsaw". Stosstruppen39-45.tripod.com. Retrieved 3 February 2009.
  93. ^ Steven J. Zaloga, Richard Hook, The Polish Army 1939–45, Osprey Publishing, 1982, ISBN 0-85045-417-4, Google Print, p. 25
  94. ^ The slaughter in Wola at Warsaw Rising Museum
  95. ^ Davies, pp. 254–257.
  96. ^ Borodziej, p. 112.
  97. ^ a b c Krystyna Wituska, Irene Tomaszewski, Inside a Gestapo Prison: The Letters of Krystyna Wituska, 1942–1944, Wayne State University Press, 2006, ISBN 0-8143-3294-3,Google Print, p. xxii
  98. ^ Interview with Director of the Warsaw Uprising Museum Jan Oldakowski "Radio Liberty" 1 August 2019/ https://www.svoboda.org/a/30086583.html
  99. ^ Davies, p. 282.
  100. ^ Davies, pp. 333, 355.
  101. ^ Borowiec, pp. 132–133; Davies, p. 354.
  102. ^ Davies, p. 355.
  103. ^ Borowiec, pp. 138–141; Davies, p. 332.
  104. ^ Davies, pp. 358–359.
  105. ^ a b c d e For description of Berling's landings, see Warsaw Uprising Timeline, at the Wayback Machine (archived 28 January 2008), and p. 27 of Steven J. Zaloga's The Polish Army, 1939–45 (Google Print's excerpt)
  106. ^ Richard J. Kozicki, Piotr Wróbel (eds), Historical Dictionary of Poland, 966–1945, Greenwood Press, 1996, ISBN 0-313-26007-9, Google Print, p. 34
  107. ^ Borodziej, p. 120 and Bell, J (2006). Besieged. Transaction Publishers. ISBN 1-4128-0586-4 p. 196.
  108. ^ Nawrocka-Dońska, Barbara (1961). Powszedni dzień dramatu (in Polish) (1 ed.). Warsaw: Czytelnik. p. 169.
  109. ^ Tomczyk, Damian (1982). Młodociani uczestnicy powstania warszawskiego (in Polish). Łambinowice: Muzeum Martyrologii i Walki Jeńców Wojennych w Łambinowicach. p. 70.
  110. ^ Ryszard Mączewski. "Stacja Filtrów". Architektura przedwojennej Warszawy (in Polish). warszawa1939.pl. Retrieved 8 May 2007.
  111. ^ a b various authors; Jadwiga Cieślakiewicz; Hanna Falkowska; Andrzej Paczkowski (1984). Polska prasa konspiracyjna (1939–1945) i Powstania Warszawskiego w zbiorach Biblioteki Narodowej (in Polish). Warsaw: Biblioteka Narodowa. p. 205. ISBN 83-00-00842-X.
  112. ^ collection of documents (1974). Marian Marek Drozdowski; Maria Maniakówna; Tomasz Strzembosz; Władysław Bartoszewski (eds.). Ludność cywilna w powstaniu warszawskim (in Polish). Warsaw: Państwowy Instytut Wydawniczy.
  113. ^ Zadrożny, Stanisław (1964). Tu—Warszawa; Dzieje radiostacji powstańczej "Błyskawica" (in Polish). London: Orbis. p. 112.
  114. ^ Project InPosterum (corporate author). "Warsaw Uprising: Radio 'Lighting' (Błyskawica)". Retrieved 8 May 2007. {{cite web}}: |author= has generic name (help)
  115. ^ Jan Nowak-Jeziorański (1982). Courier from Warsaw. Detroit: Wayne State University Press. ISBN 978-0-8143-1725-9.
  116. ^ Adam Nogaj. Radiostacja Błyskawica (in Polish).
  117. ^ Project InPosterum (corporate author) (2004). "John Ward". Warsaw Uprising 1944. Retrieved 14 May 2007. {{cite web}}: |author= has generic name (help)
  118. ^ Davies, p. 450.
  119. ^ Davies, p. 452.
  120. ^ Davies, p. 453.
  121. ^ Borowiec, pp. 68–69.
  122. ^ a b c d "American Radioworks on Warsaw Uprising". Americanradioworks.publicradio.org. Retrieved 3 February 2009.
  123. ^ a b c AIRDROPS FOR THE RESISTANCE at Warsaw Rising Museum
  124. ^ Neil Orpen (1984). Airlift to Warsaw. The Rising of 1944. University of Oklahoma. p. 192. ISBN 83-247-0235-0.
  125. ^ ALLIED AIRMEN OVER WARSAW at Warsaw Rising Museum
  126. ^ "Pincers (August 1944 – March 1945)". The World at War. Episode 19. 20 March 1974. 21 minutes in. ITV. Stalin was very suspicious of the underground, but it was utterly cruel that he wouldn't even try to get supplies in. He refused to let our aeroplanes fly and try to drop supplies for several weeks. And that was a shock to all of us. I think it played a role in all our minds as to the heartlessness of the Russians. Averell Harriman U.S. Ambassador to Russia 1943–46
  127. ^ Kamil Tchorek, Escaped British Airman Was Hero of Warsaw Uprising
  128. ^ Warsaw Uprising CNN Special – 26 August. Retrieved 11 April 2007.
  129. ^ Borodziej, p. 121; Davies, p. 377.
  130. ^ Davies, p. 377.
  131. ^ Combat Chronology of the US Army Air Forces September 1944: 17,18,19 copied from USAF History Publications 18 November 2009 at the Wayback Machine & WWII combat chronology (pdf) 10 September 2008 at the Wayback Machine
  132. ^ Davies, p. 392.
  133. ^ Davies, p. 391.
  134. ^ Davies, p. 381.
  135. ^ Davies, p. 359.
  136. ^ Churchill (1953) pp. 144–145
  137. ^ Доклад командования 1-го Белорусского фронта Верховному главнокомандующему И.В. Сталину о масштабах помощи повстанцам Варшавы от 2 October 1944 № 001013/оп (секретно)
    цит. по: Зенон Клишко. Варшавское восстание. Статьи, речи, воспоминания, документы. М., Политиздат, 1969. pp. 265–266.
  138. ^ N.Davies. Rising-44. 2005
  139. ^ Jonathan M.House. A Military History of the Cold War, 1944–1962. University of Oklahoma Press. 2012
  140. ^ Davies, p. 304.
  141. ^ SS: The Waffen-SS War in Russia 1941–45 Relevant page viewable via Google book search
  142. ^ Borowiec, pp. 148–151.
  143. ^ a b c Jan Nowak-Jeziorański (31 July 1993). "Białe plamy wokół Powstania". Gazeta Wyborcza (in Polish) (177): 13. Retrieved 14 May 2007.
  144. ^ according to Polish documents, Mikołajczyk informed the Soviet foreign minister Molotov at 9:00 pm on 31 July (Ciechanowski (1974), p. 68)
  145. ^ Jan. M. Ciechanowski. The Warsaw Rising of 1944. Cambridge University Press. Cambridge. London. 1974. p. 68
  146. ^ The Soviet Conduct of Tactical Maneuver: Spearhead of the Offensive by David M Glantz. Map of the front lines on 3 August 1944 – Google Print, p. 175
  147. ^ The Soviet Conduct of Tactical Maneuver: Spearhead of the Offensive by David M Glantz, Google Print, p. 173
  148. ^ Map of 2nd Tank Army operations map
  149. ^ Official statement of Mikołajczyk quoted in Borowiec, p. 108.
  150. ^ Michta, Andrew (1990). Red Eagle : the army in Polish politics, 1944–1988. Stanford, Calif: Hoover Institution Press. ISBN 978-0-8179-8862-3. p. 33. Berling was transferred to the War Academy in Moscow, where he remained until returning to Poland in 1947 where he organized and directed the Academy of General Staff (Akademia Sztabu Generalnego). He retired in 1953.
  151. ^ Davies, p. 444.
  152. ^ Davies, p. 283.
  153. ^ Davies, pp. 282–283.
  154. ^ a b Bartoszewski, Władysław T. (1984). Dni Walczącej Stolicy: kronika Powstania Warszawskiego (in Polish). Warsaw: Muzeum Powstania Warszawskiego; Świat Książki. ISBN 978-83-7391-679-1.
  155. ^ Davies, p. 320.
  156. ^ Davies, p. 417.
  157. ^ Davies, p. 418.
  158. ^ Davies, pp. 440–441.
  159. ^ e.g. Davies, pp. 154–155, 388–389.
  160. ^ Davies, p. 422.
  161. ^ Leonid Gibianskii, Norman Naimark. The Soviet Union and the establishment of communist regimes in Eastern Europe, 1944–1954: A Documentary Collection. The National Council for Eurasian and East European Research. 2004. pp. iii, 12, 52.
  162. ^ А. В. Исаев, М. И. Мельтюхов, М. Э. Морозов. «Мифы Великой Отечественной (сборник)» Москва. Яуза. 2010. стр. 237/A.V. Isaev, M. I. Meltyukhov, M. E. Morozov. "Myths of the Great Patriotic war (collection)" Yauza. 2010. page 237
  163. ^ Русский архив: Великая Отечественная. Том 14 (3–1). СССР и Польша. – М.: ТЕРРА, 1994 c.201/Russian archive: the Great Patriotic war. Volume 14 (3–1). USSR and Poland. – Moscow: TERRA, 1994. p.201
  164. ^ Jan. M. Ciechanowski. The Warsaw Rising of 1944. Cambridge University Press. Cambridge. London. 1974. p.IX
  165. ^ Рокоссовский К. К. Солдатский долг. – М.: Воениздат, 1988. c.282/Rokossovsky, K. K. a Soldier's duty. – Moscow: Military Publishing, 1988. p.282
  166. ^ Borkiewicz, p. 617; Bartoszewski, "Aneks", p. 282. Translation from Nad Wisłą został złamany przez 9. armię ostatni opór powstańców, którzy walczyli aż do ostatniego naboju.
  167. ^ Davies, p. 330.
  168. ^ Davies, pp. 332–334.
  169. ^ Davies, p. 353.
  170. ^ Davies, p. 358.
  171. ^ Borodziej, p. 125; Borowiec, p. 165.
  172. ^ Davies, p. 400.
  173. ^ Borodziej, p. 126; Borowiec, p. 169.
  174. ^ Davies, pp. 401–402.
  175. ^ Davies, pp. 408–409.
  176. ^ Davies, pp. 409–411.
  177. ^ The Memoirs of Marshal Zhukov (London, 1971) pp. 551–552, quoted in Davies, pp. 420–421.
  178. ^ Davies, p. 427.
  179. ^ a b Zaborski, Zdzisław (2004). Tędy przeszła Warszawa: Epilog powstania warszawskiego: Pruszków Durchgangslager 121, 6 VIII – 10 X 1944 (in Polish). Warsaw: Askon. p. 55. ISBN 83-87545-86-4.
  180. ^ Niels Gutschow, Barbarta Klain: Vernichtung und Utopie. Stadtplanung Warschau 1939–1945, Hamburg 1994, ISBN 3-88506-223-2
  181. ^ Peter K. Gessner, "For over two months ..." 3 December 2005 at the Wayback Machine
  182. ^ Oscar Pinkus (2005). The war aims and strategies of Adolf Hitler. MacFarland & Company Inc., Publishers, p. 228 [1]
  183. ^ Fabian Von Schlabrendorff (1947). They Almost Killed Hitler: Based on the Personal Account of Fabian Von Schlabrendorf. Gero v. S. Gaevernitz, p. 35 [2]
  184. ^ Anthony M. Tung, Preserving the World's Great Cities: The Destruction and Renewal of the Historic Metropolis, Three Rivers Press, New York, 2001, ISBN 0-517-70148-0. See Chapter Four: Warsaw: The Heritage of War (online excerpt). 5 October 2008 at the Wayback Machine
  185. ^ Vanessa Gera "Warsaw bloodbath still stirs emotions", Chicago Sun-Times, 1 August 2004
  186. ^ "Warszawa szacuje straty wojenne" (in Polish). Retrieved 16 March 2007.
  187. ^ See the following pages on the official site of Warsaw: Raport o stratach wojennych Warszawy LISTOPAD 2004, Straty Warszawy w albumie[permanent dead link] and Straty wojenne Warszawy 6 September 2009 at the Wayback Machine
  188. ^ a b Borowiec, p. 179.
  189. ^ a b c d Jerzy Kirchmayer (1978). Powstanie warszawskie (in Polish). Warsaw: Książka i Wiedza. p. 576. ISBN 83-05-11080-X.
  190. ^ Inst. Historyczny im. Gen. Sikorskiego w Londynie (1950). Polskie siły zbrojne w drugiej wojnie światowej (in Polish). Vol. III. London: Inst. Historyczny im. Gen. Sikorskiego. p. 819.
  191. ^ Kirchmayer, p. 460.
  192. ^ The number includes all troops fighting under German command, including Germans, Azerbaijanis, Hungarians, Russians, Ukrainians, Cossacks, etc. For detailed discussion of various figures see the text in this section
  193. ^ e.g. a German scholar specialized in Polish history, Hans E. Roos, in Der Tag of 01.08.1954 repeated the 17,000 KIA+MIA figure, referred after Klaus-Peter Friedrich, Kontaminierte Erinnerung: Vom Einfluß der Kriegspropaganda auf das Gedenken an die Warschauer Aufstände von 1943 und 1944, [in:] Zeitschrift fur Ostmitteleuropa-Forschung 55/3 ( 2008), p. 427
  194. ^ "auf deutscher Seite während des Aufstandes 2 000 Angehörige deutsch geführer Verbände gefallen und 9 000 verwunder worden sind", see Hanns von Krannhals, Der Warschauer Aufstand, Frankfurt a/M 1962, p. 215; Krannhals dismissed the 17,000 figure as "Bach’s overestimates which unfortunately made it to the Polish literature"
  195. ^ see e.g. Kazimierz Sobczak (ed.), Encyklopedia II wojny światowej, Warszawa 1975, p. 626
  196. ^ see e.g. Jerzy Kirchmayer, Powstanie Warszawskie, Warszawa 1978, ISBN ISBN 830511080X, p. 576
  197. ^ see e.g. Władysław Bartoszewski, 1859 dni Warszawy, Warszawa 1982, ISBN 8370061524, p. 758
  198. ^ see e.g. Krzysztof Komorowski, Militarne aspekty powstania warszawskiego, [in:] Marek M. Drozdowski (ed.), Powstanie Warszawskie z perspektywy półwiecza, Warszawa 1995, ISBN 8386301104, p. 129
  199. ^ see e.g. Gunther Deschner, Warsaw rising, New York 1972, p. 175
  200. ^ see e.g. Janusz Kazimierz Zawodny, Nothing But Honour: The Story of the Warsaw Uprising, 1944, Washington 1978, ISBN 9780817968311
  201. ^ see e.g. Congressional Record: Proceedings and Debates of the US Congress, Washington 1983, p. 16309
  202. ^ Krzysztof Komorowski, Bitwa o Warszawę '44, Warszawa 2004, ISBN 9788373991330, p. 271
  203. ^ Tadeusz Sawicki, Rozkaz: zdławić Powstanie, Warszwa 2001, ISBN 9788311092846, p. 189
  204. ^ Piotr Rozwadowski, Warszawa 1944–1945, Warszawa 2006, ISBN 8311104808, pp. 110–111
  205. ^ Norbert Bączyk, Ilu naprawdę poległo w powstaniu warszawskim, [in:] Tygodnik Polityka 42 (2014), pp. 54–56
  206. ^ Andrzej Leon Sowa, Kto wydał wyrok na miasto?, Kraków 2016, ISBN 9788308060957, pp. 617–618.
