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{{Short description|War crimes and crimes against humanity committed by the Soviet Union}} | ||
{{EngvarB|date=June 2017}} | |||
{{Use dmy dates|date=June 2017}} | {{Use dmy dates|date=June 2017}} | ||
{{Infobox | {{Infobox civilian attack | ||
|title=Soviet war crimes | | title = Soviet war crimes | ||
|image= |
| image = Katyń, ekshumacja ofiar.jpg | ||
|caption=] 1943 exhumation |
| caption = ] 1943 exhumation<ref name="MSB">{{cite journal|last=Szonert-Binienda|first=Maria|url=http://scholarlycommons.law.case.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1129&context=jil|format=PDF|title=Was Katyn a Genocide?|journal=Case Western Reserve Journal of International Law|publisher=scholarlycommons.law.case.edu|volume=44 |issue=3|date=2012|access-date=18 June 2017|pages=633–717}}</ref> | ||
| date = 1918 to 1991 | |||
| location = {{flatlist | | |||
| headerstyle = background:lavender | |||
*]{{efn|Including massacres at ] and ]}}, ]{{efn|Including massacres at ] and ]}}, ]{{efn|Including the ]}} | |||
| header1 = 1919 to 1991 | |||
*Since 1921: ], ]<ref>{{cite book|last=Chachkhiani|first=Archil|title=The Anti-Bolshevik Uprising of 1921 in Armenia|page=5|url=https://gfsis.org/wp-content/uploads/2023/12/1921-წლის-აჯანყება-სომხეთში-ENG-18.pdf|access-date=21 October 2024}}</ref> | |||
| label2 = Foreign territory | |||
*1936–1939: ] | |||
| data2={{flatlist | | |||
*Since 1939: ]{{efn|Including mass deportations, ], massacres of Polish prisoners of war at ], ] and ],<ref>{{cite book|author=<!--Staff writer(s); no by-line.--> |title=Ocaleni z "nieludzkiej ziemi"|year=2012|language=pl|publisher=]|location=Łódź|page=21|isbn=978-83-63695-00-2}}</ref> ] and the ]}} | |||
*] | |||
*Since 1940: ], ], ]{{efn|Including ] and ]}}, ] | |||
*] | |||
*] | *1942–1944: ] | ||
*Since 1944: ], ]{{efn|Including ]}}, ] | |||
*] | |||
*1945: ]{{efn|Including the ]}}, ] | |||
*] | |||
*1968: ] | |||
*] | |||
*Since 1979: ] | |||
*] | |||
*] | |||
*] | |||
*] | |||
*] | |||
*] | |||
*] | |||
*] | |||
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}} | }} | ||
| type = ], ], ], ], ], ], mass ] | |||
| perpetrators = ] (1918–1922)<br />] (1922–1991) | |||
| motive = | |||
*] | |||
*] | |||
*] | |||
*] | |||
*] | |||
*] | |||
*] | |||
| target = | |||
*], ], ], ] and ] civilians, especially ] | |||
*], ] and ] | |||
*] | |||
*] and civilians | |||
*Political dissidents | |||
*others | |||
}} | }} | ||
From 1917 to 1991, a multitude of ]s and ] were carried out by the ] or any of its ]s, including the ] and its ]. They include acts which were committed by the ] (later called the ]) as well as acts which were committed by the country's secret police, ], including its ]. In many cases, these acts were committed upon the direct orders of Soviet leaders ] and ] in pursuance of the early Soviet policy of ] as a means to justify ] and ]. In other instances they were committed without orders by Soviet troops against prisoners of war or civilians of countries that had been in ] with the USSR, or they were committed during ].<ref name="Statiev2010">{{cite book|last=Statiev|first=Alexander|title=The Soviet Counterinsurgency in the Western Borderlands|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=YIRSwRDVqu4C&pg=PA277|year=2010|publisher=Cambridge University Press|isbn=978-0-521-76833-7|page=277}}</ref> | |||
A significant number of these incidents occurred in |
A significant number of these incidents occurred in Northern, Central, and Eastern Europe before, during, and in the aftermath of World War II, involving ]s and the ] of ], such as in the ] and ] of the Red Army in ]. | ||
In the 1990s and 2000s, war crimes trials held in the Baltic states led to the prosecution of some Russians, mostly ''in absentia'', for crimes against humanity committed during or shortly after World War II, including killings or deportations of civilians. Today, the ] engages in ].<ref name="forbes">{{citation|url=https://www.forbes.com/sites/realspin/2014/05/05/how-putin-manipulates-russians-using-revisionist-history/|title=How Putin Manipulates Russians Using Revisionist History|work=Forbes|date=2014-05-14}}</ref> Russian media refers to the Soviet crimes against humanity and war crimes as a "Western myth".<ref name="The rape of Berlin">{{citation|title = The rape of Berlin|url = https://www.bbc.com/news/magazine-32529679|work = BBC News|author = Lucy Ash|date = 1 May 2016|access-date = 15 October 2018}}</ref> In ], the atrocities are either altered to portray the Soviets positively or omitted entirely.<ref name="How Russian Kids Are Taught World War II">{{citation|title = How Russian Kids Are Taught World War II|url = https://themoscowtimes.com/articles/how-russian-kids-are-taught-world-war-ii-57930|publisher = The Moscow Times|author = Ola Cichowlas|date = 8 May 2017|access-date = 14 October 2018}}</ref> In 2017, ] ], himself a ] since 2023, while acknowledging the "horrors of ]", criticized the "excessive ] of Stalin" by "Russia's enemies".<ref name="For Russians, Stalin is the 'most outstanding' figure in world history, followed by Putin">{{citation|title = For Russians, Stalin is the 'most outstanding' figure in world history, followed by Putin |url = https://www.washingtonpost.com/news/worldviews/wp/2017/06/26/for-russians-stalin-is-the-most-outstanding-figure-in-world-history-putin-is-next/|newspaper = The Washington Post|author = David Filipov|date = 26 June 2017|access-date = 7 August 2017}}</ref> | |||
Although there are numerous documented cases of such incidents, few members of the Red Army or leaders such as ], ], were charged with war crimes, and none of them by the ] or a Soviet tribunal.{{citation needed|date=October 2014}} When the victorious ] founded the post-war ], with officials from the Soviet Union taking an active part in the judicial processes, to examine war crimes committed during the conflict by ], there was no examination of Soviet Forces' actions and no charges were ever brought against its troops, because they were also an undefeated power which then held Eastern Europe under military occupation, marring the historical authority of the Tribunal's activity as being, in part, ].<ref name="Davies2006">{{cite book|last=Davies|first=Norman|author-link=Norman Davies|title=Europe at War 1939-1945 : No Simple Victory|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=8xtTkaQhHYEC|year=2006|publisher=Macmillan|isbn=978-0-333-69285-1|page=198}}</ref> | |||
Today, the ] engages in ].<ref name="forbes">{{citation|url=https://www.forbes.com/sites/realspin/2014/05/05/how-putin-manipulates-russians-using-revisionist-history/|title=How Putin Manipulates Russians Using Revisionist History|work=Forbes|date=2014-05-14}}</ref> Russian media refers to the war crimes as a "Western myth",<ref name="The rape of Berlin">{{citation|title = The rape of Berlin|url = https://www.bbc.com/news/magazine-32529679|work = BBC News|author = Lucy Ash|date = 1 May 2016|access-date = 15 October 2018}}</ref> in ], the atrocities are either altered to portray the Soviets positively or omitted entirely.<ref name="How Russian Kids Are Taught World War II">{{citation|title = How Russian Kids Are Taught World War II|url = https://themoscowtimes.com/articles/how-russian-kids-are-taught-world-war-ii-57930|publisher = The Moscow Times|author = Ola Cichowlas|date = 8 May 2017|access-date = 14 October 2018}}</ref> In a June 2017 interview, ] ] acknowledged the "horrors of ]", but he also criticized the "excessive ] of Stalin" by "Russia's enemies".<ref name="For Russians, Stalin is the 'most outstanding' figure in world history, followed by Putin">{{citation|title = For Russians, Stalin is the 'most outstanding' figure in world history, followed by Putin |url = https://www.washingtonpost.com/news/worldviews/wp/2017/06/26/for-russians-stalin-is-the-most-outstanding-figure-in-world-history-putin-is-next/|work = The Washington Post|author = David Filipov|date = 26 June 2017|access-date = 7 August 2017}}</ref> | |||
==Background== | ==Background== | ||
The Soviet Union did not recognize ]'s signing of the ] as binding, and as a result, it refused to recognize them until 1955.<ref>{{cite book |title=Implementing humanitarian law applicable in armed conflicts: the case of Finland |last=Hannikainen |first=Lauri |author2=Raija Hanski |author3=Allan Rosas |year=1992 |isbn=978-0-7923-1611-4 |page=46 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=xUGYzyJQAc0C&pg=PA46 }}</ref> This created a situation in which war crimes by the Soviet armed forces could |