  207. ^ see e.g. the entry Армия Крайова, [in:] Андрей Голубев, Дмитрий Лобанов, Великая Отечественная война 1941–1945 гг. Энциклопедический словарь, Москва 2017, ISBN 9785040341412
  208. ^ see e.g. Андрей Паршев, Виктор Степаков, Не там и не тогда. Когда началась и где закончилась Вторая мировая?, Москва 2017, ISBN 9785457906037, p. 437
  209. ^ Беларуская энцыклапедыя, vol. 4, Мінск 1997, ISBN 9789851100909, p. 17. The entry claims that total losses suffered by the Germans when fighting the Poles and stated as 26,000 were recorded by the 9th Army
  210. ^ Steve Crawford, The Eastern Front Day by Day; 1941–1945. A Photographic Chronology, New York 2012, ISBN 9781908410245 (referred after the Russian translation ISBN 9785457409637, p. 264
  211. ^ Milan N. Vego, Joint Operational Warfare: Theory and Practice, Tampa 2009, ISBN 9781884733628, p. II-36)
  212. ^ Philip Cooke, Ben H. Shepherd (eds.), Hitler's Europe Ablaze: Occupation, Resistance, and Rebellion during World War II, New York 2014, ISBN 9781632201591, p. 341
  213. ^ compare August 1 entry [in:] BBC On This Day service, available here
  214. ^ Anthony James Joes, Resisting Rebellion: The History and Politics of Counterinsurgency, Lexington 2006, ISBN 9780813191706, p. 48
  215. ^ "German casualties totalled over 17,000 soldiers", Zuzanna Bogumił, Joanna Wawrzyniak, Tim Buchen, Christian Ganzer, The Enemy on Display: The Second World War in Eastern European Museums, New York 2015, ISBN 9781782382188, p. 64
  216. ^ "German losses may have been as high as 17,000 dead and missing", Alan Axelrod, Jack A. Kingston, Encyclopedia of World War II, vol. 1, New York 2007, ISBN 9780816060221, p. 872
  217. ^ "German losses amounted to some 10,000 dead 9,000 wounded", Stephan Lehnstaedt, Occupation in the East: The Daily Lives of German Occupiers in Warsaw and Minsk, 1939–1944, New York 2016, ISBN 9781785333248, p. 242
  218. ^ Norman Davies, Rising 44, London 2003, ISBN 9780333905685
  219. ^ Rolf Michaelis, Das SS-Sonderkommando "Dirlewanger": Der Einsatz in Weißrussland 1941–1944, Dusseldorf 2012, ISBN 9783895557644. The author does not provide explicit Dirlewanger’s losses sustained when in combat against the Poles, yet his various detailed and general figures scattered across the book suggest an estimate ranging from 3,280 to 3,770
  220. ^ Orwell in Tribune: 'As I Please' and Other Writings 1943–7 by George Orwell (Compiled and edited by Paul Anderson) Politicos, 2006
  221. ^ George Orwell, " As I Please" column in Tribune, 1 September 1944. Accessed 26 November 2012.
  222. ^ a b Andrzej Paczkowski. Poland, the "Enemy Nation", pp. 372–375, in Black Book of Communism. Crimes, Terror, Repression. Harvard University Press, London. See online excerpt.
  223. ^ Michał Zając, Warsaw Uprising: 5 pm, 1 August 1944, Retrieved on 4 July 2007.
  224. ^ Żołnierze Batalionu Armii Krajowej "Zośka" represjonowani w latach 1944–1956 ", Instytut Pamięci Narodowej, Warszawa 2008, ISBN 978-83-60464-92-2
  225. ^ Prazmowska, A. (2004) Civil war in Poland, 1942–1948 Palgrave ISBN 0-333-98212-6 p. 115
  226. ^ Malcher, G.C. (1993) Blank Pages Pyrford Press ISBN 1-897984-00-6 p. 73
  227. ^ Mikolajczyk, S. (1948) The pattern of Soviet domination Sampson Low, Marston & Co p. 125
  228. ^ Garlinski, J.(1985) Poland in the Second World War Macmillan ISBN 0-333-39258-2 p. 324
  229. ^ Prazmowska, A. (2004) Civil war in Poland, 1942–1948 Palgrave ISBN 0-333-98212-6 p. 116
  230. ^ Michta, A. (1990) Red Eagle Stanford University ISBN 0-8179-8862-9 p. 39
  231. ^ Garlinski, J.(1985) Poland in the Second World War Macmillan ISBN 0-333-39258-2 pp. 325–326
  232. ^ Umiastowski, R. (1946) Poland, Russia and Great Britain 1941–1945 Hollis & Carter pp. 462–464
  233. ^ Piesakowski, T. (1990) The fate of Poles in the USSR 1939–1989 Gryf pp. 198–199
  234. ^ Garlinski, J.(1985) Poland in the Second World War Macmillan ISBN 0-333-39258-2 p. 335
  235. ^ Garlinski, J.(1985) Poland in the Second World War Macmillan ISBN 0-333-39258-2 p. 336
  236. ^ Umiastowski, R. (1946) Poland, Russia and Great Britain 1941–1945 Hollis & Carter pp. 467–468
  237. ^ Tadeusz Bór-Komorowski (1983). Armia podziemna. Bellona. p. 445. GGKEY:FGLR6JNT3W9.
  238. ^ "хГ ХЯРНПХХ нРЕВЕЯРБЕММНИ БНИМШ: ЯНБЕРЯЙЮЪ ДЕБСЬЙЮ рНМЪ ПЮЯЯРПЕКЪКЮ 1500 ДЕРЕИ, ФЕМЫХМ Х ЯРЮПХЙНБ – апъмяй.RU". Briansk.ru. Retrieved 25 October 2013.
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  240. ^ Davies, pp. 521–522.
  241. ^ Arnold-Forster, Mark (1973; repr. 1983). The World at War. London: Collins/Thames Television repr. Thames Methuen. ISBN 0-423-00680-0. pp. 179–180.
  242. ^ Davies, pp. 601–602.
  243. ^ Davies, p. ix.
  244. ^ Davies, p. xi.
  245. ^ Davies, p. 528.
  246. ^ Peszke, Michael Alfred (October 2006). "An Introduction to English-Language Literature on the Polish Armed Forces in World War II". The Journal of Military History 70: 1029–1064.
  247. ^ See also: Tessa Stirling, Daria Nalecz, and Tadeusz Dubicki, eds. (2005). Intelligence Co-operation between Poland and Great Britain during World War II. Vol. 1: The Report of the Anglo-Polish Historical Committee. London and Portland, Oregon: Vallentine Mitchell. Foreword by Tony Blair and Marek Belka. ISBN 0-85303-656-X
  248. ^ a b Władysław Bartoszewski interviewed by Marcin Mierzejewski, On the Front Lines, Warsaw Voice, 1 September 2004.
  249. ^ a b c 60TH ANNIVERSARY, Warsaw Rising Museum
  250. ^ Jan. M. Ciechanowski. The Warsaw Rising of 1944. Cambridge University Press. Cambridge. London. 1974. p.280
  251. ^ Rosalia Romaniec, "The Wounds of Warsaw", Deutsche Welle, 1 Aug. 2014. https://www.dw.com/en/the-wounds-of-warsaw/a-17826319
  252. ^ Alexey Timofeyev. BBC, Moscow. 31 July 2012. Poles rethink the Warsaw uprising. https://www.bbc.com/russian/russia/2012/07/120731_warsaw_uprising.shtml#
  253. ^ Censorship Towards the Subject of the Warsaw Uprising in Belles-Lettres in 1956–1958 p. 149 (pdf)
  254. ^ "Kanal". IMDb.
  255. ^ Rapold, Nicolas (6 November 2014). "'Warsaw Uprising' Animates Archival Footage". The New York Times.
  256. ^ "Powstanie Warszawskie". IMDb.
  257. ^ . Archived from the original on 20 May 2013. Retrieved 24 April 2013.
  258. ^ "Warsaw". Gaming Company. Retrieved 12 April 2021.

Further reading

See also http://www.polishresistance-ak.org/FurtherR.htm http://www.polishresistance-ak.org/FurtherR.htm for more English-language books on the topic.
  • Bartoszewski, Władysław T. (1984). Dni Walczącej Stolicy: kronika Powstania Warszawskiego (in Polish). Warsaw: Muzeum Powstania Warszawskiego; Świat Książki. ISBN 978-83-7391-679-1.
  • Borkiewicz, Adam (1957). Powstanie warszawskie 1944: zarys działań natury wojskowej (in Polish). Warsaw: PAX.
  • Ciechanowski, Jan M. (1987). Powstanie warszawskie: zarys podłoża politycznego i dyplomatycznego (in Polish). Państwowy Instytut Wydawniczy. ISBN 83-06-01135-X.
  • Kirchmayer, Jerzy (1978). Powstanie warszawskie (in Polish). Książka i Wiedza. ISBN 83-05-11080-X.
  • Przygoński, Antoni (1980). Powstanie warszawskie w sierpniu 1944 r. (in Polish). Państwowy Instytut Wydawniczy. ISBN 83-01-00293-X.
  • Borodziej, Włodzimierz (2006). The Warsaw Uprising of 1944. Translated by Barbara Harshav. University of Wisconsin Press. ISBN 978-0-299-20730-4.
  • Borowiec, Andrew (2001). Destroy Warsaw! Hitler's punishment, Stalin's revenge. Westport, Connecticut: Praeger. ISBN 0-275-97005-1.
  • Ciechanowski, Jan M. (1974). The Warsaw Uprising of 1944. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 0-521-20203-5.
  • Davies, Norman (2004). Rising '44. The Battle for Warsaw (1st U.S. ed.). New York: Viking. ISBN 978-0-670-03284-6.
  • Forczyk, Robert (2009). Warsaw 1944; Poland's bid for freedom Osprey Campaign Series #205. Osprey Publishing. ISBN 978-1-84603-352-0.
  • Karski, Jan (2001). Story of a Secret State. Safety Harbor, Florida: Simon Publications. ISBN 978-1-931541-39-8.
  • Komorowski, Tadeusz (1984). The Secret Army (1st U.S. ed.). Nashville: Battery Press. ISBN 978-0-89839-082-7.
  • Lukas, Richard C. (2012). The Forgotten Holocaust: The Poles Under German Occupation (3rd U.S. ed.). New York: Hippocrene. ISBN 978-0-7818-1302-0.
  • Lukas, Richard C. (1978). The Strange Allies: The United States and Poland, 1941-1945 (1st U.S. ed.). Knoxville: University of Tennessee Press. ISBN 0-87049-229-2.
  • Blejwas, Stanley. . Archived from the original on 31 January 2018. Retrieved 2 September 2010.
  • Ziolkowska-Boehm, Aleksandra (2012). Kaia Heroine of the 1944 Warsaw Rising. Lanham, MD: Lexington Books. ISBN 978-0-7391-7270-4.
  • Stanislas Likiernik By Devik's luck Mainstream publishing edinburgh and London, 2001, ISBN 1-84018-397-7

External links

  • Warsaw Rising Museum in Warsaw
  • The Warsaw Rising
  • Warsaw Uprising CNN Special
  • at Polonia Today
  • Warsaw Rising: The Forgotten Soldiers of World War II. Educator Guide
  • Warsaw Uprising 1944 A source for checking data used in this page and offers of material and help.
  • Polish Resistance page provides information and maps which may be freely copied with attribution.
  • Warsaw Life: A detailed account of the 1944 Warsaw Rising, including the facts, the politics and first-hand accounts
  • Polish Boy Scouts Deliver "AK" Mail
  • The Warsaw Uprising daily diary, written in English by Eugenuisz Melech, on the events as they happened.
  • Anglo-Polish Radio ORLA.fm[permanent dead link] Has broadcast several historical programmes on the Warsaw Uprising
  • (in Polish) Website summarizing many publications against decision to initiate Warsaw Uprising
  • (in Polish) Dariusz Baliszewski, Przerwać tę rzeź! Tygodnik "Wprost", Nr 1132 (8 August 2004)
  • (in German) Warschau – Der letzte Blick German aerial photos of Warsaw taken during the last days before the Warsaw Uprising
  • Count Ralph Smorczewski – Daily Telegraph obituary
  • The State We're in from Radio Netherlands Worldwide
  • 'Chronicles of Terror' – collection of civilian testimonies concerning Warsaw Uprising

warsaw, uprising, other, uses, disambiguation, part, operation, tempest, eastern, front, world, iiclockwise, from, left, civilians, construct, anti, tank, ditch, wola, district, german, anti, tank, theatre, square, home, army, soldier, defending, barricade, ru. For other uses see Warsaw Uprising disambiguation Warsaw UprisingPart of Operation Tempest in the Eastern Front of World War IIClockwise from top left Civilians construct an anti tank ditch in Wola district German anti tank gun in Theatre Square Home Army soldier defending a barricade Ruins of Bielanska Street Insurgents leave the city ruins after surrendering to German forces Allied transport planes airdrop supplies near Holy Cross Church Date1 August 2 October 1944 63 days LocationWarsaw Poland52 13 48 N 21 00 39 E 52 23000 N 21 01083 E 52 23000 21 01083 Coordinates 52 13 48 N 21 00 39 E 52 23000 N 21 01083 E 52 23000 21 01083ResultGerman victory Surrender of Warsaw Home Army See capitulation agreement Soviet Lublin Brest Offensive halted Allied operation failure of Warsaw Airlift 80 90 of Warsaw destroyed Mass murder of civilians in reprisalBelligerentsPolish Underground State Home ArmyPolish Army in the East from 14 September 1 Supported by United Kingdom 4 August 21 September United States only on 18 September South Africa 2 Soviet Union limited aid Germany General GovernmentCommanders and leadersT Komorowski POW Tadeusz Pelczynski POW Antoni Chrusciel POW Karol Ziemski POW Edward Pfeiffer POW Leopold Okulicki Jan Mazurkiewicz Zygmunt BerlingWalter ModelNikolaus von Vormann Rainer StahelE v d Bach Zelewski Heinz Reinefarth Bronislav Kaminski Oskar Dirlewanger Petro Dyachenko Robert von Greim Paul Otto GeibelUnits involvedHome Army City Center North City Center South Powisle Warsaw North Zoliborz Kampinos Forest Warsaw South Kedyw UnitsPolish First Army Warsaw Airlift Royal Air Force including Polish squadrons US Army Air Force South African Air Force Soviet Air ForceWarsaw Garrison Kampfgruppe Rohr Kampfgruppe Reinefarth Sturmgruppe Reck Sturmgruppe Schmidt Sturmgruppe Dirlewanger SchutzpolizeiSupported by LuftwaffeStrength20 000 3 49 000 4 2 500 equipped with guns initially 2 captured Panther tanks 1 captured Hetzer tank destroyer 2 captured armoured personnel carrier Improvised armored vehicles Warsaw Airlift US Army Air Force 107 B 17s P 51 Mustangs13 000 5 25 000 6 initially Throughout the course of uprising 50 000 citation needed Dozens of tanks Luftwaffe 6 Junkers Ju 87sCasualties and lossesPolish resistance 15 200 killed and missing 7 5 000 WIA 7 15 000 POW Incl capitulation agreement 7 Polish First Army 5 660 casualties 7 Warsaw Airlift 41 aircraft destroyedGerman forces 2 000 17 000 8 9 10 11 killed and missing 9 000 WIA Multiple tanks and armored vehicles150 000 12 200 000 civilians killed 13 14 700 000 expelled from the city 7 The Warsaw Uprising Polish powstanie warszawskie German Warschauer Aufstand was a major World War II operation by the Polish underground resistance to liberate Warsaw from German occupation It occurred in the summer of 1944 and it was led by the Polish resistance Home Army Polish Armia Krajowa The uprising was timed to coincide with the retreat of the German forces from Poland ahead of the Soviet advance 15 While approaching the eastern suburbs of the city the Red Army temporarily halted combat operations enabling the Germans to regroup and defeat the Polish resistance and to destroy the city in retaliation The Uprising was fought for 63 days with little outside support It was the single largest military effort taken by any European resistance movement during World War II 16 The Uprising began on 1 August 1944 as part of a nationwide Operation Tempest launched at the time of the Soviet Lublin Brest Offensive The main Polish objectives were to drive the Germans out of Warsaw while helping the Allies defeat Germany An additional political goal of the Polish Underground State was to liberate Poland s capital and assert Polish sovereignty before the Soviet backed Polish Committee of National Liberation could assume control Other immediate causes included a threat of mass German round ups of able bodied Poles for evacuation calls by Radio Moscow s Polish Service for uprising and an emotional Polish desire for justice and revenge against the enemy after five years of German occupation 17 18 Initially the Poles established control over most of central Warsaw but the Soviets ignored Polish attempts to make radio contact with them and did not advance beyond the city limits Intense street fighting between the Germans and Poles continued By 14 September the eastern bank of the Vistula River opposite the Polish resistance positions was taken over by the Polish troops fighting under the Soviet command 1 200 men made it across the river but they were not reinforced by the Red Army This and the lack of air support from the Soviet air base five minutes flying time away led to allegations that Joseph Stalin tactically halted his forces to let the operation fail and allow the Polish resistance to be crushed Arthur Koestler called the Soviet attitude one of the major infamies of this war which will rank for the future historian on the same ethical level with Lidice 19 On the other hand David Glantz argued that the uprising started too early and the Red Army could not realistically have aided it regardless of Soviet intentions 20 Winston Churchill pleaded with Stalin and Franklin D Roosevelt to help Britain s Polish allies to no avail 21 Then without Soviet air clearance Churchill sent over 200 low level supply drops by the Royal Air Force the South African Air Force and the Polish Air Force under British High Command in an operation known as the Warsaw Airlift Later after gaining Soviet air clearance the U S Army Air Force sent one high level mass airdrop as part of Operation Frantic although 80 of these supplies landed in German controlled territory 22 Although the exact number of casualties is unknown it is estimated that about 16 000 members of the Polish resistance were killed and about 6 000 badly wounded In addition between 150 000 and 200 000 Polish civilians died mostly from mass executions Jews being harboured by Poles were exposed by German house to house clearances and mass evictions of entire neighbourhoods German casualties totalled over 2 000 to 17 000 soldiers killed and missing 11 During the urban combat approximately 25 of Warsaw s buildings were destroyed Following the surrender of Polish forces German troops systematically levelled another 35 of the city block by block Together with earlier damage suffered in the 1939 invasion of Poland and the Warsaw Ghetto Uprising in 1943 over 85 of the city was destroyed by January 1945 when the course of the events in the Eastern Front forced the Germans to abandon the city Contents 1 Background 2 Eve of the battle 3 Opposing forces 3 1 Polish forces 3 2 Germans 4 Uprising 4 1 W hour or Godzina W 4 2 First four days 4 3 Wola massacre 4 4 Stalemate 4 5 Berling s landings 5 Life behind the lines 5 1 Food shortages 5 2 Polish media 6 Outside support 6 1 Airdrops 6 2 Soviet stance 7 Aftermath 7 1 Capitulation 7 2 Destruction of the city 7 3 Casualties including both Uprising civilian soldiers and civilians 7 4 After the war 7 5 1989 to present 8 Photo gallery 9 Popular culture music television and cinema 10 Notable people 11 See also 12 Notes and references 13 Further reading 14 External linksBackgroundSee also Prelude to the Warsaw Uprising A captured German Sd Kfz 251 from the 5th SS Panzer Division being used by the 8th Krybar Regiment Furthest right commander Adam Dewicz Grey Wolf 14 August 1944 Polish Home Army positions outlined in red on the western bank of the Vistula 4 August 1944 In 1944 Poland had been occupied by Nazi Germany for almost five years The Polish Home Army planned some form of rebellion against German forces Germany was fighting a coalition of Allied powers led by the Soviet Union the United Kingdom and the United States The initial plan of the Home Army was to link up with the invading forces of the Western Allies as they liberated Europe from the Nazis However when the Soviet Army began its offensive in 1943 it became clear that Poland would be liberated by it instead of the Western Allies In this country we have one point from which every evil emanates That point is Warsaw If we didn t have Warsaw in the General Government we wouldn t have four fifths of the difficulties with which we must contend German Governor General Hans Frank Krakow 14 December 1943 23 The Soviets and the Poles had a common enemy Germany but were working towards different post war goals the Home Army desired a pro Western capitalist Poland but the Soviet leader Stalin intended to establish a pro Soviet socialist Poland It became obvious that the advancing Soviet Red Army might not come to Poland as an ally but rather only as the ally of an ally 24 The Home Commander was in his political thinking pledged to the doctrine of two enemies in accordance with which both Germany and Russia were seen as Poland s traditional enemies and it was expected that support for Poland if any would come from the West 25 Warsaw Old Town in flames during Warsaw Uprising The Soviets and the Poles distrusted each other and Soviet partisans in Poland often clashed with a Polish resistance increasingly united under the Home Army s front 26 Stalin broke off Polish Soviet relations on 25 April 1943 after the Germans revealed the Katyn massacre of Polish army officers and Stalin refused to admit to ordering the killings and denounced the claims as German propaganda Afterwards Stalin created the Rudenko Commission whose goal was to blame the Germans for the war crime at all costs The Western alliance accepted Stalin s words as truth in order to keep the Anti Nazi alliance intact 27 On 26 October the Polish government in exile issued instructions to the effect that if diplomatic relations with the Soviet Union were not resumed before the Soviet entry into Poland Home Army forces were to remain underground pending further decisions However the Home Army commander Tadeusz Bor Komorowski took a different approach and on 20 November he outlined his own plan which became known as Operation Tempest On the approach of the Eastern Front local units of the Home Army were to harass the German Wehrmacht in the rear and co operate with incoming Soviet units as much as possible Although doubts existed about the military necessity of a major uprising planning continued 28 General Bor Komorowski and his civilian advisor were authorised by the government in exile to proclaim a general uprising whenever they saw fit 29 Eve of the battle Tadeusz Bor Komorowski commander of Polish Home Army The situation came to a head on 13 July 1944 as the Soviet offensive crossed the old Polish border At this point the Poles had to make a decision either initiate the uprising in the current difficult political situation and risk a lack of Soviet support or fail to rebel and face Soviet propaganda describing the Home Army as impotent or worse Nazi collaborators They feared that if Poland was liberated by the Red Army then the Allies would ignore the London based Polish government in the aftermath of the war The urgency for a final decision on strategy increased as it became clear that after successful Polish Soviet co operation in the liberation of Polish territory for example in Operation Ostra Brama Soviet security forces behind the frontline shot or arrested Polish officers and forcibly conscripted lower ranks into the Soviet controlled forces 26 30 On 21 July the High Command of the Home Army decided that the time to launch Operation Tempest in Warsaw was imminent 31 The plan was intended both as a political manifestation of Polish sovereignty and as a direct operation against the German occupiers 7 On 25 July the Polish government in exile without the knowledge and against the wishes of Polish Commander in Chief General Kazimierz Sosnkowski 32 approved the plan for an uprising in Warsaw with the timing to be decided locally 33 In the early summer of 1944 German plans required Warsaw to serve as the defensive centre of the area and to be held at all costs The Germans had fortifications constructed and built up their forces in the area This process slowed after the failed 20 July plot to assassinate the Nazi leader Adolf Hitler and around that time the Germans in Warsaw were weak and visibly demoralized 34 35 However by the end of July German forces in the area were reinforced 34 On 27 July the Governor of the Warsaw District Ludwig Fischer called for 100 000 Polish men and women to report for work as part of a plan which envisaged the Poles constructing fortifications around the city 36 The inhabitants of Warsaw ignored his demand and the Home Army command became worried about possible reprisals or mass round ups which would disable their ability to mobilize 37 The Soviet forces were approaching Warsaw and Soviet controlled radio stations called for the Polish people to rise in arms 34 38 On 25 July the Union of Polish Patriots in a broadcast from Moscow stated The Polish Army of Polish Patriots calls on the thousands of brothers thirsting to fight to smash the foe before he can recover from his defeat Every Polish homestead must become a stronghold in the struggle against the invaders Not a moment is to be lost 39 On 29 July the first Soviet armoured units reached the outskirts of Warsaw where they were counter attacked by two German Panzer Corps the 39th and 4th SS 20 On 29 July 1944 Radio Station Kosciuszko located in Moscow emitted a few times its Appeal to Warsaw and called to Fight The Germans No doubt Warsaw already hears the guns of the battle which is soon to bring her liberation The Polish Army now entering Polish territory trained in the Soviet Union is now joined to the People s Army to form the Corps of the Polish Armed Forces the armed arm of our nation in its struggle for independence Its ranks will be joined tomorrow by the sons of Warsaw They will all together with the Allied Army pursue the enemy westwards wipe out the Hitlerite vermin from Polish land and strike a mortal blow at the beast of Prussian Imperialism 40 41 Bor Komorowski and several officers held a meeting on that day Jan Nowak Jezioranski who had arrived from London expressed the view that help from the Allies would be limited but his views received no attention 42 In the early afternoon of 31 July the most important political and military leaders of the resistance had no intention of sending their troops into battle on 1 August Even so another late afternoon briefing of Bor Komorowski s Staff was arranged for five o clock At about 5 30 p m Col Monter arrived at the briefing reporting that the Russian tanks were already entering Praga and insisting on the immediate launching of the Home Army operations inside the city as otherwise it might be too late Prompted by Monter s report Bor Komorowski decided that the time was ripe for the commencement of Burza in Warsaw in spite of his earlier conviction to the contrary twice expressed during the course of that day 43 Bor Komorowski and Jankowski issued their final order for the insurrection when it was erroneously reported to them that the Soviet tanks were entering Praga Hence they assumed that the Russo German battle for Warsaw was approaching its climax and that this presented them with an excellent opportunity to capture Warsaw before the Red Army entered the capital The Soviet radio appeals calling upon the people of Warsaw to rise against the Germans regardless of Moscow s intentions had very little influence on the Polish authorities responsible for the insurrection 44 Believing that the time for action had arrived on 31 July the Polish commanders General Bor Komorowski and Colonel Antoni Chrusciel ordered full mobilization of the forces for 17 00 the following day 45 Within the framework of the entire enemy intelligence operations directed against Germany the intelligence service of the Polish resistance movement assumed major significance The scope and importance of the operations of the Polish resistance movement which was ramified down to the smallest splinter group and brilliantly organized have been in various sources disclosed in connection with carrying out of major police security operations Heinrich Himmler 31 December 1942 46 Opposing forcesMain article List of military units in the Warsaw Uprising Weapons used by the resistance including the Blyskawica submachine gun one of very few weapons designed and mass produced covertly in occupied Europe Polish forces The Home Army forces of the Warsaw District numbered between 20 000 3 47 and 49 000 soldiers 4 Other underground formations also contributed estimates range from 2 000 in total 48 to about 3 500 men including those from the National Armed Forces and the communist People s Army 49 Most of them had trained for several years in partisan and urban guerrilla warfare but lacked experience in prolonged daylight fighting The forces lacked equipment 6 because the Home Army had shuttled weapons to the east of the country before the decision to include Warsaw in Operation Tempest 50 Other partisan groups subordinated themselves to Home Army command and many volunteers joined during the fighting including Jews freed from the Gesiowka concentration camp in the ruins of the Warsaw Ghetto 51 Morale among Jewish fighters was hurt by displays of antisemitism with several former Jewish prisoners in combat units even killed by antisemitic Poles 52 Kubus an armoured car made by the Home Army during the Uprising A single unit was built by the Krybar Regiment on the chassis of a Chevrolet 157 van Colonel Antoni Chrusciel codename Monter who commanded the Polish underground forces in Warsaw divided his units into eight areas the Sub district I of Srodmiescie Area I which included Warszawa Srodmiescie and the Old Town the Sub district II of Zoliborz Area II comprising Zoliborz Marymont and Bielany the Sub district III of Wola Area III in Wola the Sub district IV of Ochota Area IV in Ochota the Sub district V of Mokotow Area V in Mokotow the Sub district VI of Praga Area VI in Praga the Sub district VII of Warsaw suburbs Area VII for the Warsaw West County and the Autonomous Region VIII of Okecie Area VIII in Okecie while the units of the Directorate of Sabotage and Diversion Kedyw remained attached to the Uprising Headquarters 53 On 20 September the sub districts were reorganized to align with the three areas of the city held by the Polish units The entire force renamed the Warsaw Home Army Corps Polish Warszawski Korpus Armii Krajowej and commanded by General Antoni Chrusciel who was promoted from Colonel on 14 September formed three infantry divisions Srodmiescie Zoliborz and Mokotow 53 The 535th platoon of Slovaks under the command of Miroslaw Iringh part of the 1st company of the Tur battalion from the Kryska Group fought in Czerniakow and Praga district during the uprising 54 The exact number of the foreign fighters obcokrajowcy in Polish who fought in Warsaw for Poland s independence is difficult to determine taking into consideration the chaotic character of the Uprising causing their irregular registration It is estimated that they numbered several hundred and represented at least 15 countries Slovakia Hungary the United Kingdom Australia France Belgium the Netherlands Greece Italy the United States the Soviet Union South Africa Romania Germany and even Nigeria These people emigrants who had settled in Warsaw before the war escapees from numerous POW concentration and labor camps and deserters from the German auxiliary forces were absorbed in different fighting and supportive formations of the Polish underground They wore the underground s red white armband the colors of the Polish national flag and adopted the Polish traditional independence fighters slogan Za nasza i wasza wolnosc Some of the obcokrajowcy showed outstanding bravery in fighting the enemy and were awarded the highest decorations of the AK and the Polish government in exile 55 During the fighting the Poles obtained additional supplies through airdrops and by capture from the enemy including several armoured vehicles notably two Panther tanks and two Sd Kfz 251 armored personnel carriers 56 57 58 Also resistance workshops produced weapons throughout the fighting including submachine guns K pattern flamethrowers 59 grenades mortars and even an armoured car Kubus 60 As of 1 August Polish military supplies consisted of 1 000 guns 1 750 pistols 300 submachine guns 60 assault rifles 7 heavy machine guns 20 anti tank guns and 25 000 hand grenades 61 Such collection of light weapons might have been sufficient to launch an urban terror campaign but not to seize control of the city 62 Germans German soldiers fighting the Polish resistance at Theater Square in Warsaw September 1944 In late July 1944 the German units stationed in and around Warsaw were divided into three categories The first and the most numerous was the garrison of Warsaw As of 31 July it numbered some 11 000 troops under General Rainer Stahel 63 Commanding officers of the collaborationist Freiwillige the Waffen SS volunteers brigade R O N A during the Warsaw Uprising August 1944 These well equipped German forces prepared for the defence of the city s key positions for many months Several hundred concrete bunkers and barbed wire lines protected the buildings and areas occupied by the Germans Apart from the garrison itself numerous army units were stationed on both banks of the Vistula and in the city The second category was composed of police and SS under SS and Police Leader SS Oberfuhrer Paul Otto Geibel numbering initially 5 710 men 64 including Schutzpolizei and Waffen SS 65 The third category was formed by various auxiliary units including detachments of the Bahnschutz rail guard Werkschutz factory guard and the Polish Volksdeutsche ethnic Germans in Poland and Soviet former POW of the Sonderdienst and Sonderabteilungen paramilitary units 66 During the uprising the German side received reinforcements on a daily basis Stahel was replaced as overall commander by SS General Erich von dem Bach in early August 67 As of 20 August 1944 the German units directly involved with fighting in Warsaw comprised 17 000 men arranged in two battle groups Battle Group Rohr commanded by Major General Rohr which included 1 700 soldiers of the anti communist S S Sturmbrigade R O N A Russkaya Osvoboditelnaya Narodnaya Armiya Russian National Liberation Army also known as Kaminski Brigade under German command made up of Russian Belorussian and Ukrainian collaborators 68 and Battle Group Reinefarth commanded by SS Gruppenfuhrer Heinz Reinefarth which consisted of Attack Group Dirlewanger commanded by Oskar Dirlewanger which included Aserbaidschanische Legion part of the Ostlegionen 69 Attack Group Reck commanded by Major Reck Attack Group Schmidt commanded by Colonel Schmidt and various support and backup units The Nazi forces included about 5 000 regular troops 4 000 Luftwaffe personnel 1 000 at Okecie airport 700 at Bielany 1 000 in Boernerowo 300 at Sluzewiec and 1 000 in anti air artillery posts throughout the city as well as about 2 000 men of the Sentry Regiment Warsaw Wachtregiment Warschau including four infantry battalions Patz Baltz No 996 and No 997 and an SS reconnaissance squadron with ca 350 men 67 70 UprisingMain article Military history of the Warsaw Uprising W hour or Godzina W Main article W Hour After days of hesitation at 17 00 on 31 July the Polish headquarters scheduled W hour from the Polish wybuch explosion the moment of the start of the uprising for 17 00 on the following day 71 The decision was a strategic miscalculation because the under equipped resistance forces were prepared and trained for a series of coordinated surprise dawn attacks In addition although many units were already mobilized and waiting at assembly points throughout the city the mobilization of thousands of young men and women was hard to conceal Fighting started in advance of W hour notably in Zoliborz 72 and around Napoleon Square and Dabrowski Square 73 The Germans had anticipated the possibility of an uprising though they had not realized its size or strength 74 At 16 30 Governor Fischer put the garrison on full alert 75 Resistance fighter armed with a flamethrower 22 August 1944 That evening the resistance captured a major German arsenal the main post office and power station and the Prudential building However Castle Square the police district and the airport remained in German hands 76 The first days were crucial in establishing the battlefield for the rest of the fight The resistance fighters were most successful in the City Centre Old Town and Wola districts However several major German strongholds remained and in some areas of Wola the Poles sustained heavy losses that forced an early retreat In other areas such as Mokotow the attackers almost completely failed to secure any objectives and controlled only the residential areas In Praga on the east bank of the Vistula the Poles were sent back into hiding by a high concentration of German forces 77 Most crucially the fighters in different areas failed to link up with each other and with areas outside Warsaw leaving each sector isolated from the others After the first hours of fighting many units adopted a more defensive strategy while civilians began erecting barricades Despite all the problems by 4 August the majority of the city was in Polish hands although some key strategic points remained untaken 78 My Fuhrer the timing is unfortunate but from a historical perspective what the Poles are doing is a blessing After five six weeks we shall leave But by then Warsaw the capital the head the intelligence of this former 16 17 million Polish people will be extinguished this Volk that has blocked our way to the east for seven hundred years and has stood in our way ever since the First Battle of Tannenberg in 1410 After this the Polish problem will no longer be a great historical problem for the children who come after us nor indeed will it be for us SS Chief Heinrich Himmler to Adolf Hitler when he learned about the Warsaw Uprising 79 80 First four days The city s sewer system was used to move resistance fighters between the Old Town Srodmiescie and Zoliborz districts Home Army soldiers from Kolegium A of Kedyw formation on Stawki Street in the Wola District of Warsaw September 1944 The uprising was intended to last a few days until Soviet forces arrived 81 however this never happened and the Polish forces had to fight with little outside assistance The results of the first two days of fighting in different parts of the city were as follows Area I city centre and the Old Town Units captured most of their assigned territory but failed to capture areas with strong pockets of resistance from the Germans the Warsaw University buildings PAST skyscraper the headquarters of the German