The Soviet Union did not recognize ]'s signing of the ] as binding, and as a result, it refused to recognize them until 1955.<ref>{{cite book |title=Implementing humanitarian law applicable in armed conflicts: the case of Finland |last=Hannikainen |first=Lauri |author2=Raija Hanski |author3=Allan Rosas |year=1992 |isbn=978-0-7923-1611-4 |page=46 |publisher=Martinus Nijhoff Publishers |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=xUGYzyJQAc0C&pg=PA46 }}</ref> This created a situation in which war crimes by the Soviet armed forces could be justified, and also gave Nazi Germany a legal cover for the ].<ref>{{cite book |last1= Grenkevich |first1=Leonid D. |last2= Glantz |first2=David M. |editor1-first=David M. |editor1-last= Glantz |title=The Soviet partisan movement, 1941-1944: a critical historiographical analysis |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=YsBgvxYVVPMC&pg=PA110 |year=1999 |isbn=978-0-7146-4874-3 |page=110 |publisher=Psychology Press }}</ref> | ||
== |
== Russian Civil War == | ||
=== Blagoveshchensk massacre === | |||
In March 1918, over a thousand residents of ] fell victim to the ], who seized the city after the mutiny of ] I. M. Gamov. As reported in 1922 by the prominent ] I. P. Pavlunovsky:<blockquote>"A mass of workers from the mines rushed into the city, stormed it, and organized a massacre of the bourgeoisie ‘in general’. They went in squads from house to house and slaughtered all those suspected of rebellion and those sympathizing with them. By the way, they slaughtered almost the entire staff of the Blagoveshchensk City Administration and especially cut up the specialists and employees of the mining offices."<ref name=":05">Тепляков, Алексей Георгиевич (2015). ". "АТАМАНЩИНА" И "ПАРТИЗАНЩИНА" В ГРАЖДАНСКОЙ ВОЙНЕ: ИДЕОЛОГИЯ, ВОЕННОЕ УЧАСТИЕ, КАДРЫ: 719-728. – via ].</ref></blockquote>The press in the spring of 1919 reported on terrorist actions in Blagoveshchensk under the Reds:<blockquote>"Bolshevik atrocities in the city reached terrible proportions. From the local population, more than 1,000 people were shot. Excavation of graves has started. After the capture of the city, most of the students joined our army as volunteers."<ref name=":05" /></blockquote>I. I. Zhukovsky-Zhuk, a well-known Far Eastern ], wrote:<blockquote>"almost all revolutionaries in the D.-East, especially in Blagoveshchensk on the Amur River, resorted to the ‘ragtag’ methods, i.e., to the methods of active, ruthless revolutionary struggle that knew no compromise. Shootings without trial, which served as the main accusation against the ragpickers, were not uncommon here. Individual representatives of the Amur authorities, such as Matveev, the head of the regional prison, and his assistant S. Dimitriev (both ]), shot dozens of persons suspected and accused of counter-revolution and White Guardism without trial. This was known to the Revolutionary Committee, and many people in the city also learned about it, but no one protested against it, with the exception of the Blagoveshchensk group of anarchists, because everyone was so "accustomed" to this kind of phenomenon."<ref name=":05" /></blockquote> | |||
=== Vladivostok massacre === | |||
At the beginning of April 1920, the former head of ], P. V. Volgodsky, met in ] with two officers who had escaped from ] in ], who said that there, despite the coalition socialist government of A. S. Medvedev, "the Bolsheviks were actually at work there," arresting and, after almost obligatory torture, killing ]:<blockquote>"...In Vladivostok, there are systematic murders of White Guard officers. They are arrested and shot on their way to prison under the pretext of stopping escape attempts, etc."<ref name=":05" /></blockquote> | |||
=== Chita massacre and the elimination of the so-called "Semyonov jam" === | |||
The partisan detachment of the Red Army under ] participated in the capture of ] and the elimination of the so-called "Semyonov jam", during which his detachment habitually attacked the ] population, which actively supported the whites. For example, in the Fall of 1920 the Khamnigan-Buryat Khoshun of Aginsky Aimag was brutally defeated by partisans: three of its ] were completely deserted, in the other two less than 200 out of 6000 inhabitants remained. The rest fled to Mongolia, but many of them were killed and their corpses were left unburied in March 1921. More than 70 bodies, mostly monks, women, and children, were found in and around Byrtsin datsan. In late 1920, Kalandarishvili's unit not only robbed the local population, but also raped Buryat women and girls. The command of the 5th Army of the Eastern Front — which was advancing on Chita — accused the former guerrillas of undermining the Soviet power, because the criminal situation in the ranks of Kalandarishvili's unit constantly threatened the peaceful population. However, the military authorities did not sanction Kalandarishvili.<ref name=":2">{{Cite journal |last=Тепляков |first=Алексей Георгиевич |date=2018 |title="К портрету Нестора Каландаришвили (1876-1922): уголовник-авантюрист, партизан и красный командир" |url=https://elibrary.ru/item.asp?id=36352366 |journal=Исторический курьер. |volume=1 |pages=46–47 |via=]}}</ref> (At that time, Nestor Kalandarishvili's position had been strengthened by ].<ref name=":2" />) | |||
=== Amur River massacre === | |||
The movement of about two thousand troops of ] and Nina Lebedeva-Kiyashko down the ] was accompanied by the almost complete extermination of rural intellectuals (for revolutionary "passivity") and anyone who looked like a town "]"; priests were drowned in ice-holes, or taken prisoner. Even those who voluntarily went to the partisans were shot.<ref name=":05" /> | |||
One of Tryapitsyn's assistants, Ivan Lapta (Yakov Rogozin), organized a Red Army detachment that "raided villages and camps, robbed and killed people,". They killed those who did not give up gold at the Limursk mines, and looted the Amgun gold mines and surrounding villages. Lapta's detachments, together with the Tryapitsyns Zavarzin, Bitsenko, Dyldin, Otsevilli, and Sasov, killed hundreds of Lower Amurians even before the occupation of the regional center.<ref name=":05" /> | |||
In Tryapitsyn's detachment, there were about 200 Chinese and the same number of Koreans recruited from the gold mines of the ] (the latter were commanded by Ilya Pak), to whom the ataman gave a generous cash advance, promising gold from the mines, and many Russian women. Partisan chiefs were appointed by the most determined and cruel personalities, who kept the units in submission by giving them the right to plunder and kill.<ref name=":05" /> | |||
=== Nikolaevsk-on-Amur massacre === | |||
{{See also|Nikolayevsk incident}} | |||
In 1920, ] and Japan discussed a ] in the ]. Recognizing that ]'s government had collapsed, the Japanese agreed to allow the Red Army to enter ] in late January 1920. With so many foreign troops stationed in ], the Bolsheviks were forced to accept the socialist ]. At the same time Tryapitsyn besieged, and after an artillery bombardment at the end of February, captured ] where a Japanese battalion of 350 men and about the same number of White garrisons were stationed. There were no roads to it before the ice drift, so the defenders of the almost 20,000-strong city could rely only on their own forces. The Red Army entered the area after promising the Japanese and White garrisons that it would not commit atrocities. The Red Army signed a pact with the Japanese garrison on February 28, 1920, promising to abide by the agreement. Nevertheless, the Red Army immediately began looting and killing.<ref name=":05" /> | |||