garrison in the Saxon Palace the German only area near Szucha Avenue and the bridges over the Vistula They thus failed to create a central stronghold secure communication links to other areas or a secure land connection with the northern area of Zoliborz through the northern railway line and the Citadel citation needed Area II Zoliborz Marymont Bielany Units failed to secure the most important military targets near Zoliborz Many units retreated outside of the city into the forests Although they captured most of the area around Zoliborz the soldiers of Colonel Mieczyslaw Niedzielski Zywiciel failed to secure the Citadel area and break through German defences at Warsaw Gdansk railway station 82 Area III Wola Units initially secured most of the territory but sustained heavy losses up to 30 Some units retreated into the forests while others retreated to the eastern part of the area In the northern part of Wola the soldiers of Colonel Jan Mazurkiewicz Radoslaw managed to capture the German barracks the German supply depot at Stawki Street and the flanking position at the Okopowa Street Jewish Cemetery citation needed Area IV Ochota The units mobilized in this area did not capture either the territory or the military targets the Gesiowka concentration camp and the SS and Sipo barracks on Narutowicz Square After suffering heavy casualties most of the Home Army forces retreated to the forests west of Warsaw Only two small units of approximately 200 to 300 men under Lieut Andrzej Chyczewski Gustaw remained in the area and managed to create strong pockets of resistance They were later reinforced by units from the city centre Elite units of the Kedyw managed to secure most of the northern part of the area and captured all of the military targets there However they were soon tied down by German tactical counter attacks from the south and west citation needed Area V Mokotow The situation in this area was very serious from the start of hostilities The partisans aimed to capture the heavily defended Police Area Dzielnica policyjna on Rakowiecka Street and establish a connection with the city centre through open terrain at the former airfield of Mokotow Field As both of the areas were heavily fortified and could be approached only through open terrain the assaults failed Some units retreated into the forests while others managed to capture parts of Dolny Mokotow which was however severed from most communication routes to other areas 83 Area VI Praga The Uprising was also started on the right bank of the Vistula where the main task was to seize the bridges on the river and secure the bridgeheads until the arrival of the Red Army It was clear that since the location was far worse than that of the other areas there was no chance of any help from outside After some minor initial successes the forces of Lt Col Antoni Zurowski Andrzej were badly outnumbered by the Germans The fights were halted and the Home Army forces were forced back underground 71 Area VII Powiat warszawski this area consisted of territories outside Warsaw city limits Actions here mostly failed to capture their targets citation needed An additional area within the Polish command structure was formed by the units of the Directorate of Sabotage and Diversion or Kedyw an elite formation that was to guard the headquarters and was to be used as an armed ambulance thrown into the battle in the most endangered areas These units secured parts of Srodmiescie and Wola along with the units of Area I they were the most successful during the first few hours citation needed Among the most notable primary targets that were not taken during the opening stages of the uprising were the airfields of Okecie and Mokotow Field as well as the PAST skyscraper overlooking the city centre and the Gdansk railway station guarding the passage between the centre and the northern borough of Zoliborz citation needed The leaders of the uprising counted only on the rapid entry of the Red Army in Warsaw on the second or third or at the latest by the seventh day of the fighting 84 and were more prepared for a confrontation with the Russians At this time the head of the government in exile Mikolajczyk met with Stalin on 3 August 1944 in Moscow and raised the questions of his imminent arrival in Warsaw the return to power of his government in Poland as well as the Eastern borders of Poland while categorically refusing to recognize the Curzon Line as the basis for negotiations 85 In saying this Mikolajczyk was well aware that the USSR and Stalin had repeatedly stated their demand for recognition of the Curzon line as the basis for negotiations and categorically refused to change their position 23 March 1944 Stalin said he could not depart from the Curzon Line in spite of Churchill s post Teheran reference to his Curzon Line policy as one of force he still believed it to be the only legitimate settlement 86 Thus the Warsaw uprising was actively used to achieve political goals The question of assistance to the insurrection was not raised by Mikolajczyk apparently for reasons that it might weaken the position in the negotiations The substance of the two and a half hour discussion was a harsh disagreement about future of Poland the Uprising considered by the Poles as a bargaining chip turned to be disadvantageous for Mikolajczyk s position since it made him seem like a supplicant Nothing was agreed about the Uprising 87 The question of helping the Home Army with weapons was only raised but Stalin refused to discuss this question until the formation of a new government was decided 85 Wola massacre Main article Wola massacre Home Army soldier armed with Blyskawica submachine gun defending a barricade in Powisle District of Warsaw during the Uprising August 1944 The Uprising reached its apogee on 4 August when the Home Army soldiers managed to establish front lines in the westernmost boroughs of Wola and Ochota However it was also the moment at which the German army stopped its retreat westwards and began receiving reinforcements On the same day SS General Erich von dem Bach was appointed commander of all the forces employed against the Uprising 71 German counter attacks aimed to link up with the remaining German pockets and then cut off the Uprising from the Vistula river Among the reinforcing units were forces under the command of Heinz Reinefarth 71 On 5 August Reinefarth s three attack groups started their advance westward along Wolska and Gorczewska streets toward the main east west communication line of Jerusalem Avenue Their advance was halted but the regiments began carrying out Heinrich Himmler s orders behind the lines special SS police and Wehrmacht groups went from house to house shooting the inhabitants regardless of age or gender and burning their bodies 71 Estimates of civilians killed in Wola and Ochota range from 20 000 to 50 000 88 40 000 by 8 August in Wola alone 89 or as high as 100 000 90 The main perpetrators were Oskar Dirlewanger and Bronislav Kaminski whose forces committed the cruelest atrocities 91 92 93 The policy was designed to crush the Poles will to fight and put the uprising to an end without having to commit to heavy city fighting 94 With time the Germans realized that atrocities only stiffened resistance and that some political solution should be found as the thousands of men at the disposal of the German commander were unable to effectively counter the resistance in an urban guerrilla setting 95 They aimed to gain a significant victory to show the Home Army the futility of further fighting and induce them to surrender This did not succeed Until mid September the Germans shot all captured resistance fighters on the spot but from the end of September some of the captured Polish soldiers were treated as POWs 96 Stalemate This is the fiercest of our battles since the start of the war It compares to the street battles of Stalingrad SS chief Heinrich Himmler to German generals on 21 September 1944 97 Jewish prisoners of Gesiowka concentration camp liberated by Polish Home Army soldiers from Zoska Battalion 5 August 1944 German Stuka Ju 87 bombing Warsaw s Old Town August 1944 the rebels were unable to capture the airfields and only 6 German aircraft could make a large number of sorties causing great destruction to the city 98 Warsaw s Old Town Market Place August 1944 Despite the loss of Wola the Polish resistance strengthened Zoska and Wacek battalions managed to capture the ruins of the Warsaw Ghetto and liberate the Gesiowka concentration camp freeing about 350 Jews 71 The area became one of the main communication links between the resistance fighting in Wola and those defending the Old Town On 7 August German forces were strengthened by the arrival of tanks using civilians as human shields 71 After two days of heavy fighting they managed to bisect Wola and reach Bankowy Square However by then the net of barricades street fortifications and tank obstacles were already well prepared both sides reached a stalemate with heavy house to house fighting citation needed Between 9 and 18 August pitched battles raged around the Old Town and nearby Bankowy Square with successful attacks by the Germans and counter attacks from the Poles German tactics hinged on bombardment through the use of heavy artillery 99 and tactical bombers against which the Poles were unable to effectively defend as they lacked anti aircraft artillery weapons Even clearly marked hospitals were dive bombed by Stukas 100 Although the Battle of Stalingrad had already shown the danger a city can pose to armies which fight within it and the importance of local support the Warsaw Uprising was probably the first demonstration that in an urban terrain a vastly under equipped force supported by the civilian population can hold its own against better equipped professional soldiers though at the cost of considerable sacrifice on the part of the city s residents citation needed The Poles held the Old Town until a decision to withdraw was made at the end of August On successive nights until 2 September the defenders of the Old Town withdrew through the sewers which were a major means of communication between different parts of the Uprising 101 Thousands of people were evacuated in this way Those that remained were either shot or transported to concentration camps like Mauthausen and Sachsenhausen once the Germans regained control 102 Berling s landings Soviet attacks on the 4th SS Panzer Corps east of Warsaw were renewed on 26 August and the Germans were forced to retreat into Praga The Soviet army under the command of Konstantin Rokossovsky captured Praga and arrived on the east bank of the Vistula in mid September By 13 September the Germans had destroyed the remaining bridges over the Vistula signalling that they were abandoning all their positions east of the river 103 In the Praga area Polish units under the command of General Zygmunt Berling thus sometimes known as berlingowcy the Berling men fought on the Soviet side Three patrols of his First Polish Army 1 Armia Wojska Polskiego landed in the Czerniakow and Powisle areas and made contact with Home Army forces on the night of 14 15 September The artillery cover and air support provided by the Soviets was unable to effectively counter enemy machine gun fire as the Poles crossed the river and the landing troops sustained heavy losses 104 Only small elements of the main units made it ashore I and III battalions of 9th infantry regiment 3rd Infantry Division 105 Monument to General Berling in Warsaw The limited landings by the 1st Polish Army represented the only external ground force which arrived to physically support the uprising and even they were curtailed by the Soviet High Command due to the losses they took 105 The Germans intensified their attacks on the Home Army positions near the river to prevent any further landings but were not able to make any significant advances for several days while Polish forces held those vital positions in preparation for a new expected wave of Soviet landings Polish units from the eastern shore attempted several more landings and from 15 to 23 September sustained heavy losses including the destruction of all their landing boats and most of their other river crossing equipment 105 Red Army support was inadequate 105 After the failure of repeated attempts by the 1st Polish Army to link up with the resistance the Soviets limited their assistance to sporadic artillery and air support Conditions that prevented the Germans from dislodging the resistance also acted to prevent the Poles from dislodging the Germans Plans for a river crossing were suspended for at least 4 months since operations against the 9th Army s five panzer divisions were problematic at that point and the commander of the 1st Polish Army General Berling was relieved of his duties by his Soviet superiors 26 106 On the night of 19 September after no further attempts from the other side of the river were made and the promised evacuation of wounded did not take place Home Army soldiers and landed elements of the 1st Polish Army were forced to begin a retreat from their positions on the bank of the river 105 Out of approximately 900 men who made it ashore only a handful made it back to the eastern shore of the Vistula 107 Berling s Polish Army losses in the attempt to aid the Uprising were 5 660 killed missing or wounded 7 From this point on the Warsaw Uprising can be seen as a one sided war of attrition or alternatively as a fight for acceptable terms of surrender The Poles were besieged in three areas of the city Srodmiescie Zoliborz and Mokotow citation needed Life behind the lines Tadeusz Rajszczak Maszynka left Ryszard Michal Lach and one other young soldier from Miotla Battalion 2 September 1944 Home Army soldiers Henryk Ozarek Henio left holding a Vis pistol and Tadeusz Przybyszewski Roma right firing a Blyskawica submachine gun from Anna Company of the Gustaw Battalion fighting on Kredytowa Krolewska Street 3 October 1944 the use of pistols in street battles indicates a very poor equipment of weapons of the rebels In 1939 Warsaw had roughly 1 350 000 inhabitants Over a million were still living in the city at the start of the Uprising In Polish controlled territory during the first weeks of the Uprising people tried to recreate the normal day to day life of their free country Cultural life was vibrant both among the soldiers and civilian population with theatres post offices newspapers and similar activities 108 Boys and girls of the Polish Scouts acted as couriers for an underground postal service risking their lives daily to transmit any information that might help their people 71 109 Near the end of the Uprising lack of food and medicine overcrowding and indiscriminate German air and artillery assault on the city made the civilian situation more and more desperate citation needed Booby traps such as thermite laced candy pieces may have also been used in German controlled districts of Warsaw targeting Polish youth citation needed Food shortages As the Uprising was supposed to be relieved by the Soviets in a matter of days the Polish underground did not predict food shortages would be a problem However as the fighting dragged on the inhabitants of the city faced hunger and starvation A major break through took place on 6 August when Polish units recaptured the Haberbusch i Schiele brewery complex at Ceglana Street From that time on the citizens of Warsaw lived mostly on barley from the brewery s warehouses Every day up to several thousand people organized into cargo teams reported to the brewery for bags of barley and then distributed them in the city centre The barley was then ground in coffee grinders and boiled with water to form a so called spit soup Polish pluj zupa The Sowinski Battalion managed to hold the brewery until the end of the fighting citation needed Another serious problem for civilians and soldiers alike was a shortage of water 71 By mid August most of the water conduits were either out of order or filled with corpses In addition the main water pumping station remained in German hands 71 To prevent the spread of epidemics and provide the people with water the authorities ordered all janitors to supervise the construction of water wells in the backyards of every house On 21 September the Germans blew up the remaining pumping stations at Koszykowa Street and after that the public wells were the only source of potable water in the besieged city 110 By the end of September the city centre had more than 90 functioning wells 71 Polish media Polish Radio broadcast in English source source A news programme on the daily fights in Warsaw Problems playing this file See media help Before the Uprising the Bureau of Information and Propaganda of the Home Army had set up a group of war correspondents Headed by Antoni Bohdziewicz the group made three newsreels and over 30 000 meters of film tape documenting the struggles The first newsreel was shown to the public on 13 August in the Palladium cinema at Zlota Street 71 In addition to films dozens of newspapers appeared from the very first days of the uprising Several previously underground newspapers started to be distributed openly 111 112 The two main daily newspapers were the government run Rzeczpospolita Polska and military Biuletyn Informacyjny There were also several dozen newspapers magazines bulletins and weeklies published routinely by various organizations and military units 111 The Blyskawica long range radio transmitter assembled on 7 August in the city centre was run by the military but was also used by the recreated Polish Radio from 9 August 71 It was on the air three or four times a day broadcasting news programmes and appeals for help in Polish English German and French as well as reports from the government patriotic poems and music 113 It was the only such radio station in German held Europe 114 Among the speakers appearing on the resistance radio were Jan Nowak Jezioranski 115 Zbigniew Swietochowski Stefan Sojecki Jeremi Przybora 116 and John Ward a war correspondent for The Times of London 117 Outside supportMain article Outside support during the Warsaw Uprising Captured German Panther tank by resistance fighters from Zoska Battalion under the command of Waclaw Micuta 2 August 1944 According to many historians a major cause of the eventual failure of the uprising was the almost complete lack of outside support and the late arrival of that which did arrive 7 20 The Polish government in exile