The Red guerrilla forces entered the city after agreeing to a peace with the Japanese ], but once inside they ignored the agreement and killed residents.<ref name=":103">Азаренков, Александр Алексеевич (2019). “.”. 《Гражданская война на востоке России (ноябрь 1917-декабрь 1922 г.)》: 181-182.</ref> The Red guerrilla forces arrested and executed civilians sympathetic to the White Movement, even wealthy civilians.<ref name=":13">Sergey V, Grishachev; Vladimir G, Datsyshen (2019). “]”. 《Brill》: 145~146.</ref> Since then, Red guerrilla units have provoked the Japanese garrison.<ref name=":92">Кривенький, В. В.; Малафеева, Е. Г.; Фуфыгин, А. Н. (2018). “” . 《eruditorum 2018 Выпуск 26》: 128.</ref> The Red guerrillas gave the Japanese garrison an ] to disarm. The Japanese garrison refused the ultimatum. This led to the armed conflict on March 12.<ref name=":13" /> The Japanese realized that they were dealing with a Red Army that did not recognize any agreements, and that Tryapitsyn wanted to provoke the Japanese into action with this ultimatum.<ref name=":05" /> When the Red Army gave the Japanese garrison an ultimatum to disarm, Major Ishikawa — the Japanese garrison commander — refused. He launched a preemptive strike on 13 March. Tryapitsyn received two wounds in the surprise attack but was able to organize a resistance, and after a fierce battle, the Japanese garrison was crushed in numbers. The consul and all the staff died in the consulate set on fire by the guerrillas.<ref name=":05" /> Tryapitsyn's unit exterminated Jewish children and women during the purge. Children were killed along with their mothers, and women were raped before being executed. The guerrillas deliberately killed children as an unnecessary burden. Members of the Jewish community were taken by steamboat to the Amur River and drowned, young and old.<ref name=":05" /> The executions were carried out by specially designated squads of Russian Red Army partisans, Koreans and Chinese loyal to Tryapitsyn. Every night they went to the prison and killed a certain number of victims according to a list.<ref name=":16">Тепляков, Алексей Георгиевич (2013). "". ПРОБЛЕМЫ ИСТОРИИ МАССОВЫХ ПОЛИТИЧЕСКИХ РЕПРЕССИЙ В СССР. 1953-2013: 60 ЛЕТ БЕЗ СТАЛИНА. ОСМЫСЛЕНИЕ ПРОШЛОГО СОВЕТСКОГО ГОСУДАРСТВА: 135–142 – via ].</ref> | |||
Tryapitsyn's unit retreated only after laying waste to the entire city, setting fire to wooden buildings and blowing up stone structures.<ref name=":13" /> In the last days of May and the first days of June 1920, on the orders of Tryapitsyn's headquarters, himself and a group of people close to him, the town of Nikolaevsk-on-Amur was blown up and burned, the surrounding fishing grounds along the coast were burned, the inhabitants of the town were killed according to the censorship of "trustworthiness" and social affiliation; surviving Japanese, who were kept as prisoners, as well as Red Army partisans who did not agree with Tryapitsyn's actions. As a result of the evacuation of part of the population to the taiga, almost all children under the age of 5 died.<ref name=":92" /><ref name=":05" /> The remaining population of the city retreated together, and they were taken out of the city by force.<ref name=":13" /><ref name=":16" /> The survivors were forcibly taken away by Red Army through the taiga to the middle Amur (to Red Army partisans hearth - the so-called "red island"). Desolate ashes were left in the place of Nikolaevsk.<ref name=":103" /> The Red Army massacred thousands of Russians.<ref name=":13" /><ref name=":05" /> | |||
=== The terror of 1920–1921 in the occupied Crimea === | |||
The Red Army carried out a mass ] of the officers and soldiers of ]'s army and the civilians who remained in the ] in late 1920 and the first half of 1921.<ref name=":1">{{Cite journal |last=Георгиевич |first=Тепляков Алексей |date=2015 |title=ЧЕКИСТЫ КРЫМА В НАЧАЛЕ 1920-Х ГГ. |url=https://www.elibrary.ru/item.asp?id=25728403 |journal=Вопросы истории |volume=11 |pages=139–145 |via=]}}</ref> | |||
After the seizure of the Crimea on November 21, 1920, the ] created the so-called Crimean Strike Group at the Special Department of the VChK of the South-Western Front, which united a number of security officers headed by the deputy head of the department E. G. Evdokimov. The Chekists often did not open real investigative cases, but limited themselves to arrests and selection of questionnaires. The questionnaires were used to “judge” by troikas, which resulted in a single case for dozens and hundreds of those shot. A significant part of those arrested — among whom were often women and teenagers — were shot at once, the rest sent to concentration camps and exiled.<ref name=":1" /> | |||
It is believed that Yefim Yevdokimov and his “expedition” of hundreds of special agents killed at least twelve thousand people. This figure is recorded in Yevdokimov's presentation to the Order of the Red Banner, where it was noted that under his leadership "...were shot up to 12 thousand people, including up to 30 governors, more than 150 generals, more than 300 colonels, several hundred counter-intelligence spies...".<ref name=":1" /> | |||
In addition to the workers of special and transportation departments, in the extermination of Crimeans actively participated in the Chekists of territorial bodies - the VChK Polpresidency in the Crimea, Crimean Cheka, city and county Cheka. Meanwhile, the short-lived head of the Crimean Cheka (in the spring of 1921) M.M. Vikhman wrote twenty years later about his personal merits: <blockquote>"During the capture of the Crimea was appointed personally by Mr. DZERZHINSKY as chairman of the Crimean Extraordinary Commission, where, on the instructions of the Party's fighting body VChK, he killed an ennite number of thousands of White Guards - the remnants of Wrangel's officers".<ref name=":1" /></blockquote>and the extermination of at least three thousand Crimeans by the Red partisans.<ref name=":1" /> | |||
However, the terror provoked not only armed resistance from part of the population, but also the indignation of many local communists, who actively complained to the central authorities. In this context, in June 1921, the Plenipotentiary Commission of the All-Russian Central Executive Committee and the RSFSR People's Commissariat for Crimean Affairs began its work on the peninsula. M.H. Sultan-Galiev, a member of the Commission and the Board of the RSFSR People's Commissariat, reported: <blockquote>"According to the accounts of Crimean workers themselves, the number of Wrangel officers shot reaches from 20,000 to 25,000 throughout the Crimea. They point out that in Simferopol alone up to 12,000 were shot. Popular rumor exalts this figure for the whole Crimea up to 70.000. Whether this is really so, I have not been able to verify"<ref name=":1" /></blockquote> | |||
=== Wartime sexual violence === | |||
] in the Russian Civil War had a cultural component. Traditionally, a conquering warrior had the right to rape the defeated. As a European historian wrote, "the raids of the Cossacks in 1815, who chopped men with sabers and raped women, remain legendary in France to this day”.<ref name=":14" /> | |||
In Babel's story “My First Goose” Budyonovets said about the mores of the red cavalry: “A man of the highest distinction - from him here the soul out. And if you spoil a lady, the cleanest lady, then you will get affection from the fighters...”.<ref name=":14" /> | |||
In September 1920, in a letter to Lenin, commissioner N. Narimanov described the atrocities of the Red Army in ]: “We receive amazing reports from the localities. It comes to open rape of girls and women...”.<ref name=":14">Тепляков, Алексей Георгиевич (2017). "". In Государство, общество, Церковь в истории России ХХ-XXI веков: 448-452. – via ].</ref> | |||
In places of war captive women became a valuable commodity. One of the prominent Bolsheviks{{who|date=October 2024}} wrote in a personal letter from Uryankhai (Uyuk village) at the end of December, 1921: “Now. we are evacuating Bakich's gang to Siberia. There are many women for whom I, as the ‘head’ of the region, have demands, but I myself have not acquired a single one, although my official position requires me to have a whole harem.”<ref name=":14" /> | |||
Irregular units were characterized by an increased propensity to violence of all kinds during the civil war. Some ethnographic peculiarities of the Trans-Ural peasants also contributed to the rampant sexual crime. It is known that in the Siberian village among young people there was an ancient custom of gang rape of girls. Lack of respect for women, promiscuity of morals{{opinion|date=October 2024}} combined with class hatred bore their fruits. During the guerrilla years, mass rape was ubiquitous. The rebels, who considered all women their legitimate prey, raped the wives of priests, civil servants, officers and merchants, nuns, teachers, but occasionally they willingly pounced on peasant women from neighboring villages.<ref name=":14" /> | |||