carried out frantic diplomatic efforts to gain support from the Western Allies prior to the start of battle but the allies would not act without Soviet approval The Polish government in London asked the British several times to send an allied mission to Poland 26 However the British mission did not arrive until December 1944 118 Shortly after their arrival they met up with Soviet authorities who arrested and imprisoned them 119 In the words of the mission s deputy commander it was a complete failure 120 Nevertheless from August 1943 to July 1944 over 200 British Royal Air Force RAF flights dropped an estimated 146 Polish personnel trained in Great Britain over 4 000 containers of supplies and 16 million in banknotes and gold to the Home Army 121 The only support operation which ran continuously for the duration of the Uprising were night supply drops by long range planes of the RAF other British Commonwealth air forces and units of the Polish Air Force which had to use distant airfields in Italy reducing the amount of supplies they could carry The RAF made 223 sorties and lost 34 aircraft The effect of these airdrops was mostly psychological they delivered too few supplies for the needs of the resistance and many airdrops landed outside Polish controlled territory citation needed Airdrops Main article Warsaw airlift There was no difficulty in finding Warsaw It was visible from 100 kilometers away The city was in flames but with so many huge fires burning it was almost impossible to pick up the target marker flares William Fairly a South African pilot from an interview in 1982 122 Home Army soldiers from Zoska Battalion liberating Gesiowka concentration camp Only Juliusz Deczkowski centre survived Tadeusz Milewski Cwik right was killed later in the day and Wojciech Omyla Wojtek left was killed several days later 5 August 1944 From 4 August the Western Allies began supporting the Uprising with airdrops of munitions and other supplies 123 Initially the flights were carried out mostly by the 1568th Polish Special Duties Flight of the Polish Air Force later renamed No 301 Polish Bomber Squadron stationed in Bari and Brindisi in Italy flying B 24 Liberator Handley Page Halifax and Douglas C 47 Dakota planes Later on at the insistence of the Polish government in exile citation needed they were joined by the Liberators of 2 Wing No 31 and No 34 Squadrons of the South African Air Force based at Foggia in Southern Italy and Halifaxes flown by No 148 and No 178 RAF Squadrons The drops by British Polish and South African forces continued until 21 September The total weight of allied drops varies according to source 104 tons 124 230 tons 123 or 239 tons 26 over 200 flights were made 125 The Soviet Union did not allow the Western Allies to use its airports for the airdrops 7 for several weeks 126 so the planes had to use bases in the United Kingdom and Italy which reduced their carrying weight and number of sorties The Allies specific request for the use of landing strips made on 20 August was denied by Stalin on 22 August 122 Stalin referred to the Polish resistance as a handful of criminals 127 and stated that the Uprising was inspired by enemies of the Soviet Union 22 Thus by denying landing rights to Allied aircraft on Soviet controlled territory the Soviets vastly limited effectiveness of Allied assistance to the Uprising and even fired at Allied airplanes which carried supplies from Italy and strayed into Soviet controlled airspace 122 American support was also limited After Stalin s objections to supporting the uprising British Prime Minister Winston Churchill telegraphed U S President Franklin D Roosevelt on 25 August and proposed sending planes in defiance of Stalin to see what happens Unwilling to upset Stalin before the Yalta Conference Roosevelt replied on 26 August I do not consider it advantageous to the long range general war prospect for me to join you 122 128 Soldier from the Kilinski Battalion pictured aiming his rifle at the German occupied PAST building 20 August 1944 Finally on 18 September the Soviets allowed a USAAF flight of 107 B 17 Flying Fortresses of the Eighth Air Force s 3rd Division to re fuel and reload at Soviet airfields used in Operation Frantic but it was too little too late The planes dropped 100 tons of supplies but only 20 were recovered by the resistance due to the wide area over which they were spread 22 The vast majority of supplies fell into German held areas 129 The USAAF lost two B 17s 130 with a further seven damaged The aircraft landed at the Operation Frantic airbases in the Soviet Union where they were rearmed and refueled and the next day 100 B 17s and 61 P 51s left the USSR to bomb the marshalling yard at Szolnok in Hungary on their way back to bases in Italy 131 Soviet intelligence reports show that Soviet commanders on the ground near Warsaw estimated that 96 of the supplies dropped by the Americans fell into German hands 132 From the Soviet perspective the Americans were supplying the Nazis instead of aiding the Polish resistance 133 The Soviets refused permission for any further American flights until 30 September by which time the weather was too poor to fly and the Uprising was nearly over 134 Between 13 and 30 September Soviet aircraft commenced their own re supply missions dropping arms medicines and food supplies Initially these supplies were dropped in canisters without parachutes 135 which led to damage and loss of the contents 136 Also a large number of canisters fell into German hands The Soviet Air Forces flew 2 535 re supply sorties with small bi plane Polikarpov Po 2 s delivering a total of 156 50 mm mortars 505 anti tank rifles 1 478 sub machine guns 520 rifles 669 carbines 41 780 hand grenades 37 216 mortar shells over 3 million cartridges 131 2 tons of food and 515 kg of medicine 137 Although German air defence over the Warsaw area itself was almost non existent about 12 of the 296 planes taking part in the operations were lost because they had to fly 1 600 kilometres 990 miles out and the same distance back over heavily defended enemy territory 112 out of 637 Polish and 133 out of 735 British and South African airmen were shot down 22 Most of the drops were made during the night at no more than 30 90 m 100 300 ft altitude and poor accuracy left many parachuted packages stranded behind German controlled territory only about 50 tons of supplies less than 50 delivered was recovered by the resistance 123 The level of losses during the operation was very high especially for the conditions of mid 1944 In the first flight on 4 5 August 5 out of 7 aircraft were lost 138 In subsequent flights the level of losses decreased but remained very high For example on 13 14 August 3 planes out of 28 were shot down and 4 planes were forced to make forced landings in territories occupied by the USSR due to damage 139 Soviet stance Soviet advances from 1 August 1943 to 31 December 1944 to 1 December 1943 to 30 April 1944 to 19 August 1944 to 31 December 1944 Fight The Germans No doubt Warsaw already hears the guns of the battle which is soon to bring her liberation The Polish Army now entering Polish territory trained in the Soviet Union is now joined to the People s Army to form the Corps of the Polish Armed Forces the armed arm of our nation in its struggle for independence Its ranks will be joined tomorrow by the sons of Warsaw They will all together with the Allied Army pursue the enemy westwards wipe out the Hitlerite vermin from Polish land and strike a mortal blow at the beast of Prussian Imperialism Moscow Radio Station Kosciuszko 29 July 1944 broadcast 40 The role of the Red Army during the Warsaw Uprising remains controversial and is still disputed by historians 20 The Uprising started when the Red Army appeared on the city s doorstep and the Poles in Warsaw were counting on Soviet front capturing or forwarding beyond the city in a matter of days This basic scenario of an uprising against the Germans launched a few days before the arrival of Allied forces played out successfully in a number of European capitals such as Paris 140 and Prague However despite easy capture of area south east of Warsaw barely 10 kilometres 6 2 miles from the city centre and holding these positions for about 40 days the Soviets did not extend any effective aid to the resistance within Warsaw At that time city outskirts were defended by the under manned and under equipped German 73rd Infantry Division which was destroyed many times on the Eastern Front and was yet again being reconstituted 141 The weak German defence forces did not experience any significant Soviet pressure during that period which effectively allowed them to strengthen German forces fighting against uprising in the city itself Soldier from Piesc Battalion led by Stanislaw Jankowski Agaton pictured on a rooftop of a house near the Evangelic Cemetery in Wola District of Warsaw 2 August 1944 The Red Army was fighting intense battles further to the south of Warsaw to seize and maintain bridgeheads over the Vistula river and to the north of the city to gain bridgeheads over the river Narew The best German armoured divisions were fighting on those sectors Despite the fact both of these objectives had been mostly secured by September Yet the Soviet 47th Army did not move into Praga Warsaw s suburbs on the right bank of the Vistula until 11 September when the Uprising was basically over In three days the Soviets quickly gained control of the suburb a few hundred meters from the main battle on the other side of the river as the resistance by the German 73rd Division collapsed quickly Had the Soviets done this in early August the crossing of the river would have been easier as the Poles then held considerable stretches of the riverfront However by mid September a series of German attacks had reduced the Poles to holding one narrow stretch of the riverbank in the district of Czerniakow The Poles were counting on the Soviet forces to cross to the left bank where the main battle of the uprising was occurring Though Berling s communist 1st Polish Army did cross the river their support from the Soviets was inadequate and the main Soviet force did not follow them 142 One of the reasons given for the collapse of the Uprising was the reluctance of the Soviet Red Army to help the Polish resistance On 1 August the day of Uprising the Soviet advance was halted by a direct order from the Kremlin 143 Soon afterwards the Soviet tank units stopped receiving any oil from their depots 143 Soviets knew of the planned outbreak from their agents in Warsaw and more importantly directly from the Polish Prime Minister Stanislaw Mikolajczyk who informed them of the Polish Home Army uprising plans 143 144 The Soviet side was informed post factum The Russians learned about possibility for the first time from Mikolajczyk at about 9 p m on 31 July that is about 3 hours after Bor Komorowski had given the order for the insurrection to begin 145 Polish controlled areas of Warsaw after the fall of the Old Town around 10 September 1944 One way or the other the presence of Soviet tanks in nearby Wolomin 15 kilometers to the east of Warsaw had sealed the decision of the Home Army leaders to launch the Uprising However as a result of the initial battle of Radzymin in the final days of July these advance units of the Soviet 2nd Tank Army were pushed out of Wolomin and back about 10 kilometres 6 2 miles 146 147 148 On 9 August Stalin informed Premier Mikolajczyk that the Soviets had originally planned to be in Warsaw by 6 August but a counter attack by four Panzer divisions had thwarted their attempts to reach the city 149 By 10 August the Germans had enveloped and inflicted heavy casualties on the Soviet 2nd Tank Army at Wolomin 20 On 1 August 1944 the underground Polish Home Army being in contact with and loyal to the Polish government in exile in London began offensive operations in Warsaw in an attempt to free the city from the occupying German forces before the Red Army could secure the capital Zygmunt Berling became the deputy commander of the Polish Army in the USSR on 22 July 1944 With his own army stopped on the Vistula River and facing Warsaw itself and without first consulting his Soviet superiors Berling may have independently issued orders to engage the German enemy and to come to the aid of the Polish resistance but it was a small landing without any tactical support from Berling or other Soviet units that could not make a difference in the situation of Warsaw Yet this behaviour may have caused Berlings dismissal from his post soon after 150 When Stalin and Churchill met face to face in October 1944 Stalin told Churchill that the lack of Soviet support was a direct result of a major reverse in the Vistula sector in August which had to be kept secret for strategic reasons 151 All contemporary German sources assumed that the Soviets were trying to link up with the resistance and they believed it was their defence that prevented the Soviet advance rather than a reluctance to advance on the part of the Soviets 152 Nevertheless as part of their strategy the Germans published propaganda accusing both the British and Soviets of abandoning the Poles 153 Picture of the Uprising taken from the opposite side of the Vistula river Kierbedz Bridge viewed from Praga District towards Royal Castle and the Old Town 1944 the rebels were unable to capture the bridges over the Vistula river and thus lost a light hope of connecting with the Red Army The Soviet units which reached the outskirts of Warsaw in the final days of July 1944 had advanced from the 1st Belorussian Front in Western Ukraine as part of the Lublin Brest Offensive between the Lvov Sandomierz Offensive on its left and Operation Bagration on its right 20 These two flanking operations were colossal defeats for the German army and completely destroyed a large number of German formations 20 As a consequence the Germans at this time were desperately trying to put together a new force to hold the line of the Vistula the last major river barrier between the Red Army and Germany proper rushing in units in various stages of readiness from all over Europe These included many infantry units of poor quality 154 and 4 5 high quality Panzer Divisions in the 39th Panzer Corps and 4th SS Panzer Corps 20 pulled from their refits 154 Other explanations for Soviet conduct are possible The Red Army geared for a major thrust into the Balkans through Romania in mid August and a large proportion of Soviet resources was sent in that direction while the offensive in Poland was put on hold 155 Stalin had made a strategic decision to concentrate on occupying Eastern Europe rather than on making a thrust toward Germany 156 The capture of Warsaw was not essential for the Soviets as they had already seized a series of convenient bridgeheads to the south of Warsaw and were concentrating on defending them against vigorous German counterattacks 20 Finally the Soviet High Command may not have developed a coherent or appropriate strategy with regard to Warsaw because they were badly misinformed 157 Propaganda from the Polish Committee of National Liberation minimized the strength of the Home Army and portrayed them as Nazi sympathizers 158 Information submitted to Stalin by intelligence operatives or gathered from the frontline was often inaccurate or omitted key details 159 Possibly because the operatives were unable due to the harsh political climate to express opinions or report facts honestly they deliberately resorted to writing nonsense 160 According to David Glantz military historian and a retired US Army colonel as well as a member of the Russian Federation s Academy of Natural Sciences the Red Army was simply unable to extend effective support to the uprising which began too early regardless of Stalin s political intentions 20 German military capabilities in August early September were sufficient to halt any Soviet assistance to the Poles in Warsaw were it intended 20 In addition Glantz argued that Warsaw would be a costly city to clear of Germans and an unsuitable location as a start point for subsequent Red Army offensives 20 Declassified documents from Soviet archives reveal that Stalin gave instructions to cut off the Warsaw resistance from any outside help The urgent orders issued to the Red Army troops in Poland on 23 August 1944 stipulated that the Home Army units in Soviet controlled areas should be prevented from reaching Warsaw and helping the Uprising their members apprehended and disarmed Only from mid September under pressure from the Western Allies the Soviets began to provide some limited assistance to the resistance 161 Modern Russian historians generally hold the view that the failure of the uprising in Warsaw was caused primarily by the mistakes of the leadership of the uprising They point out that in July 1944 according to the Directive of the command the Soviet troops did not have the goal of attacking Warsaw but only to the suburbs of Warsaw Praga with access to the Vistula river line Since the Soviet command understood that it was unlikely to be possible to capture the bridges over the Vistula and the Germans would blow them up The Soviet forces aimed to advance in the northern direction with the capture of East Prussia and with the priority task of reaching the line of the Vistula and Narew rivers and capturing bridgeheads Then the offensive against East Prussia was to begin from these bridgeheads on the West Bank of the Narew river in the area of Pultusk Serotsk and South and North of Warsaw on the West Bank of the Vistula river in the area of Demblin Zvolen Solec In the future keep in mind to advance in the General direction of Thorn and Lodz 162 Directive of the Headquarters of the Supreme high command to the commander of the 1st Belorussian front Moscow July 27 1944 The headquarters of the Supreme command ORDERS 1 After capturing the area of Brest and Siedlec by the right wing of the front to develop an offensive in the General direction of Warsaw with the task no later than August 5 8 to capture Praga and capture the bridgehead on the West Bank of the Narev river in the area of Pultusk Serotsk The left wing of the front to capture a bridgehead on the West Bank of the Vistula river in the area of Demblin Zvolen solets The captured bridgeheads should be used for a strike in the North West direction in order to collapse the enemy s defenses along the Narev and Vistula rivers and thus facilitate the crossing of