In June 1919, in the village of Kolyon, Mariinsk uyezd, P.K. Lubkov's partisans gang-raped a teacher who went mad from the shock. Partisan gangs often took women into sexual slavery under the guise of hostages; after being abused, the unfortunate women were usually killed. The first mass murders of women by the Reds date back to the spring and summer of 1918 in Semirechye. In the Altai villages in the summer of 1918, the fighters of P.F. Sukhov's detachment not only robbed and massacred prisoners, but also kidnapped the wives and daughters of priests: "In Voznesenskoye the wife of the local priest was subjected to heinous violence and taken away by a gang...In Butyrskoye the same gangs took away the priest and his adult daughter. Leader of the detachment in Kuznetsk uyezd, Tomsk province. T.F. Putilov in May 1919 directly told the victims of the raid on a remote camp that he would take one of them with him "as a beautiful young woman". The partisans of the Amur region, among whom there were many Chinese, Koreans, Magyars and Caucasians, often took women with them when they attacked villages.<ref name=":14" /> | |||
During the pogrom of the Barnaul Bogoroditse-Kazan nunnery by partisans in late 1919. “Many nuns were killed and raped”; some of them managed to escape. A well-known memoirist, describing the discovery of numerous remains of tortured Whites on the bank of one of the tributaries of the Yenisei in the spring of 1920, noted: “...We came across the corpse of a tortured woman, from the first glance at which it was clear what the unfortunate had to endure before a blessed bullet put an end to the abuse.”<ref name=":14" /> | |||
The former Altai partisan mentioned several episodes of group violence by I.Y. Tretiak's division in Biysk uyezd dating back to the second half of 1919: “The partisan regiments stayed in Smolenskoye for about ten days and left again for Altaysk... After their departure there were more than a dozen ruined maidens and pregnant women...” When partisans in December 1919 once again captured the village of Charyshskaya, “hundreds of girls became women, and women became unwilling traitors to their husbands”. The objectivity of V.N. Shvetsov's memories is confirmed by documents. Cossacks of the Biysk line, complaining to the revcoms, in February 1920 claimed that in Cossack settlements partisans committed a lot of rapes, girls and women had to hide, “all kinds of venereal and other diseases developed”. On December 30, 1919, the Commissar of Justice of the Altgubrevkom noted that “the units standing in the village of Antonievskaya were committing violence against Cossack girls” and demanded that Nachdiv F.I. Arkhipov should bring the perpetrators to the court of tribunal, and the commanders of the units should be put on trial for inaction. This order was sabotaged.<ref name=":14" /> | |||
The fighters of the West Siberian Peasant Red Army also abused women and committed rape. In the fall of 1919, during the capture of the Aul station, partisans raped women. During the partisan occupation of the Rubtsovka railway station, the company commander of the 2nd regiment, Syropyatov, raped and shot the wife of a railway worker, Filimonov.<ref name=":14" /> | |||
The mass rape in Kuznetsk, Tomsk province, in December 1919 was reported in a Chekist information bulletin. Rogovtsy broke into houses, kidnapped women and girls, and used them for "brutal pleasure", including in their headquarters. Partisan memoirs contain the names of some of the victims: "The 18-year-old schoolteacher Inna P., daughter of one of the popes burned in the cathedral, was summoned to the headquarters 'on urgent business' and raped there. She fell ill with a nervous disorder. A 19-year-old girl, Polasukhina, was raped in her apartment. The girl almost went mad and soon died of shock. The 52-year-old widow of a prison official, Sycheva, was also raped in her apartment".<ref name=":14" /> | |||
Mass rapes were characterized by the adventures of Y. Tryapitsyn's detachments (Sakhalin region), whose headquarters became the centers of mass rapes. Tryapitsyn's unit in the captured village, accustomed to wartime rape, violated human rights. Tryapitsyn's unit in the captured village of Susanino herded all the girls into one room and raped them, then tried to burn their victims alive, but were repelled by other Red Army partisans.<ref name=":14" /> | |||
Red Army partisans often raped minors, often killing them afterwards. The opera singer Vera Davydova survived Tryapitsyn's unit at the age of 14 and told Nikolaev local historian V.I. Yuzefov that after the evacuation she was immediately seized by a group of Red Army partisans, forcibly separated from her parents, for allegedly sending her to the "headquarters." Her mother's screams attracted one of the Red Army partisan leaders, who recognized her as his former teacher and intervened. Tryapitsyn's unit also sexually assaulted women during their hasty escape from Nikolaevsk-on-Amur. N.D. Kolesnikova recalled: "It was forbidden for girls from the age of 16 to leave Nikolaevsk with their families. They had to go through the taiga together with the Red Army partisans. Luckily for me, I was only 13 years old."<ref name=":14" /> | |||
The pogrom in Nikolaevsk-on-Amur and the subsequent Tryapitsyn's unit atrocities led not only to rape but also to the murder of young women and girls. In the summer of 1920, many corpses, mostly women and children, were fished out of the Amgun River: "Women, children, and rarely men—with cut ears, noses, severed fingers, and slashed and stabbed bayonet wounds." One of the acts drawn up in the village of Udinskoye in early July 1920 recorded the discovery of the body of Mozgunova, a girl of 15–17 years of age, with eight dagger wounds in the chest area.<ref name=":14" /> | |||
==Before World War II== | |||
], ] during the suppression of the ] of 1921]] | |||
The Soviets reportedly deployed mustard gas bombs during the 1934 ], many civilians were also killed by conventional bombs dropped by Soviet and aligned during the invasion.<ref name="Pearson">{{cite web|url=https://fas.org/bwc/papers/review/cwtable.htm |title=Uses of CW since the First World War |last=Pearson |first=Graham S. |publisher=FEDERATION OF AMERICAN SCIENTISTS |access-date=2010-06-28 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20100822165939/http://www.fas.org/bwc/papers/review/cwtable.htm |archive-date=2010-08-22 }}</ref><ref>{{cite book|url=http://dsr.nii.ac.jp/toyobunko/E-290.9-HE01-025/V-3/page/0164.html.en|title=History of the expedition in Asia, 1927-1935, Part 3|author1=Sven Anders Hedin |author2=Folke Bergman |year=1944|publisher=Göteborg, Elanders boktryckeri aktiebolag|location=Stockholm|page=112|access-date=28 November 2010}}</ref> | |||
===Red Army and pogroms=== | ===Red Army and pogroms=== | ||
{{further|Antisemitism in the Soviet Union}} | |||
The early Soviet leaders publicly denounced ],<ref name="korey">William Korey, ''The Origins and Development of Soviet Anti-Semitism: An Analysis.'' Slavic Review, Vol. 31, No. 1 (Mar., 1972), pp. 111–135; included in: William Korey, '''', New York: Viking, 1973.</ref> William Korey wrote: "Anti-Jewish discrimination had become an integral part of Soviet state policy ever since the late thirties." Efforts were made by Soviet authorities to contain anti-Jewish ] notably during the ], whenever the Red Army units perpetrated ]s,<ref>{{cite book| author=John Doyle Klier |others=Shlomo Lambroza |title=Pogroms |publisher=Cambridge University Press |year=2004 |page=294}}</ref><ref>{{cite web |publisher=United States Holocaust Museum |url=http://www.ushmm.org/wlc/article.php?ModuleId=10005183|title=Pogroms}}</ref> as well as during the ] of 1919–1920 at ].<ref>Владимир Марковчин, Sovsekretno.ru.</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.lechaim.ru/ARHIV/138/kardin.htm|title=МОЖНО ЛИ ВЕРИТЬ РЕЧИСТЫМ БЫЛИННИКАМ|access-date=14 February 2016}}</ref><ref>Статья "Евреи Украины в 1914–1920 гг." в Электронной еврейской энциклопедии</ref> Only a small number of pogroms were attributed to the Red Army, with the vast majority of the 'collectively violent' acts in the period having been committed by ] and ] forces.<ref>], ''Jewish Representation in the Independent Ukrainian Governments of 1917–1920'', Slavic review, Vol. 50, No. 3 (Autumn, 1991), pp. 542–550</ref> | |||
The early Soviet leaders publicly denounced ],<ref name="korey">William Korey, ''The Origins and Development of Soviet Anti-Semitism: An Analysis.'' Slavic Review, Vol. 31, No. 1 (Mar., 1972), pp. 111–135; included in: William Korey, '''', New York: Viking, 1973.</ref> efforts were made by Soviet authorities to contain anti-Jewish ] notably during the ], and soldiers were punished whenever the Red Army units perpetrated ]s,<ref name="Pogroms">{{cite book| author=John Doyle Klier |others=Shlomo Lambroza |title=Pogroms |publisher=Cambridge University Press |year=2004 |page=294}}</ref><ref name="US holocaust museum">{{cite web |publisher=United States Holocaust Museum |url=http://www.ushmm.org/wlc/article.php?ModuleId=10005183|title=Pogroms}}</ref> as well as during the ] in 1919–1920 at ].<ref>Владимир Марковчин, Sovsekretno.ru.</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.lechaim.ru/ARHIV/138/kardin.htm|title=МОЖНО ЛИ ВЕРИТЬ РЕЧИСТЫМ БЫЛИННИКАМ|access-date=14 February 2016}}</ref><ref>Статья "Евреи Украины в 1914–1920 гг." в Электронной еврейской энциклопедии</ref> Only a small number of pogroms were attributed to the Red Army, with the majority of the 'collectively violent' acts in the period having been committed by ] and ] forces.<ref>], ''Jewish Representation in the Independent Ukrainian Governments of 1917–1920'', Slavic review, Vol. 50, No. 3 (Autumn, 1991), pp. 542–550</ref> | |||
The pogroms were condemned by the Red Army high command and guilty units were disarmed, while individual pogromists were court-martialed.<ref name="korey"/> |
The pogroms were condemned by the Red Army high command and guilty units were disarmed, while individual pogromists were court-martialed and faced execution.<ref name="korey"/><ref>Nora Levin ''The Jews in the Soviet Union Since 1917: Paradox of Survival'' NYU Press, 1991, {{ISBN|978-0-8147-5051-3}}, p.43</ref> Although pogroms by Ukrainian units of the Red Army still occurred even after this, ] regarded the Red Army as the only force which was willing to protect them.<ref>Encyclopaedia Judaica, The Jewish Virtual Library. 2009; "...severe penalties were imposed not only on guilty individuals, who were executed, but also on complete army units, which were disbanded after their men had attacked Jews. Even though pogroms were still perpetrated after this, mainly by Ukrainian units of the Red Army at the time of its retreat from ] (1920), in general, the Jews regarded the units of the Red Army as the only force which was able and willing to defend them." Retrieved December 29, 2014.</ref> It is estimated that 3,450 Jews or 2.3 percent of the Jewish victims killed during the Russian Civil War were murdered by the Bolshevik forces.<ref name="Midlarsky2005">{{cite book|last=Midlarsky|first=Manus I.|title=The Killing Trap: Genocide in the Twentieth Century|url=https://archive.org/details/killingtrapgenoc0000midl|url-access=registration|access-date=19 June 2017|year=2005|publisher=Cambridge University Press|isbn=978-0-521-81545-1|page=}}</ref> In comparison, according to the ], a total of about 300 Jews died in all incidents involving Polish responsibility.<ref>Andrzej Kapiszewski, ''Studia Judaica'' 7: 2004 nr 2(14) s. 257–304 (pdf)</ref> However, as William Korey wrote: "Anti-Jewish discrimination had become an integral part of Soviet state policy ever since the late thirties.", as the new Stalin government moved to fight against perceived "Jewish infiltration" in the country, as well as growing conspiracies of "Jewish collaboration with the west and the ]".<ref name="Pogroms"/><ref name="US holocaust museum"/> | ||
It is estimated that 3,450 Jews or 2.3 percent of the Jewish victims killed during the Russian Civil War were murdered by the Bolshevik armies.<ref name="Midlarsky2005">{{cite book|last=Midlarsky|first=Manus I.|title=The Killing Trap: Genocide in the Twentieth Century|url=https://archive.org/details/killingtrapgenoc0000midl|url-access=registration|access-date=19 June 2017|year=2005|publisher=Cambridge University Press|isbn=978-0-521-81545-1|page=}}</ref> In comparison, according to the ], a total of about 300 Jews lost their lives in all incidents involving Polish responsibility. The commission also found that the Polish military and civil authorities did their best to prevent such incidents and their recurrence in the future. The Morgenthau report stated that some forms of discrimination against Jews were of a political rather than an anti-Semitic nature and it specifically avoided using the term "pogrom," noting that the term's use was applied to a wide range of excesses, and it also had no specific definition.<ref>Andrzej Kapiszewski, ''Studia Judaica'' 7: 2004 nr 2(14) s. 257–304 (pdf)</ref> | |||
==The Red Army and the NKVD== | ==The Red Army and the NKVD== | ||
] | ] | ||
{{See also|NKVD prisoner massacres|Katyn massacre}} | {{See also|NKVD prisoner massacres|Katyn massacre}} | ||
On 6 February 1922 the Cheka was replaced by the ] or OGPU, a section of the ]. The declared function of the NKVD was to protect the ] of the Soviet Union, which was accomplished by the large scale political persecution of "class enemies". The Red Army often gave support to the NKVD in the implementation of ]s.<ref name="Nagorski">{{cite book |url=https://archive.org/details/greatestbattlest0000nago |url-access=registration |quote=Soviet terror Poland 1940. |title=The Greatest Battle |via=] |first=Andrew |last=Nagorski |publisher=Simon and Schuster |page= |access-date=2015-02-15|isbn=9781416545736 |date=2007-09-18 }}</ref> As an internal security force and a prison guard contingent of the ], the Internal Troops repressed political dissidents and engaged in war crimes during periods of military hostilities throughout Soviet history. They were specifically responsible for maintaining the political regime in the Gulag and conducting mass deportations and ]. The latter targeted a number of ethnic groups that the Soviet authorities presumed to be hostile to its policies and likely to collaborate with the enemy, including ], ], and ].<ref name="Applebaum583">] (2003), ''].'' ]. {{ISBN|0-7679-0056-1}}, pg 583: "both archives and memoirs indicate that it was a common practice in many camps to release prisoners who were on the point of dying, thereby lowering camp death statistics."</ref> | On 6 February 1922, the ] (All-Russian Extraordinary Commission) secret police was replaced by the ] or OGPU, a section of the ]. The declared function of the NKVD was to protect the ] of the Soviet Union, which was accomplished by the large scale political persecution of "class enemies". The Red Army often gave support to the NKVD in the implementation of ]s.<ref name="Nagorski">{{cite book |url=https://archive.org/details/greatestbattlest0000nago |url-access=registration |quote=Soviet terror Poland 1940. |title=The Greatest Battle |via=] |first=Andrew |last=Nagorski |publisher=Simon and Schuster |page= |access-date=2015-02-15|isbn=9781416545736 |date=2007-09-18 }}</ref> As an internal security force and a prison guard contingent of the ], the Internal Troops repressed political dissidents and engaged in war crimes during periods of military hostilities throughout Soviet history. They were specifically responsible for maintaining the political regime in the Gulag and conducting mass deportations and ]. The latter targeted a number of ethnic groups that the Soviet authorities presumed to be hostile to its policies and likely to collaborate with the enemy, including ], ], and ].<ref name="Applebaum583">] (2003), ''].'' ]. {{ISBN|0-7679-0056-1}}, pg 583: "both archives and memoirs indicate that it was a common practice in many camps to release prisoners who were on the point of dying, thereby lowering camp death statistics."</ref> | ||
During World War II, series of mass executions were committed by the Soviet NKVD against prisoners of war in Eastern Poland and surrounding countries, primarily Modern-day Western Belarus, and other parts of the Soviet occupied territories. The overall death toll is still unknown.<ref>https://www.jstor.org/stable/25779119?seq=1</ref> | |||