the Narev river to the left wing of the 2nd Belorussian front and the Vistula river The Vistula to the Central armies of its front In the future keep in mind to advance in the General direction of Torn and Lodz 2 Establish from 24 00 29 7 the following dividing lines with the 2nd Belorussian front to Rozhan former and further Ciechanow Strasburg Graudenz all points for the 2nd Belorussian inclusive With the 1st Ukrainian front to konske former and then Piotrkow ostruv South West Kalish 20 km both points for the 1st Belorussian front inclusive 3 The responsibility for providing joints with the adjacent fronts remain the same 4 About given orders to convey The Supreme Commander I Stalin Antonov 163 The liberation of Warsaw was planned by a flanking maneuver after the start of a General offensive in the direction of East Prussia and Berlin This is exactly how it happened only in January 1945 The AK leadership made a mistake it took the left flank of the 2nd Tank army which was advancing to north for the vanguard which was allegedly advancing on Warsaw and the order was given to start the uprising which led to defeat A terrible mistake but in essence inevitable if the leadership of the uprising took a political line about the lack of coordination with the Soviet command if the goal was that Warsaw should be freed from the Germans by Polish effort alone 12 hours before the entry of the Soviets into the capital 164 The Soviet command had no deliberate purpose against the Warsaw uprising and categorically denied such accusations 165 Aftermath Home Army soldier from the Mokotow District surrenders to German troops Capitulation Main article Capitulation after the Warsaw Uprising The 9th Army has crushed the final resistance in the southern Vistula circle The resistance fought to the very last bullet German report 23 September T 4924 44 166 By the first week of September both German and Polish commanders realized that the Soviet army was unlikely to act to break the stalemate The Germans reasoned that a prolonged Uprising would damage their ability to hold Warsaw as the frontline the Poles were concerned that continued resistance would result in further massive casualties On 7 September General Rohr proposed negotiations which Bor Komorowski agreed to pursue the following day 167 Over 8 9 and 10 September about 20 000 civilians were evacuated by agreement of both sides and Rohr recognized the right of Home Army soldiers to be treated as military combatants 168 The Poles suspended talks on the 11th as they received news that the Soviets were advancing slowly through Praga 169 A few days later the arrival of the 1st Polish army breathed new life into the resistance and the talks collapsed 170 Surrender of the Warsaw Uprising resistance 5 October 1944 However by the morning of 27 September the Germans had retaken Mokotow 171 Talks restarted on 28 September 172 In the evening of 30 September Zoliborz fell to the Germans 173 The Poles were being pushed back into fewer and fewer streets and their situation was ever more desperate 174 On the 30th Hitler decorated von dem Bach Dirlewanger and Reinefarth while in London General Sosnkowski was dismissed as Polish commander in chief Bor Komorowski was promoted in his place even though he was trapped in Warsaw 175 Bor Komorowski and Prime Minister Mikolajczyk again appealed directly to Rokossovsky and Stalin for a Soviet intervention 176 None came According to Soviet Marshal Georgy Zhukov who was by this time at the Vistula front both he and Rokossovsky advised Stalin against an offensive because of heavy Soviet losses 177 The capitulation order of the remaining Polish forces was finally signed on 2 October All fighting ceased that evening 71 178 According to the agreement the Wehrmacht promised to treat Home Army soldiers in accordance with the Geneva Convention and to treat the civilian population humanely 71 The next day the Germans began to disarm the Home Army soldiers They later sent 15 000 of them to POW camps in various parts of Germany Between 5 000 and 6 000 resistance fighters decided to blend into the civilian population hoping to continue the fight later The entire civilian population of Warsaw was expelled from the city and sent to a transit camp Durchgangslager 121 in Pruszkow 179 Out of 350 000 550 000 civilians who passed through the camp 90 000 were sent to labour camps in the Third Reich 60 000 were shipped to death and concentration camps including Ravensbruck Auschwitz and Mauthausen among others while the rest were transported to various locations in the General Government and released 179 The Eastern Front remained static in the Vistula sector with the Soviets making no attempt to push forward until the Vistula Oder Offensive began on 12 January 1945 Almost entirely destroyed Warsaw was liberated from the Germans on 17 January 1945 by the Red Army and the First Polish Army 71 Destruction of the city Main article Planned destruction of Warsaw The city must completely disappear from the surface of the earth and serve only as a transport station for the Wehrmacht No stone can remain standing Every building must be razed to its foundation SS chief Heinrich Himmler 17 October SS officers conference 97 Warsaw Old Town after the Warsaw Uprising 85 of the city was deliberately destroyed by the German forces The destruction of the Polish capital was planned before the start of World War II On 20 June 1939 while Adolf Hitler was visiting an architectural bureau in Wurzburg am Main his attention was captured by a project of a future German town Neue deutsche Stadt Warschau According to the Pabst Plan Warsaw was to be turned into a provincial German city It was soon included as a part of the great Germanization plan of the East the genocidal Generalplan Ost The failure of the Warsaw Uprising provided an opportunity for Hitler to begin the transformation 180 After the remaining population had been expelled the Germans continued the destruction of the city 7 Special groups of German engineers were dispatched to burn and demolish the remaining buildings According to German plans after the war Warsaw was to be turned into nothing more than a military transit station 97 or even an artificial lake 181 the latter of which the Nazi leadership had already intended to implement for the Soviet Russian capital of Moscow in 1941 182 183 The Brandkommandos arson squads used flamethrowers and Sprengkommandos demolition squads explosives to methodically destroy house after house They paid special attention to historical monuments Polish national archives and places of interest 184 By January 1945 85 of the buildings were destroyed 25 as a result of the Uprising 35 as a result of systematic German actions after the uprising and the rest as a result of the earlier Warsaw Ghetto Uprising and the September 1939 campaign 7 Material losses are estimated at 10 455 buildings 923 historical buildings 94 25 churches 14 libraries including the National Library 81 primary schools 64 high schools University of Warsaw and Warsaw University of Technology and most of the historical monuments 7 Almost a million inhabitants lost all of their possessions 7 The exact amount of losses of private and public property as well as pieces of art monuments of science and culture is unknown but considered enormous Studies done in the late 1940s estimated total damage at about US 30 billion 185 In 2004 President of Warsaw Lech Kaczynski later President of Poland established a historical commission to estimate material losses that were inflicted upon the city by German authorities The commission estimated the losses as at least US 31 5 billion at 2004 values 186 Those estimates were later raised to US 45 billion 2004 US dollars and in 2005 to 54 6 billion 187 Warsaw c 1950 still witness to the massive World War II destruction of the city Northwest view of the Krasinski Gardens and Swietojerska Street Casualties including both Uprising civilian soldiers and civilians The exact number of casualties on both sides is unknown Estimates of Polish casualties fall into roughly similar ranges Side Civilians KIA WIA MIA POWPolish 150 000 200 000 188 15 200 7 16 000 189 16 200 190 5 000 7 6 000 191 25 000 188 all declared dead 189 15 000 7 189 German 192 unknown 2 000 to 17 000 9 000 0 to 7 000 2 000 7 to 5 000 189 Estimates of German casualties differ widely Though the figure of 9 000 German WIA is generally accepted and generates no controversy there is little agreement as to German irrecoverable losses KIA MIA Until the 1990s the Eastern and the Western historiography stuck to two widely different estimates the former claiming 17 000 and the latter 2 000 original research The 17 000 figure was first coined by a 1947 issue of a Warsaw historical journal Dzieje Najnowsze allegedly based on estimates made by Bach Zelewski when interrogated by his Polish captors and divided into 10 000 KIA and 7 000 MIA This figure was initially repeated in West Germany 193 However in 1962 a scholarly monograph by Hanns Krannhals coined the 2 000 estimate 194 Until the late 20th century the 17 000 figure was consistently and unequivocally quoted in the Polish though also in the East German and Soviet historiography original research be it encyclopedias 195 scientific monographs 196 or more popular works 197 It was at times paired or otherwise related to the figure of 16 000 German Warsaw KIA MIA listed by the so called Gehlen report of April 1945 198 The 2 000 figure was accepted in West Germany and generally spilled over to Western historiography 199 exceptions were studies written in English by the Poles 200 and some other works 201 Komorowski who in 1995 opted for 16 000 changed his mind and 10 years later cautiously subscribed to the 2 000 figure 202 also scholars like Sawicki 203 and Rozwadowski 204 tentatively followed suit A popular work of Baczyk 205 who concludes that 3 000 is the maximum conceivable though not the most probable figure In his 2016 analysis Sowa dismissed the 17 000 figure as entirely improbable and suggested that its longevity and popularity resulted from manipulation on part of apologists of the Rising 206 In the Russian historiography it is given clear preference original research be it in encyclopedias and dictionaries 207 or general works 208 the same opinion might be found in Belorussia 209 The 17 000 estimate made it also to the English literature quoted with no reservations in popular compendia 210 warfare manuals 211 and a handful of other works 212 The figure is advanced also by established institutions like BBC 213 Other works in English offer a number of approaches some quote both sides with no own preference 214 some provide ambiguous descriptions 215 some set 17 000 irrecoverable losses as an upper limit 216 some provide odd numbers perhaps resulting from incompetent quotations 217 and some remain silent on the issue altogether which is the case of the only major English monograph 218 A key argument supporting the 17 000 figure apart from quotations from Bach and Gehlen are total KIA MIA WIA losses sustained by Kampfgruppe Dirlewanger one of a few operational units forming German troops fighting the Poles They are currently calculated at some 3 500 219 if extrapolated they might support the overall 25 000 German casualty estimate original research After the war Main article Cultural representations of the Warsaw Uprising Maly Powstaniec Little Insurrectionist Monument erected just outside Warsaw s medieval city walls in 1981 commemorates the children who fought in the Warsaw Uprising against the German occupation I want to protest against the mean and cowardly attitude adopted by the British press towards the recent rising in Warsaw One was left with the general impression that the Poles deserved to have their bottoms smacked for doing what all the Allied wirelesses had been urging them to do for years past First of all a message to English left wing journalists and intellectuals generally Do remember that dishonesty and cowardice always have to be paid for Don t imagine that for years on end you can make yourself the boot licking propagandist of the Soviet regime or any other regime and then suddenly return to mental decency Once a whore always a whore George Orwell 1 September 1944 220 221 By deciding to act without co ordinating their plans with the Soviet High Command authors of the insurrection assumed heavy responsibility for the fate of Warsaw and greatly contributed to the ensuing tragedy of this city and its people They failed to realise that a badly armed Home Army could not in the summer of 1944 successfully do battle with the Germans while simultaneously trying to oppose the Russians and the Polish Communists politically Bor Komorowski s and Jankowski s plans were too complicated and too hazardous to succeed in the existing political and military situation Jan M Ciechanowski Historian participant of the Warsaw uprising 44 Most soldiers of the Home Army including those who took part in the Warsaw Uprising were persecuted after the war captured by the NKVD or UB political police They were interrogated and imprisoned on various charges such as that of fascism 222 223 Many of them were sent to Gulags executed or disappeared 222 Between 1944 and 1956 all of the former members of Battalion Zoska were incarcerated in Soviet prisons 224 In March 1945 a staged trial of 16 leaders of the Polish Underground State held by the Soviet Union took place in Moscow the Trial of the Sixteen 225 226 227 228 The Government Delegate together with most members of the Council of National Unity and the C i C of the Armia Krajowa were invited by Soviet general Ivan Serov with agreement of Joseph Stalin to a conference on their eventual entry to the Soviet backed Provisional Government They were presented with a warrant of safety yet they were arrested in Pruszkow by the NKVD on 27 and 28 March 229 230 Leopold Okulicki Jan Stanislaw Jankowski and Kazimierz Puzak were arrested on the 27th with 12 more the next day A Zwierzynski had been arrested earlier They were brought to Moscow for interrogation in the Lubyanka 231 232 233 After several months of brutal interrogation and torture 234 they were presented with the forged accusations of collaboration with Nazis and planning a military alliance with Germany 235 236 Many resistance fighters captured by the Germans and sent to POW camps in Germany were later liberated by British American and Polish forces and remained in the West Among those were the leaders of the uprising Tadeusz Bor Komorowski and Antoni Chrusciel 237 The Soviet government labelled all S S Sturmbrigade R O N A Russkaya Osvoboditelnaya Narodnaya Armiya soldiers as traitors and those who were repatriated were tried and sentenced to detention in Soviet prisons or executed In the 1950s and 1960s in the USSR dozens of other former R O N A members were found some of them also sentenced to death 238 Monument to the resistance fighters who fought in the Warsaw Uprising The facts of the Warsaw Uprising were inconvenient to Stalin and were twisted by propaganda of the People s Republic of Poland which stressed the failings of the Home Army and the Polish government in exile and forbade all criticism of the Red Army or the political goals of Soviet strategy 239 In the immediate post war period the very name of the Home Army was censored and most films and novels covering the 1944 Uprising were either banned or modified so that the name of the Home Army did not appear 239 From the 1950s on Polish propaganda depicted the soldiers of the Uprising as brave but the officers as treacherous reactionary and characterized by disregard of the losses 239 240 The first publications on the topic taken seriously in the West were not issued until the late 1980s In Warsaw no monument to the Home Army was built until 1989 Instead efforts of the Soviet backed People s Army were glorified and exaggerated citation needed By contrast in the West the story of the Polish fight for Warsaw was told as a tale of valiant heroes fighting against a cruel and ruthless enemy It was suggested that Stalin benefited from Soviet non involvement as opposition to eventual Soviet control of Poland was effectively eliminated when the Nazis destroyed the partisans 241 The belief that the Uprising failed because of deliberate procrastination by the Soviet Union contributed to anti Soviet sentiment in Poland Memories of the Uprising helped to inspire the Polish labour movement Solidarity which led a peaceful opposition movement against the Communist government during the 1980s 242 1989 to present Until the 1990s historical analysis of the events remained superficial because of official censorship and lack of academic interest 243 Research into the Warsaw Uprising was boosted by the revolutions of 1989 due to the abolition of censorship and increased access to state archives As of 2004 update however access to some material in British Polish and ex Soviet archives was still restricted 244 Further complicating the matter is the British claim that the records of the Polish government in exile were destroyed 245 and material not transferred to British authorities after the war was burnt by the Poles in London in July 1945 246 247 In Poland 1 August is now a celebrated anniversary On 1 August 1994 Poland held a ceremony commemorating the 50th anniversary of the Uprising to which both the German and Russian presidents were invited 15 Though the German President Roman Herzog attended the Russian President Boris Yeltsin declined the invitation other notable guests included the U S Vice President Al Gore 15 248 Herzog on behalf of Germany was the first German statesman to apologize for German atrocities committed against the Polish nation during the Uprising 248 During the 60th anniversary of the Uprising in 2004 official delegations included German Chancellor Gerhard Schroder UK deputy Prime Minister John Prescott and US Secretary of State Colin Powell Pope John Paul II sent a letter to the mayor of Warsaw Lech Kaczynski on this occasion 249 Russia once again did not send a representative 249 A day before 31 July 2004 the Warsaw Uprising Museum opened in Warsaw 249 At present Poland largely lacks a critical view of the leaders of the 1944 Warsaw uprising The reasons for the defeat of the uprising are mainly seen in external factors the lack of sufficient support from the USSR and to a lesser extent from the United States and Great Britain The poor relations between