==World War II== | ==World War II== | ||
{{Blockquote|text="... Whenever I mentioned the heartlessness of our highest-ranking | |||
War crimes by Soviet armed forces against civilians and prisoners of war in the territories occupied by the USSR between 1939 and 1941 in regions including Western Ukraine, the Baltic states and ] in Romania, along with war crimes in 1944–1945, have been ongoing issues within these countries. Since the ], a more systematic, locally controlled discussion of these events has taken place.<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.am.gov.lv/data/file/e/HC-Progress-Report2001.pdf |title=The Progress Report |publisher=Latvia's History Commission}}</ref> | |||
]s, the cruelty of our executioners, I remember myself in my ]'s shoulder boards and the forward march of my battery through ], enshrouded in fire, and I say: 'So were ''we'' any better?'"|author=]|title='']''}} | |||
War crimes by Soviet armed forces against civilians and prisoners of war in the territories occupied by the USSR between 1939 and 1941 in regions including ], the ] and ] in Romania, along with war crimes in 1944–1945, have been ongoing issues within these countries. Since the ], a more systematic, locally controlled discussion of these events has taken place.<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.am.gov.lv/data/file/e/HC-Progress-Report2001.pdf |title=The Progress Report |publisher=Latvia's History Commission |access-date=29 July 2007 |archive-date=19 March 2014 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20140319182357/http://www.am.gov.lv/data/file/e/HC-Progress-Report2001.pdf |url-status=dead }}</ref> | |||
Targets of Soviet atrocities included both collaborators with Germany after 1941 and the members of anti-communist ]s such as the Ukrainian Insurgent Army (]) in ], the ] in ], ] and ], and the Polish ]. The NKVD also conducted the ], summarily executing over 20,000 Polish military officer prisoners and ] in April and May 1940. | |||
As the Red Army withdrew after the German attack of 1941 which is known as ], numerous reports of war crimes committed by Soviet armed forces against captured German ] and ] soldiers from the very beginning of hostilities were documented in thousands of files of the Wehrmacht War Crimes Bureau which was established by Nazi Germany in September 1939 to investigate violations of the Hague and Geneva conventions by Germany's enemies.<ref>De Zayas, Alfred M., ''The Wehrmacht War Crimes Bureau, 1939–1945'', University of Nebraska Press, Lincoln, NE, 1989, 3rd revised edition Picton Press, Rockland, Maine 2003. {{OCLC|598598774}} Translation of: ''Die Wehrmacht-Untersuchungsstelle.''</ref> Among the better documented Soviet massacres are those at ] (June 1941), ] (December 1941) and ] (1943). | |||
In the occupied territories, the NKVD carried out mass arrests, deportations and executions{{citation needed|date=October 2018}}. The targets included both collaborators with Germany and the members of anti-Communist ]s such as the Ukrainian Insurgent Army (]) in ], the ] in ], ] and ], and the Polish ]. The NKVD also conducted the ], summarily executing over 20,000 Polish military officer prisoners in April and May 1940. | |||
===Baltic states=== | |||
After the final repulse of German forces in the Soviet Union, Red Army troops entered Germany, Romania and Hungary in late 1944. Soviet soldiers were by then, aware of the German war crimes and often executed surrendering or captured German soldiers in retaliation. There were numerous accounts of war crimes by Soviet armed forces – plunder, the murder of civilians and POWs and Widespread rape.<ref name="dw.com">https://www.dw.com/en/germany-postwar-soviet-special-camps/a-54759064</ref> | |||
====Estonia==== | |||
The Soviets deployed mustard gas bombs during the ]. Civilians were killed by conventional bombs during the invasion.<ref name="Pearson">{{cite web|url=https://fas.org/bwc/papers/review/cwtable.htm |title=Uses of CW since the First World War |last=Pearson |first=Graham S. |publisher=FEDERATION OF AMERICAN SCIENTISTS |access-date=2010-06-28 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20100822165939/http://www.fas.org/bwc/papers/review/cwtable.htm |archive-date=2010-08-22 }}</ref><ref>{{cite book|url=http://dsr.nii.ac.jp/toyobunko/E-290.9-HE01-025/V-3/page/0164.html.en|title=History of the expedition in Asia, 1927-1935, Part 3|author1=Sven Anders Hedin |author2=Folke Bergman |year=1944|publisher=Göteborg, Elanders boktryckeri aktiebolag|location=Stockholm|page=112|access-date=28 November 2010}}</ref> | |||
===Estonia=== | |||
{{Main|Soviet occupation of Estonia}} | {{Main|Soviet occupation of Estonia}} | ||
], ], 1941.]] | ], ], 1941.]] | ||
Under the German-Soviet ], Estonia was annexed by the Soviet Union on 6 August 1940 and renamed the ].<ref>Magnus Ilmjärv ''Hääletu alistumine'', (''Silent Submission''), Tallinn, Argo, 2004, {{ISBN|9949-415-04-7}}</ref> The Estonian standing army was broken up, and its officers executed or deported.<ref>{{cite book|last=Wulf|first=Meike|title=Shadowlands: Memory and History in Post-Soviet Estonia|year=2016|publisher=Berghahn Books|isbn=9781785330742|page=46}}</ref> In 1941, some 34,000 Estonians were drafted into the Red Army, of whom less than 30% survived the war. No more than half of those men were used for military service. The rest were sent to labour battalions where around 12,000 died, mainly in the early months of the war.<ref>{{cite book | |||
|editor=Toomas Hiio | |||
|title=Estonia, 1940-1945: Reports of the Estonian International Commission for the Investigation of Crimes Against Humanity|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=n6o-AQAAIAAJ | |||
|year=2006 | |||
|publisher=Estonian Foundation for the Investigation of Crimes Against Humanity | |||
|isbn=9789949130405 | |||
|page=886}}</ref> After it became clear that the German invasion of Estonia would be successful, political prisoners who could not be evacuated were executed by the NKVD, so that they would not be able to make contact with the Nazi government.<ref>The Baltic Revolution: Estonia, Latvia, Lithuania and the Path to Independence by Anatol Lieven p. 424 {{ISBN|0-300-06078-5}}</ref> More than 300,000 citizens of Estonia, almost a third of the population at the time, were affected by deportations, arrests, execution and other acts of repression.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.communistcrimes.org/en/Database/Estonia/Historical-Overview|title=CommunistCrimes.org – Historical Introduction|access-date=14 February 2016}}</ref> As a result of the ], Estonia lost at least 200,000 people or 20% of its population to repression, exodus and war.<ref> | |||
{{cite book | |||
|last=Vetik | |||
|first=Raivo | |||
|editor=Pål Kolstø | |||
|title=National Integration and Violent Conflict in Post-Soviet Societies: The Cases of Estonia and Moldova | |||
Soviet political repressions in Estonia were met by an armed resistance by the ], composed of former ], ] militia and volunteers in the ] who fought a ], which was not completely suppressed until the late 1950s.<ref name="vr25-30">, pp. 25–30</ref> In addition to the expected human and material losses suffered due to the fighting, until its end this conflict led to the deportation of tens of thousands of people, along with hundreds of political prisoners and thousands of civilians lost their lives. | |||
|year=2002 | |||
|publisher=Rowman & Littlefield Publishers | |||
|isbn=9781461639459 | |||
|page=74 | |||
|chapter=Cultural and Social Makeup of Estonia}}</ref> | |||
Soviet political repressions in Estonia were met by an armed resistance by the ], composed of former ], ] militia and volunteers in the ] who fought a ], which was not completely suppressed until the late 1950s.<ref name="vr25-30">, pp. 25–30</ref> In addition to the expected human and material losses suffered due to the fighting, over time this conflict led to the deportation of tens of thousands of people, along with hundreds of political prisoners and thousands of civilians died. | |||
According to many historians, ] resulted in five times more casualties among the Estonians than Hitler's rule.<ref>{{cite journal | title=Soviet mass violence in Estonia revisited | first=Olaf |last=Mertelsmann |pages=307–322 | doi=10.1080/14623520903119001 |volume=11| issue=2–3| journal=Journal Journal of Genocide Research| year=2009| s2cid=144908587 }}</ref> | |||
====Mass deportations==== | =====Mass deportations===== | ||
{{Main|Soviet deportations from Estonia}} | {{Main|Soviet deportations from Estonia}} | ||
On 14 June 1941, and the following two days, 9,254 to 10,861 people, mostly urban residents, of them over 5,000 women and over 2,500 children under 16,<ref name="commission"> {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20070609223156/http://www.historycommission.ee/temp/pdf/conclusions_en.pdf |date=9 June 2007 }}, historycommission.ee; accessed 13 December 2016.</ref><ref>Kareda, Endel (1949). ''Estonia in the Soviet Grip: Life and Conditions under Soviet Occupation 1947–1949''. London: Boreas.<!-- ISSN/ISBN needed --></ref><ref>Uustalu, Evald (1952). ''The History of Estonian People''. London: Boreas.<!--ISSN/ISBN needed--></ref><ref name="laar">] (2006). {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20090225225623/http://web-static.vm.ee/static/failid/128/Deportations_from_Estonia.pdf |date=2009-02-25 }}. ''Estonia Today'': Fact Sheet of the Press and Information Department, Estonian Ministry of Foreign Affairs (June 2006).</ref><ref>, '']'', 29 June 2011; retrieved 6 May 2013.</ref><ref>, mnemosyne.ee; retrieved 6 May 2013.</ref> 439 Jews (more than 10% of the ])<ref>{{Cite journal|doi=10.1093/hgs/12.2.308|last1=Weiss-Wendt|first1=Anton|year=1998|title=The Soviet Occupation of Estonia in 1940–41 and the Jews|journal=]|volume=12|issue=2|pages=308–25}}</ref> were deported, mostly to ], ] or prisons. Deportations were predominantly to ] and ] by means of railroad cattle cars, without prior announcement, while deported were given few night hours at best to pack their belongings and separated from their families, usually also sent to the east. The procedure was established by the ]. Estonians |
On 14 June 1941, and the following two days, 9,254 to 10,861 people, mostly urban residents, of them over 5,000 women and over 2,500 children under 16,<ref name="commission"> {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20070609223156/http://www.historycommission.ee/temp/pdf/conclusions_en.pdf |date=9 June 2007 }}, historycommission.ee; accessed 13 December 2016.</ref><ref>Kareda, Endel (1949). ''Estonia in the Soviet Grip: Life and Conditions under Soviet Occupation 1947–1949''. London: Boreas.<!-- ISSN/ISBN needed --></ref><ref>Uustalu, Evald (1952). ''The History of Estonian People''. London: Boreas.<!--ISSN/ISBN needed--></ref><ref name="laar">] (2006). {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20090225225623/http://web-static.vm.ee/static/failid/128/Deportations_from_Estonia.pdf |date=2009-02-25 }}. ''Estonia Today'': Fact Sheet of the Press and Information Department, Estonian Ministry of Foreign Affairs (June 2006).</ref><ref>, '']'', 29 June 2011; retrieved 6 May 2013.</ref><ref> {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20140211082523/http://www.mnemosyne.ee/hc.ee/pdf/conclusions_en_1940-1941.pdf |date=11 February 2014 }}, mnemosyne.ee; retrieved 6 May 2013.</ref> 439 Jews (more than 10% of the ])<ref>{{Cite journal|doi=10.1093/hgs/12.2.308|last1=Weiss-Wendt|first1=Anton|year=1998|title=The Soviet Occupation of Estonia in 1940–41 and the Jews|journal=]|volume=12|issue=2|pages=308–25}}</ref> were deported, mostly to ], ] or prisons. Deportations were predominantly to ] and ] by means of railroad cattle cars, without prior announcement, while the deported were given a few night hours at best to pack their belongings and separated from their families, usually also sent to the east. The procedure was established by the ]. Estonians in ] had already been subject to deportation since 1935.<ref> | ||
{{cite journal | |||
|doi=10.1086/235168 | |||
|last1=Martin | |||
|first1=Terry | |||
|year=1998 | |||
|title=The Origins of Soviet Ethnic Cleansing | |||
|journal=] | |||
|volume=70 | |||
|issue=4 | |||
|pages=813–861 | |||
|jstor=10.1086/235168 | |||
|s2cid=32917643 | |||
|url=https://dash.harvard.edu/bitstream/handle/1/3229636/Martin%201998.pdf?sequence=2}}</ref> | |||
====Destruction battalions==== | =====Destruction battalions===== | ||
{{Main|Destruction battalions}} | {{Main|Destruction battalions}} | ||
{{See also|Battle of Kautla}} | {{See also|Battle of Kautla}} | ||
In 1941, to implement Stalin's ], destruction battalions were formed in the western regions of the Soviet Union. In Estonia, they killed thousands of people including |
In 1941, to implement Stalin's ], destruction battalions were formed in the western regions of the Soviet Union. In Estonia, they killed thousands of people including many women and children, and burned down dozens of villages, schools and public buildings. Many atrocities were committed by these forces, such as the case of a school boy named Tullio Lindsaar, who had all of the bones in his hands broken for hoisting the ] before being bayoneted to death, or Mauricius Parts, son of ] veteran ], who was killed after being doused in acid, just six weeks after the imprisonment of his father by Soviet occupation forces (who would later also be executed by Soviet forces while in prison).<ref>{{cite book |last1=Laar |first1=Mart |author1-link=Mart Laar |title=War in the Woods: Estonia's Struggle for Survival, 1944–1956 |date=1992 |publisher=The Compass Press |location=Washington, DC |page=10}}</ref><ref>{{cite book |last1=Madisson |first1=Tiit |author1-link=Tiit Madisson |title=Lihula õppetund: Maailma Uue Korra loomine Eestis : ajaloo ümbertegemine ja rahvusluse mahasurumine |date=2005 |publisher=Kirjastus OÜ Ortwil |location=Lihula |page=24}}</ref> In August 1941, all residents of the village of ] were killed including a two-year-old child and a six-day-old infant, the battalions also occasionally burned people alive, according to survivors of the massacres.<ref>Mart Laar, ''War in the woods'', The Compass Press, Washington, 1992, p. 10</ref> A partisan war broke out in response to the atrocities of the destruction battalions, with tens of thousands of men forming the ] to protect the local population from these battalions; in general, the destruction battalions murdered ~1,850 people in Estonia, almost all of them partisans or unarmed civilians.<ref>''Eesti rahva kannatuste aasta''. Tallinn, 1996, p. 234.</ref> | ||
Another example of the destruction battalions' actions is the ], where twenty civilians were murdered and tens of farms destroyed |
Another example of the destruction battalions' actions is the ], where twenty civilians were murdered and tens of farms and houses looted, burned down or destroyed, with many of the people killed after being ]d and beaten by Soviet troops. The low toll of human deaths in comparison with the number of burned farms is due to the ] breaking the Red Army blockade on the area, allowing many civilians to escape.<ref> | ||
{{cite web | |||
|url=http://kultuur.elu.ee/ke486_liim.htm | |||
|title=Kultuur ja Elu – kultuuriajakiri | |||
|access-date=14 February 2016 | |||
}}</ref><ref>]: {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20090827075510/http://www.postimees.ee/160807/esileht/arvamus/277366.php |date=2009-08-27 }}, printed in ] 16 August 2007</ref> | |||
===Latvia=== | ====Latvia==== | ||
{{Main|Soviet occupation of Latvia in 1940}} | {{Main|Soviet occupation of Latvia in 1940}} | ||
On 23 August 1939, the Soviet Union and Germany signed the |
On 23 August 1939, the Soviet Union and ] signed the ], in which Latvia was included in the ]. On 17 June 1940, Latvia ] by the ]. The ] government was removed, and ] were held on 21 June 1940 with only the Communist ] allowed to participate, "electing" the ] ] which made resolution to join the Soviet Union, with the resolution having already been drawn up in Moscow prior the election. Latvia was officially annexed by the Soviet Union on 5 August, and on 25 August all people in Latvia were declared citizens of the Soviet Union. The ] was closed isolating Latvia from the rest of the world.<ref name="Starptautiska konference">{{cite web|url=https://latvianhistory.com/2012/06/14/soviet-mass-deportations-of-14-june-1941/|title=Deportation of 14 June 1941: crime against humanity: materials of an International Conference 12-13 June. (2001)|work=Latvijas vēstures institūts|via=latvianhistory.com|date=14 June 2012|access-date=18 June 2017}}</ref> | ||