modern Russia and Poland in this case are an additional argument for such views Meanwhile in Poland there is a different view of the Warsaw uprising presented for example in 1974 by Jan M Ciechanowski the historian and participant of the Warsaw uprising His views were already widely spread in the 1970s although he was not a Communist historian In this view the Warsaw uprising is seen as a manifestation of a long standing historical tradition of Poland in the form of anti Russian discourse using an external factor in this discourse From this point of view the Warsaw uprising was most directed against Russia USSR and was designed to create a confrontation between the United States Britain and the USSR By undertaking the struggle against the Germans said Gen Pelczynski in 1965 the Home Army was defending the independence of Poland threatened by the Russians If the Russians were our allies there would not have been so great an insurrection To its authors the insurrection was a form of political struggle against the entering Muscovites Muscovites a pejorative name for Russians in Poland Jankowski and Bor Komorowski hoped that a strong resolute and unconciliatory attitude to the Russians would produce more fruitful results They believed that only by assuming an intransigent attitude to Stalin and by confronting him as the leaders of insurgent Warsaw would they be able to compel him to treat them as equals and allow them to govern the country after liberation In their view the adoption of any less robust course of action would amount to political suicide The insurrection was to be their moment of triumph in the event it was precisely the absence of military co operation between the Polish and Russian forces which turned it instead into a time of defeat and destruction 250 Piotr Zychowicz caused a storm of outrage in with his book The Madness of 44 for calling the Uprising a gigantic useless sacrifice Zychowicz criticized the leadership of the Home Army for an exercise of poor judgment that led to the death of thousands of people 251 A well known Polish publicist and philosopher Bronislaw Lagowski in one of his interviews called the approach in which the Warsaw uprising is considered a moral victory and is associated with the democratization of Polish society absurd According to him the cult of an event that caused huge losses especially a cult that is not sad but joyful it is so disconnected from life that we can talk about a painful state of minds Recently the attitude towards the Warsaw events has begun to change in Poland According to Piskorsky Director of the European center for geopolitical analysis in Warsaw this was a reaction to the way right wing politicians used the symbolism associated with the uprising for their purely practical purposes According to Radziwinowicz chief correspondent Bureau of Gazeta Wyborcza in Moscow now part of Polish society is beginning to rethink much of what concerns the Warsaw uprising This is a reflection on the terrible tragedy of the people Suddenly at the very end of the war when it seemed that everything was already over the city is dying the capital is dying 200 thousand people are dying says a Polish journalist I myself was brought up on the tradition of the Warsaw uprising and it was something sacred for me for a long time There was heroism tragedy However now is the time to ask questions who is to blame and whether it was necessary to start the uprising at all said Radzivinovich 252 Photo gallery Bunker in front of gate to University of Warsaw converted to a base for Wehrmacht viewed from Krakowskie Przedmiescie Street July 1944 Members of the SS Sonderregiment Dirlewanger fighting in Warsaw pictured in window of a townhouse at Focha Street August 1944 German SS Gruppenfuhrer Heinz Reinefarth the Butcher of Wola left in Cossack headgear with Jakub Bondarenko commander of Kuban Cossack Infantry regiment Warsaw Uprising Azerbaijani SS volunteer formation during the Warsaw Uprising even the collaborationist units were well armed Resistance fighters from Chrobry I Battalion in front of German police station Nordwache at the junction of Chlodna and Zelazna Streets 3 August 1944 only one rebel has a weapon Barricade erected such on Napoleon Square In background captured Hetzer tank destroyer 3 August 1944 One of the German POW s captured during the fighting at the PAST building located on Zielna Street 20 August 1944 German soldier killed by the resistance during the attack on Mala PAST building 23 August 1944 Home Army soldiers from Ruczaj Battalion after a fire fight for the Mala PAST building take pictures at the main entrance at Piusa Street next to a bunker 24 August 1944 Polish victims of the Wola massacre burned by members of Verbrennungskommando People of Wola leaving the city after the uprisingPopular culture music television and cinemaNumerous works have been influenced by and devoted to the Uprising In literature they include Kolumbowie Rocznik 20 novel by Polish writer Roman Bratny 253 In television they include documentary film The Ramparts of Warsaw 1943 44 produced for the 70th anniversary of the Warsaw Uprising with support from the European Commission The Warsaw Uprising is often confused with the revolt in the Warsaw Ghetto which took place a year earlier in the Spring of 1943 Three young Europeans Alexandra France Maria Poland and Roman Germany meet in Warsaw to enquire into these events here they meet witnesses who took part in the Warsaw Uprising or lived in the ghetto Beneath their white hair we can recognise the men and women who formed the living ramparts of freedom in the face of Nazism Meanwhile the Polish World War II TV drama series Time of Honor Czas honoru Series 7 which aired in 2014 was entirely devoted to the Warsaw Uprising citation needed In cinema they include Kanal a 1956 Polish film directed by Andrzej Wajda It was the first film made about the Warsaw Uprising telling the story of a company of Home Army resistance fighters escaping the Nazi onslaught through the city s sewers 254 A 2014 film Warsaw Uprising directed by Jan Komasa and produced by the Warsaw Uprising Museum was created entirely from restored and colourised film footage taken during the uprising 255 Komasa followed this up with Warsaw 44 also known as Miasto 44 City 44 a story of love friendship and the pursuit of adventure during the bloody and brutal reality of the uprising which was a huge box office success in Poland in 2014 256 Roman Polanski s film The Pianist also briefly shows the uprising through the eyes of its main character Wladyslaw Szpilman Polish director Malgorzata Brama stated he intends to shoot a docudrama about the Warsaw Uprising 257 Niki Caro s 2017 film The Zookeeper s Wife depicts the Warsaw Uprising and Jan Zabinski s participation in it At the end of the film the viewer is informed that Warsaw was destroyed during the war and that only six percent of the Polish capital s prewar population was still in the city after the uprising citation needed Warsaw a 2019 turn based tactical role playing videogame developed and published by Polish studio Pixelated Milk set during the uprising 258 The second film of Yuri Ozerov s epic Soldiers of Freedom of 1977 is mostly devoted to the uprising in Warsaw The presentation of historical events is given from the Soviet point of view Notable peopleStanislaw Bobr Tylingo 1919 2001 Polish born historianSee also Poland portal World War II portal War portalChronicles of Terror Cross of the Warsaw Uprising Cultural representations of the Warsaw Uprising Krakow Uprising 1944 Monument to Victims of the Wola Massacre Ochota massacre Polish contribution to World War II Polish material losses during World War II Robinson Crusoes of Warsaw Tchorek plaques Verbrennungskommando Warschau Wola massacre Wola Massacre Memorial on Gorczewska StreetNotes and references Davies Norman 2008 2004 Outbreak Rising 44 The Battle for Warsaw London Pan Books ISBN 978 0330475747 via Google Books preview Neil Orpen 1984 Airlift to Warsaw The Rising of 1944 University of Oklahoma ISBN 83 247 0235 0 a b Borodziej Wlodzimierz 2006 The Warsaw Uprising of 1944 Translated by Barbara Harshav University of Wisconsin Press ISBN 978 0 299 20730 4 p 74 a b Borowiec Andrew 2001 Destroy Warsaw Hitler s punishment Stalin s revenge Westport Connecticut Praeger ISBN 0 275 97005 1 p 6 Borodziej p 75 a b Comparison of Forces Warsaw Rising Museum a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q FAQ Warsaw Uprising Retrieved 3 February 2009 Tadeusz Sawicki Rozkaz zdlawic powstanie Niemcy i ich sojusznicy w walce z powstaniem warszawskim Warszawa Bellona 2010 ISBN 978 83 11 11892 8 pp 189 Tadeusz Bor Komorowski Armia Podziemna Warszawa Bellona 1994 ISBN 83 11 08338 X pp 443 Marek Getter Straty ludzkie i materialne w Powstaniu Warszawskim Biuletyn IPN 8 9 43 44 sierpien wrzesien 2004 s 70 a b Ilu Niemcow naprawde zginelo w Powstaniu Warszawskim Pawel Stachnik ciekawostkihistoryczne pl 31 07 2017 Accessed 12 September 2019 Meng Michael 2011 Shattered Spaces Encountering Jewish Ruins in Postwar Germany and Poland Harvard University Press p 69 ISBN 9780674053038 Bartrop Paul R Grimm Eve E 2019 Perpetrating the Holocaust Leaders Enablers and Collaborators ABC CLIO p 12 ISBN 9781440858963 Wolfson Leah 2015 Jewish Responses to Persecution 1944 1946 Rowman amp Littlefield p 534 ISBN 978144224337 8 a b c Stanley Blejwas A Heroic Uprising in Poland 2004 Duraczynski Eugeniusz Terej Jerzy Janusz 1974 Europa podziemna 1939 1945 Europe underground 1939 1945 in Polish Warszawa Wiedza Powszechna OCLC 463203458 Davies 2008 pp 268 271 Warsaw Uprising 1944 www warsawuprising com accessed 12 September 2019 Koestler letter in Tribune magazine 15 September 1944 reprinted in Orwell Collected Works I Have Tried to Tell the Truth p 374 a b c d e f g h i j k l David M Glantz 2001 The Soviet German War 1941 1945 Myths and Realities A Survey Essay Archived 29 October 2013 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved on 24 October 2013 Kochanski Halik 2013 The Eagle Unbowed Poland and the Poles in the Second World War pp 417 418 ISBN 978 1846143588 a b c d Stalin s Private Airfields The diplomacy surrounding the AAF mission to aid the Poles and the mission itself is extensively covered in Richard C Lukas s The Strange Allies The United States and Poland 1941 1945 pp 61 85 Warsaw Rising Museum Frank s diary quoted in Davies Norman 2004 Rising 44 The Battle for Warsaw London Pan Books ISBN 0 330 48863 5 p 367 sojusznik naszych sojusznikow Instytut Zachodni Przeglad zachodni v 47 no 3 4 1991 Jan M Ciechanowski The Warsaw Rising of 1944 Cambridge University Press Cambridge London 1974 p 137 a b c d e The Warsaw Rising polandinexile com Davies pp 48 115 Davies pp 206 208 Winston S Churchill The Second World War Vol 6 Chapter IX The Martyrdom of Warsaw 1955 Cassel The NKVD Against the Home Army Armia Krajowa Warsaw Uprising based on Andrzej Paczkowski Poland the Enemy Nation pp 372 375 in Black Book of Communism Crimes Terror Repression Harvard University Press London 1999 Davies p 209 Borowiec p 4 Davies p 213 Davies pp 210 211 a b c Warsaw Uprising of 1944 Part 1 Introduction Poloniatoday com Archived from the original on 28 January 2008 Retrieved 3 February 2009 Muzeum Powstania Warszawskiego 1944 pl Davies p 117 Borowiec p 5 Borowiec p 4 Davies pp 164 165 The Tragedy of Warsaw and its Documentation by the Duchess of Atholl D B E Hon D C L LL D F R C M 1945 London a b Pomian Andrzej The Warsaw Rising A Selection of Documents London 1945 Warsaw Uprising Documents Radio Station Kosciuszko warsawuprising com Wlodzimierz Borodziej 2006 The Warsaw Uprising of 1944 University of Wisconsin Press pp 69 70 ISBN 978 0 299 20730 4 Jan M Ciechanowski The Warsaw Rising of 1944 Cambridge University Press Cambridge London 1974 pp 239 240 a b Ciechanowski Jan M 1974 The Warsaw Rising of 1944 London Cambridge Cambridge University Press p 313 Davies p 232 Forgotten Holocaust The Poles under German Occupation 1939 1944 Richard C Lukas Hippocrene Books New York 1997 ISBN 0 7818 0901 0 Arnold Forster Mark 1973 repr 1983 The World at War London Collins Thames Television repr Thames Methuen ISBN 0 423 00680 0 p 178 Borkiewicz p 31 Chodakiewicz Marek April 2002 Der Warschauer Aufstand 1944 The Sarmatian Review Issue 02 2002 pp 875 880 Borowiec p 70 The exact number of Poles of Jewish ancestry and Jews to take part in the uprising is a matter of controversy General Tadeusz Bor Komorowski estimated the number of Jewish Poles in Polish ranks at 1 000 other authors place it at between several hundred and 2 000 See for example Edward Kossoy Zydzi w Powstaniu Warszawskim in Polish Task Force for International Cooperation on Holocaust Education Remembrance and Research a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help The United States Holocaust Memorial Museum Encyclopedia of Camps and Ghettos 1933 1945 Geoffrey P Megargee Martin Dean and Mel Hecker Volume I part B pages 1514 quote The vast majority of liberated prisoners volunteered to fight in the uprising and served the revolt in various capacities A special Jewish fighting platoon and a Jewish brigade to construct barricades were formed from liberated prisoners These units sustained heavy losses The morale of the former prisoners was corroded however when antisemitism reared its ugly head in the fighting units antisemitic Poles even killed several liberated prisoners who volunteered for combat units a b in Polish Stowarzyszenie Pamieci Powstania Warszawskiego 1944 Struktura oddzialow Armii Krajowej poczytaj pl Slowacy w Powstaniu Warszawskim Wybor zrodel Ksiazka Ksiegarnia internetowa Poczytaj pl Slovaks in the Warsaw Uprising poczytaj pl Retrieved 5 May 2021 Yaacov Falkov For our freedom and yours Discovering the transnational dimension of the Warsaw Uprising August October 1944 Transnational Resistance Blog 24 8 2016 permanent dead link NW36 Other Polish Vehicles Mailer fsu edu Archived from the original on 18 April 2009 Retrieved 3 February 2009 Polish Armored Fighting Vehicles of the Warsaw Uprising 1 August to 2 October 1944 Achtung Panzer Archived from the original on 14 February 2009 Retrieved 3 February 2009 Warsaw Uprising of 1944 Part 6 Warsaw Aflame Poloniatoday com Archived from the original on 28 January 2008 Retrieved 3 February 2009 Mariusz Skotnicki Miotacz ognia wzor K in Nowa Technika Wojskowa 7 98 p 59 ISSN 1230 1655 Improvised Armored Car Kubus Achtung Panzer Archived from the original on 14 February 2009 Retrieved 3 February 2009 All figures estimated by Aleksander Gieysztor and quoted in Bartoszewski Wladyslaw T 1984 Dni Walczacej Stolicy kronika Powstania Warszawskiego in Polish Warsaw Muzeum Powstania Warszawskiego Swiat Ksiazki pp 307 309 ISBN 978 83 7391 679 1 M House Jonathan 2012 A Military History of the Cold War 1944 1962 University of Oklahoma Press Adam Borkiewicz 1957 Powstanie Warszawskie 1944 in Polish Warsaw Wydawnictwo PAX p 40 Borkiewicz p 41 Borowiec p 93 Borowiec p 94 a b Davies pp 666 667 Warsaw Uprising RONA Bronislaw Kaminski warsawuprising com Rolf Michaelis Die SS Sturmbrigade Dirlewanger Vom Warschauer Aufstand bis zum Kessel von Halbe Band II 1 Auflage Verlag Rolf Michaelis 2003 ISBN 3 930849 32 1 Borowiec Andrew 2014 Warsaw Boy A Memoir of a Wartime Childhood Penguin UK p 204 ISBN 978 0241964040 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p Timeline Warsaw Uprising Retrieved 3 February 2009 Borowiec p 79 Davies p 245 Borowiec p 80 Borowiec pp 95 97 Borowiec pp 86 87 Davies p 248 Davies pp 245 247 Bartelski Leslaw M 2000 Praga in Polish Warsaw Fundacja Wystawa Warszawa Walczy 1939 1945 p 182 ISBN 83 87545 33 3 Hanson Joanna 2004 The Civilian Population and the Warsaw Uprising Google Books Cambridge University Press p 79 ISBN 9780521531191 Retrieved 29 July 2014 Wlodzimierz Borodziej Der Warschauer Aufstand 1944 Fischer Frankfurt am Main 2004 p 121 Richie Alexandra 2013 Warsaw 1944 Hitler Himmler and the Warsaw Uprising Farrar Straus and Giroux p 242 ISBN 978 1466848474 in Polish and German various authors Czeslaw Madajczyk 1999 Nie rozwiazane problemy powstania warszawskiego In Stanislawa Lewandowska Bernd Martin ed Powstanie Warszawskie 1944 Warsaw Wydawnictwo Polsko Niemieckie p 613 ISBN 83 86653 08 6 Borowiec pp 89 90 Borowiec p 89 Jan M Ciechanowski The Warsaw Rising of 1944 Cambridge University Press Cambridge London 1974 p 247 a b Geoffrey Roberts Stalin s war Yale university press 2008 p 212 Message from Mr Churchill to Marshal Stalin 21 March 1944 No 256 Correspondence vol i pp 211 12 Warsaw Uprising of 1944 Wlodzimierz Borodziej The University of Wisconsin Press 2006 p 88 Davies p 252 Muzeum Powstania otwarte in Polish BBC Polish edition 2 October 2004 Jerzy Kloczowski 1 August 1998 O Powstaniu Warszawskim opowiada prof Jerzy Kloczowski Gazeta Wyborcza in Polish Warsaw ed Warsaw Uprising of 1944 PART 5 THEY ARE BURNING WARSAW Poloniatoday com 5 August 1944 Archived from the original on 28 January 2008 Retrieved 3 February 2009 The Rape of Warsaw Stosstruppen39 45 tripod com Retrieved 3 February 2009 Steven J Zaloga Richard Hook The Polish Army 1939 45 Osprey Publishing 1982 ISBN 0 85045 417 4 Google Print p 25 The slaughter in Wola at Warsaw Rising Museum Davies pp 254 257 Borodziej p 112 a b c Krystyna Wituska Irene Tomaszewski Inside a Gestapo Prison The Letters of Krystyna Wituska 1942 1944 Wayne State University Press 2006 ISBN 0 8143 3294 3 Google Print p xxii Interview with Director of the Warsaw Uprising Museum Jan Oldakowski Radio Liberty 1 August 2019 https www svoboda org a 30086583 html Davies p 282 Davies pp 333 355 Borowiec pp 132 133 Davies p 354 Davies p 355 Borowiec pp 138 141 Davies p 332 Davies pp 358 359 a b c d e For description of Berling s landings see Warsaw Uprising Timeline Warsaw Uprising Part 10 The Final Agony at the Wayback Machine archived 28 January 2008 and p 27 of Steven J Zaloga s The Polish Army 1939 45 Google Print s excerpt Richard J Kozicki Piotr Wrobel eds Historical Dictionary of Poland 966 1945 Greenwood Press 1996 ISBN 0 313 26007 9 Google Print p 34 Borodziej p 120 and Bell J 2006 Besieged Transaction Publishers ISBN 1 4128 0586 4 p 196 Nawrocka Donska Barbara 1961 Powszedni dzien dramatu in Polish 1 ed Warsaw Czytelnik p 169 Tomczyk Damian 1982 Mlodociani uczestnicy powstania warszawskiego in Polish Lambinowice Muzeum Martyrologii i Walki Jencow Wojennych w Lambinowicach p 70 Ryszard Maczewski Stacja Filtrow Architektura przedwojennej Warszawy in Polish warszawa1939 pl Retrieved 8 May 2007 a b various authors Jadwiga Cieslakiewicz Hanna Falkowska Andrzej Paczkowski 1984 Polska prasa konspiracyjna 1939 1945 i Powstania Warszawskiego w zbiorach Biblioteki Narodowej in Polish Warsaw Biblioteka Narodowa p 205 ISBN 83 00 00842 X collection of documents 1974 Marian Marek Drozdowski Maria Maniakowna Tomasz Strzembosz Wladyslaw Bartoszewski eds Ludnosc cywilna w powstaniu warszawskim in Polish Warsaw Panstwowy Instytut Wydawniczy Zadrozny Stanislaw 1964 Tu Warszawa Dzieje radiostacji powstanczej Blyskawica in Polish London Orbis p 112 Project InPosterum corporate author Warsaw Uprising Radio Lighting Blyskawica Retrieved 8 May 2007 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a author has generic name help Jan Nowak Jezioranski 1982 Courier from Warsaw Detroit Wayne State University Press ISBN 978 0 8143 1725 9 Adam Nogaj Radiostacja Blyskawica in Polish Project InPosterum corporate author 2004 John Ward Warsaw Uprising 1944 Retrieved 14 May 2007 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a author has generic name help Davies p 450 Davies p 452 Davies p 453 Borowiec pp 68 69 a b c d American Radioworks on Warsaw Uprising Americanradioworks publicradio org Retrieved 3 February 2009 a b c AIRDROPS FOR THE RESISTANCE at Warsaw Rising Museum Neil Orpen 1984 Airlift to Warsaw The Rising of 1944 University of Oklahoma p 192 ISBN 83 247 0235 0 ALLIED AIRMEN OVER WARSAW at Warsaw Rising Museum Pincers August 1944 March 1945 The World at War Episode 19 20 March 1974 21 minutes in ITV Stalin was very suspicious of the underground but it was utterly cruel that he wouldn t even try to get supplies in He refused to let our aeroplanes fly and try to drop supplies for several weeks And that was a shock to all of us I think it played a role in all our minds as to the heartlessness of the Russians Averell Harriman U S Ambassador to Russia 1943 46 Kamil Tchorek Escaped British Airman Was Hero of Warsaw Uprising Warsaw Uprising CNN Special 26 August Retrieved 11 April 2007 Borodziej p 121 Davies p 377 Davies p 377 Combat Chronology of the US Army Air Forces September 1944 17 18 19 copied from USAF History Publications Archived 18 November 2009 at the Wayback Machine amp WWII combat chronology pdf Archived 10 September 2008 at the Wayback Machine Davies p 392 Davies p 391 Davies p 381 Davies p 359 Churchill 1953 pp 144 145 Doklad komandovaniya 1 go Belorusskogo fronta Verhovnomu glavnokomanduyushemu I V Stalinu o masshtabah pomoshi povstancam Varshavy ot 2 October 1944 001013 op sekretno cit po Zenon Klishko Varshavskoe vosstanie Stati rechi vospominaniya dokumenty M Politizdat 1969 pp 265 266 N Davies Rising 44 2005 Jonathan M House A Military History of the Cold War 1944 1962 University of Oklahoma Press 2012 Davies p 304 SS The Waffen SS War in Russia 1941 45 Relevant page viewable via Google book search Borowiec pp 148 151 a b c Jan Nowak Jezioranski 31 July 1993 Biale plamy wokol Powstania Gazeta Wyborcza in Polish 177 13 Retrieved 14 May 2007 according to Polish documents Mikolajczyk informed the Soviet foreign minister Molotov at 9 00 pm on 31 July Ciechanowski 1974 p 68 Jan M Ciechanowski The Warsaw Rising of 1944 Cambridge University Press Cambridge London 1974 p 68 The Soviet Conduct of Tactical Maneuver Spearhead of the Offensive by David M Glantz Map of the front lines on 3 August 1944 Google Print p 175 The Soviet Conduct of Tactical Maneuver Spearhead of the Offensive by David M Glantz Google Print p 173 Map of 2nd Tank Army operations map Official statement of Mikolajczyk quoted in Borowiec p 108 Michta Andrew 1990 Red Eagle the army in Polish politics 1944 1988 Stanford Calif Hoover Institution Press ISBN 978 0 8179 8862 3 p 33 Berling was transferred to the War Academy in Moscow where he remained until returning to Poland in 1947 where he organized and directed the Academy of General Staff Akademia Sztabu Generalnego He retired in 1953 Davies p 444 Davies p 283 Davies pp 282 283 a b Bartoszewski Wladyslaw T 1984 Dni Walczacej Stolicy kronika Powstania Warszawskiego in Polish Warsaw Muzeum Powstania Warszawskiego Swiat Ksiazki ISBN 978 83 7391 679 1 Davies p 320 Davies p 417 Davies p 418 Davies pp 440 441 e g Davies pp 154 155 388 389 Davies p 422 Leonid Gibianskii Norman Naimark The Soviet Union and the establishment of communist regimes in Eastern Europe 1944 1954 A Documentary Collection The National Council for Eurasian and East European Research 2004 pp iii 12 52 A V Isaev M I Meltyuhov M E Morozov Mify Velikoj Otechestvennoj sbornik Moskva Yauza 2010 str 237 A V Isaev M I Meltyukhov M E Morozov Myths of the Great Patriotic war collection Yauza 2010 page 237 Russkij arhiv Velikaya Otechestvennaya Tom 14 3 1 SSSR i Polsha M TERRA 1994 c 201 Russian archive the Great Patriotic war Volume 14 3 1 USSR and Poland Moscow TERRA 1994 p 201 Jan M Ciechanowski The Warsaw Rising of 1944 Cambridge University Press Cambridge London 1974 p IX Rokossovskij K K Soldatskij dolg M Voenizdat 1988 c 282 Rokossovsky K K a Soldier s duty Moscow Military Publishing 1988 p 282 Borkiewicz p 617 Bartoszewski Aneks p 282 Translation from Nad Wisla zostal zlamany przez 9 armie ostatni opor powstancow ktorzy walczyli az do ostatniego naboju Davies p 330 Davies pp 332 334 Davies p 353 Davies p 358 Borodziej p 125 Borowiec p 165 Davies p 400 Borodziej p 126 Borowiec p 169 Davies pp 401 402 Davies pp 408 409 Davies pp 409 411 The Memoirs of Marshal Zhukov London 1971 pp 551 552 quoted in Davies pp 420 421 Davies p 427 a b Zaborski Zdzislaw 2004 Tedy przeszla Warszawa Epilog powstania warszawskiego Pruszkow Durchgangslager 121 6 VIII 10 X 1944 in Polish Warsaw Askon p 55 ISBN 83 87545 86 4 Niels Gutschow Barbarta Klain Vernichtung und Utopie Stadtplanung Warschau 1939 1945 Hamburg 1994 ISBN 3 88506 223 2 Peter K Gessner For over two months Archived 3 December 2005 at the Wayback Machine Oscar Pinkus 2005 The war aims and strategies of Adolf Hitler MacFarland amp Company Inc Publishers p 228 1 Fabian Von Schlabrendorff 1947 They Almost Killed Hitler Based on the Personal Account of Fabian Von Schlabrendorf Gero v S Gaevernitz p 35 2 Anthony M Tung Preserving the World s Great Cities The Destruction and Renewal of the Historic Metropolis Three Rivers Press New York 2001 ISBN 0 517 70148 0 See Chapter Four Warsaw The Heritage of War online excerpt Archived 5 October 2008 at the Wayback Machine Vanessa Gera Warsaw bloodbath still stirs emotions Chicago Sun Times 1 August 2004 Warszawa szacuje straty wojenne in Polish Retrieved 16 March 2007 See the following pages on the official site of Warsaw Raport o stratach wojennych Warszawy LISTOPAD 2004 Straty Warszawy w albumie permanent dead link and Straty wojenne Warszawy Archived 6 September 2009 at the Wayback Machine a b Borowiec p 179 a b c d Jerzy Kirchmayer 1978 Powstanie warszawskie in Polish Warsaw Ksiazka i Wiedza p 576 ISBN 83 05 11080 X Inst Historyczny im Gen Sikorskiego w Londynie 1950 Polskie sily zbrojne w drugiej wojnie swiatowej in Polish Vol III London Inst Historyczny im Gen Sikorskiego p 819 Kirchmayer p 460 The number includes all troops fighting under German command including Germans Azerbaijanis Hungarians Russians Ukrainians Cossacks etc For detailed discussion of various figures see the text in this section e g a German scholar specialized in Polish history Hans E Roos in Der Tag of 01 08 1954 repeated the 17 000 KIA MIA figure referred after Klaus Peter Friedrich Kontaminierte Erinnerung Vom Einfluss der Kriegspropaganda auf das Gedenken an die Warschauer Aufstande von 1943 und 1944 in Zeitschrift fur Ostmitteleuropa Forschung 55 3 2008 p 427 auf deutscher Seite wahrend des Aufstandes 2 000 Angehorige deutsch gefuhrer Verbande gefallen und 9 000 verwunder worden sind see Hanns von Krannhals Der Warschauer Aufstand Frankfurt a M 1962 p 215 Krannhals dismissed the 17 000 figure as Bach s overestimates which unfortunately made it to the Polish literature see e g Kazimierz Sobczak ed Encyklopedia II wojny swiatowej Warszawa 1975 p 626 see e g Jerzy Kirchmayer Powstanie Warszawskie Warszawa 1978 ISBN ISBN 830511080X p 576 see e g Wladyslaw Bartoszewski 1859 dni Warszawy Warszawa 1982 ISBN 8370061524 p 758 see e g Krzysztof Komorowski Militarne aspekty powstania warszawskiego in Marek M Drozdowski ed Powstanie Warszawskie z perspektywy polwiecza Warszawa 1995 ISBN 8386301104 p 129 see e g Gunther Deschner Warsaw rising New York 1972 p 175 see e g Janusz Kazimierz Zawodny Nothing But Honour The Story of the Warsaw Uprising 1944 Washington 1978 ISBN 9780817968311 see e g Congressional Record Proceedings and Debates of the US Congress Washington 1983 p 16309 Krzysztof Komorowski Bitwa o Warszawe 44 Warszawa 2004 ISBN 9788373991330 p 271 Tadeusz Sawicki Rozkaz zdlawic Powstanie Warszwa 2001 ISBN 9788311092846 p 189 Piotr Rozwadowski Warszawa 1944 1945 Warszawa 2006 ISBN 8311104808 pp 110 111 Norbert Baczyk Ilu naprawde poleglo w powstaniu warszawskim in Tygodnik Polityka 42 2014 pp 54 56 Andrzej Leon Sowa Kto wydal wyrok na miasto Krakow 2016 ISBN 9788308060957 pp 617 618 see e g the entry Armiya Krajova in Andrej Golubev Dmitrij Lobanov Velikaya Otechestvennaya vojna 1941 1945 gg Enciklopedicheskij slovar Moskva 2017 ISBN 9785040341412 see e g Andrej Parshev Viktor Stepakov Ne tam i ne togda Kogda nachalas i gde zakonchilas Vtoraya mirovaya Moskva 2017 ISBN 9785457906037 p 437 Belaruskaya encyklapedyya vol 4 Minsk 1997 ISBN 9789851100909 p 17 The entry claims that total losses suffered by the Germans when fighting the Poles and stated as 26 000 were recorded by the 9th Army Steve Crawford The Eastern Front Day by Day 1941 1945 A Photographic Chronology New York 2012 ISBN 9781908410245 referred after the Russian translation ISBN 9785457409637 p 264 Milan N Vego Joint Operational Warfare Theory and Practice Tampa 2009 ISBN 9781884733628 p II 36 Philip Cooke Ben H Shepherd eds Hitler s Europe Ablaze Occupation Resistance and Rebellion during World War II New York 2014 ISBN 9781632201591 p 341 compare August 1 entry in BBC On This Day service available here Anthony James Joes Resisting Rebellion The History and Politics of Counterinsurgency Lexington 2006 ISBN 9780813191706 p 48 German casualties totalled over 17 000 soldiers Zuzanna Bogumil Joanna Wawrzyniak Tim Buchen Christian Ganzer The Enemy on Display The Second World War in Eastern European Museums New York 2015 ISBN 9781782382188 p 64 German losses may have been as high as 17 000 dead and missing Alan Axelrod Jack A Kingston Encyclopedia of World War II vol 1 New York 2007 ISBN 9780816060221 p 872 German losses amounted to some 10 000 dead 9 000 wounded Stephan Lehnstaedt Occupation in the East The Daily Lives of German Occupiers in Warsaw and Minsk 1939 1944 New York 2016 ISBN 9781785333248 p 242 Norman Davies Rising 44 London 2003 ISBN 9780333905685 Rolf Michaelis Das SS Sonderkommando Dirlewanger Der Einsatz in Weissrussland 1941 1944 Dusseldorf 2012 ISBN 9783895557644 The author does not provide explicit Dirlewanger s losses sustained when in combat against the Poles yet his various detailed and general figures scattered across the book suggest an estimate ranging from 3 280 to 3 770 Orwell in Tribune As I Please and Other Writings 1943 7 by George Orwell Compiled and edited by Paul Anderson Politicos 2006 George Orwell As I Please column in Tribune 1 September 1944 Accessed 26 November 2012 a b Andrzej Paczkowski Poland the Enemy Nation pp 372 375 in Black Book of Communism Crimes Terror Repression Harvard University Press London See online excerpt Michal Zajac Warsaw Uprising 5 pm 1 August 1944 Retrieved on 4 July 2007 Zolnierze Batalionu Armii Krajowej Zoska represjonowani w latach 1944 1956 Instytut Pamieci Narodowej Warszawa 2008 ISBN 978 83 60464 92 2 Prazmowska A 2004 Civil war in Poland 1942 1948 Palgrave ISBN 0 333 98212 6 p 115 Malcher G C 1993 Blank Pages Pyrford Press ISBN 1 897984 00 6 p 73 Mikolajczyk S 1948 The pattern of Soviet domination Sampson Low Marston amp Co p 125 Garlinski J 1985 Poland in the Second World War Macmillan ISBN 0 333 39258 2 p 324 Prazmowska A 2004 Civil war in Poland 1942 1948 Palgrave ISBN 0 333 98212 6 p 116 Michta A 1990 Red Eagle Stanford University ISBN 0 8179 8862 9 p 39 Garlinski J 1985 Poland in the Second World War Macmillan ISBN 0 333 39258 2 pp 325 326 Umiastowski R 1946 Poland Russia and Great Britain 1941 1945 Hollis amp Carter pp 462 464 Piesakowski T 1990 The fate of Poles in the USSR 1939 1989 Gryf pp 198 199 Garlinski J 1985 Poland in the Second World War Macmillan ISBN 0 333 39258 2 p 335 Garlinski J 1985 Poland in the Second World War Macmillan ISBN 0 333 39258 2 p 336 Umiastowski R 1946 Poland Russia and Great Britain 1941 1945 Hollis amp Carter pp 467 468 Tadeusz Bor Komorowski 1983 Armia podziemna Bellona p 445 GGKEY FGLR6JNT3W9 hG HYaRNPHH nREVEYaRBEMMNI BNIMSh YaNBERYaJYu DEBSJYu rNM PYuYaYaRPEKKYu 1500 DEREI FEMYHM H YaRYuPHJNB apmyaj RU Briansk ru Retrieved 25 October 2013 a b c Sawicki Jacek Zygmunt 2005 Bitwa o prawde Historia zmagan o pamiec Powstania Warszawskiego 1944 1989 in Polish Warsaw Wydawnictwo DiG p 230 ISBN 83 7181 366 X Davies pp 521 522 Arnold Forster Mark 1973 repr 1983 The World at War London Collins Thames Television repr Thames Methuen ISBN 0 423 00680 0 pp 179 180 Davies pp 601 602 Davies p ix Davies p xi Davies p 528 Peszke Michael Alfred October 2006 An Introduction to English Language Literature on the Polish Armed Forces in World War II The Journal of Military History 70 1029 1064 See also Tessa Stirling Daria Nalecz and Tadeusz Dubicki eds 2005 Intelligence Co operation between Poland and Great Britain during World War II Vol 1 The Report of the Anglo Polish Historical Committee London and Portland Oregon Vallentine Mitchell Foreword by Tony Blair and Marek Belka ISBN 0 85303 656 X a b Wladyslaw Bartoszewski interviewed by Marcin Mierzejewski On the Front Lines Warsaw Voice 1 September 2004 a b c 60TH ANNIVERSARY Warsaw Rising Museum Jan M Ciechanowski The Warsaw Rising of 1944 Cambridge University Press Cambridge London 1974 p 280 Rosalia Romaniec The Wounds of Warsaw Deutsche Welle 1 Aug 2014 https www dw com en the wounds of warsaw a 17826319 Alexey Timofeyev BBC Moscow 31 July 2012 Poles rethink the Warsaw uprising https www bbc com russian russia 2012 07 120731 warsaw uprising shtml Censorship Towards the Subject of the Warsaw Uprising in Belles Lettres in 1956 1958 p 149 pdf Kanal IMDb Rapold Nicolas 6 November 2014 Warsaw Uprising Animates Archival Footage The New York Times Powstanie Warszawskie IMDb Warsaw Uprising Docudrama to Begin Filming Archived from the original on 20 May 2013 Retrieved 24 April 2013 Warsaw Gaming Company Retrieved 12 April 2021 Further readingSee also http www polishresistance ak org FurtherR htm http www polishresistance ak org FurtherR htm for more English language books on the topic Bartoszewski Wladyslaw T 1984 Dni Walczacej Stolicy kronika Powstania Warszawskiego in Polish Warsaw Muzeum Powstania Warszawskiego Swiat Ksiazki ISBN 978 83 7391 679 1 Borkiewicz Adam 1957 Powstanie warszawskie 1944 zarys dzialan natury wojskowej in Polish Warsaw PAX Ciechanowski Jan M 1987 Powstanie warszawskie zarys podloza politycznego i dyplomatycznego in Polish Panstwowy Instytut Wydawniczy ISBN 83 06 01135 X Kirchmayer Jerzy 1978 Powstanie warszawskie in Polish Ksiazka i Wiedza ISBN 83 05 11080 X Przygonski Antoni 1980 Powstanie warszawskie w sierpniu 1944 r in Polish Panstwowy Instytut Wydawniczy ISBN 83 01 00293 X Borodziej Wlodzimierz 2006 The Warsaw Uprising of 1944 Translated by Barbara Harshav University of Wisconsin Press ISBN 978 0 299 20730 4 Borowiec Andrew 2001 Destroy Warsaw Hitler s punishment Stalin s revenge Westport Connecticut Praeger ISBN 0 275 97005 1 Ciechanowski Jan M 1974 The Warsaw Uprising of 1944 Cambridge University Press ISBN 0 521 20203 5 Davies Norman 2004 Rising 44 The Battle for Warsaw 1st U S ed New York Viking ISBN 978 0 670 03284 6 Forczyk Robert 2009 Warsaw 1944 Poland s bid for freedom Osprey Campaign Series 205 Osprey Publishing ISBN 978 1 84603 352 0 Karski Jan 2001 Story of a Secret State Safety Harbor Florida Simon Publications ISBN 978 1 931541 39 8 Komorowski Tadeusz 1984 The Secret Army 1st U S ed Nashville Battery Press ISBN 978 0 89839 082 7 Lukas Richard C 2012 The Forgotten Holocaust The Poles Under German Occupation 3rd U S ed New York Hippocrene ISBN 978 0 7818 1302 0 Lukas Richard C 1978 The Strange Allies The United States and Poland 1941 1945 1st U S ed Knoxville University of Tennessee Press ISBN 0 87049 229 2 Blejwas Stanley A Heroic Uprising in Poland Archived from the original on 31 January 2018 Retrieved 2 September 2010 Ziolkowska Boehm Aleksandra 2012 Kaia Heroine of the 1944 Warsaw Rising Lanham MD Lexington Books ISBN 978 0 7391 7270 4 Stanislas Likiernik By Devik s luck Mainstream publishing edinburgh and London 2001 ISBN 1 84018 397 7External links Wikimedia Commons has media related to Warsaw Uprising Warsaw Rising Museum in Warsaw The Warsaw Rising The Warsaw Uprising 1 VIII 1944 Warsaw Uprising CNN Special Warsaw Uprising of 1944 at Polonia Today Warsaw Rising The Forgotten Soldiers of World War II Educator Guide Warsaw Uprising 1944 A source for checking data used in this page and offers of material and help Polish Resistance page provides information and maps which may be freely copied with attribution Warsaw Life A detailed account of the 1944 Warsaw Rising including the facts the politics and first hand accounts Polish Boy Scouts Deliver AK Mail The Warsaw Uprising daily diary written in English by Eugenuisz Melech on the events as they happened Anglo Polish Radio ORLA fm permanent dead link Has broadcast several historical programmes on the Warsaw Uprising in Polish Website summarizing many publications against decision to initiate Warsaw Uprising in Polish Dariusz Baliszewski Przerwac te rzez Tygodnik Wprost Nr 1132 8 August 2004 in German Warschau Der letzte Blick German aerial photos of Warsaw taken during the last days before the Warsaw Uprising Count Ralph Smorczewski Daily Telegraph obituary Interview with Warsaw Uprising veteran Stefan Baluk The State We re in from Radio Netherlands Worldwide Chronicles of Terror collection of civilian testimonies concerning Warsaw Uprising Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Warsaw Uprising amp oldid 1144950392, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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