In the 1941 ], tens of thousands of Latvians, including whole families with women, children and old people, were taken from their homes, loaded onto freight trains and taken to ] ]s or ] in Siberia by the Soviet occupation regime on the orders of high authorities in Moscow. Prior to the deportation, the ] established operational groups who performed arrests, and search and seizure of property. Arrests took place in all parts in Latvia including rural areas.<ref name="Starptautiska konference" /> | |||
In accordance with the ], Soviet troops invaded Latvia on 17 June 1940 and it was subsequently incorporated into the Soviet Union as the ]. | |||
====Lithuania==== | |||
On 14 June 1941, thousands of people were taken from their homes, loaded onto freight trains and taken to Siberia. Whole families, women, children and old people were sent to labor camps in Siberia. The crime was perpetrated by the Soviet occupation regime on the orders of high authorities in Moscow. Prior the deportation, the Peoples Commissariat established operational groups who performed arrests, search and seizure of the property. Arrests took place in all parts in Latvia including rural areas.<ref name="Starptautiska konference" /> | |||
===Lithuania=== | |||
{{Main|Occupation of the Baltic states}} | {{Main|Occupation of the Baltic states}} | ||
] with display of the ] killed by the Soviet forces in Lithuania]] | ] with display of the ] killed by the Soviet forces in Lithuania]] | ||
Lithuania |
Lithuania and the other ], fell victim to the secret addendum to the ] between the USSR and Germany, signed in August 1939. First Lithuania was invaded by the Red Army on 15 June 1940, and then the Soviet Union annexed it on 3 August 1940.{{citation needed|date=November 2015}} The annexation resulted in mass terror, the denial of civil liberties, the destruction of the economic system and the suppression of Lithuanian culture. Between 1940 and 1941, thousands of Lithuanians were arrested and hundreds of political prisoners were arbitrarily executed. More than 17,000 people were deported to Siberia in June 1941. After the German ] of the Soviet Union, the Soviet political apparatus was either destroyed or retreated east. Lithuania was then occupied by ] for a little over three years. In 1944, the Soviet Union reoccupied Lithuania. Following World War II and the subsequent suppression of the Lithuanian ], the Soviet authorities executed thousands of resistance fighters and civilians, whom they accused of helping them. Some 300,000 ] or sentenced to terms in prison camps on political grounds. Lithuania lost an estimated nearly 780,000 citizens in the Soviet occupation. Of these, around 440,000 were war refugees.<ref> | ||
{{cite web|url=http://www.communistcrimes.org/en/Database/Lithuania/Historical-Overview|title=CommunistCrimes.org – Historical Introduction|access-date=14 February 2016|archive-date=21 June 2009|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20090621105230/http://www.communistcrimes.org/en/Database/Lithuania/Historical-Overview|url-status=dead}}</ref> | |||
The estimated death toll in Soviet prisons and camps between 1944 and 1953 was at least 14,000.<ref>International Commission For the Evaluation of the Crimes of the Nazi and Soviet Occupation Regimes in Lithuania, , pp. 2-3 (=10%+ of 142,579 arrested)</ref> The estimated death toll among deportees between 1945 and 1958 was 20,000, including 5,000 children.<ref>International Commission For the Evaluation of the Crimes of the Nazi and Soviet Occupation Regimes in Lithuania, {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20130601173600/http://www.komisija.lt/Files/www.komisija.lt/File/Tyrimu_baze/II%20Sovietine%20okupacija%20I%20etapas/Nusikaltimai/Tremimai/ENG/Conclusions%20ENG.pdf |date=1 June 2013 }}, paragraph 14</ref> | The estimated death toll in Soviet prisons and camps between 1944 and 1953 was at least 14,000.<ref>International Commission For the Evaluation of the Crimes of the Nazi and Soviet Occupation Regimes in Lithuania, {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20140319182358/http://www.komisija.lt/Files/www.komisija.lt/File/Tyrimu_baze/II%20Sovietine%20okupacija%20I%20etapas/Nusikaltimai/Arestai%20ir%20kankinimai/ENG/Conclusions%20_ENG.pdf |date=19 March 2014 }}, pp. 2-3 (=10%+ of 142,579 arrested)</ref> The estimated death toll among deportees between 1945 and 1958 was 20,000, including 5,000 children.<ref>International Commission For the Evaluation of the Crimes of the Nazi and Soviet Occupation Regimes in Lithuania, {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20130601173600/http://www.komisija.lt/Files/www.komisija.lt/File/Tyrimu_baze/II%20Sovietine%20okupacija%20I%20etapas/Nusikaltimai/Tremimai/ENG/Conclusions%20ENG.pdf |date=1 June 2013 }}, paragraph 14</ref> | ||
During the restoration of Lithuanian independence in 1990 and 1991, the Soviet army killed 13 people in Vilnius during the ].<ref name=bbc-onthisday>{{cite news|title=On This Day 13 January 1991: Bloodshed at Lithuanian TV station| |
During the restoration of Lithuanian independence in 1990 and 1991, the Soviet army killed 13 people in Vilnius during the ].<ref name=bbc-onthisday>{{cite news|title=On This Day 13 January 1991: Bloodshed at Lithuanian TV station|publisher=BBC News|url=http://news.bbc.co.uk/onthisday/hi/dates/stories/january/13/newsid_4059000/4059959.stm|access-date=2011-09-13}}</ref> | ||
===Poland=== | ===Poland=== | ||
====1939–1941==== | ====1939–1941==== | ||
] | ] in occupied Poland in June 1941]] | ||
] where the ] massacred thousands of Polish Officers, policemen, intellectuals and civilian prisoners of war.<ref name="Sanford2007">{{cite book|last=Sanford|first=George|author-link=George Sanford (political scientist)|title=Katyn and the Soviet Massacre of 1940: Truth, Justice and Memory|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=umQqmFXTosMC&pg=PA2|access-date=19 June 2017|year=2007|publisher=Routledge|isbn=978-1-134-30300-7|page=2}}</ref>]] | ] where the ] massacred thousands of Polish Officers, policemen, intellectuals and civilian prisoners of war.<ref name="Sanford2007">{{cite book|last=Sanford|first=George|author-link=George Sanford (political scientist)|title=Katyn and the Soviet Massacre of 1940: Truth, Justice and Memory|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=umQqmFXTosMC&pg=PA2|access-date=19 June 2017|year=2007|publisher=Routledge|isbn=978-1-134-30300-7|page=2}}</ref>]] | ||
{{Main|Soviet invasion of Poland|Katyn massacre|Polish prisoners of war in the Soviet Union (after 1939)|NKVD prisoner massacres}} | {{Main|Soviet invasion of Poland|Katyn massacre|Polish prisoners of war in the Soviet Union (after 1939)|NKVD prisoner massacres}} | ||
In September 1939, the Red Army invaded eastern Poland and occupied it in accordance with the secret protocols of the ]. The Soviets later forcefully occupied the Baltic States and parts of Romania, including ] and Northern Bukovina. | In September 1939, the Red Army invaded eastern Poland and occupied it in accordance with the secret protocols of the ]. The Soviets later forcefully occupied the Baltic States and parts of Romania, including ] and Northern Bukovina. | ||
German historian ]<ref name="OCLC/Urban">WorldCat, Library catalog. Holdings. Retrieved December 28, 2014.</ref> writes that the Soviet policy towards the people who fell under their control in occupied areas was harsh, showing strong elements of ].<ref name="Urban/Verlust2">Thomas Urban, '''', p. 9 (ibidem): "Massendeportationen nach Rußland. Seit dem frühen Morgen zogen Wagen mit ganzen polnischen Familien durch die Stadt zum Bahnhof. Man schaffte reichere polnische Familien, Familien von national gesinnten Anhängern, polnischen Patrioten, die Intelligenz weg, Familien von Häftlingen in sowjetischen Gefängnissen, es war schwer, sich auch nur ein Bild davon zu machen, welche Kategorie Menschen deportiert wurden. Weinen, Stöhnen und schreckliche Verzweiflung in polnischen Seelen Sowjets freuen sich lautstark und drohen damit, daß bald alle Polen deportiert werden. Und man könnte das erwarten, weil sie den ganzen 20. Juni über und am folgenden 21. Juni pausenlos Menschen zum Bahnhof brachten." {{ndash}} Alojza Piesiewiczówna.</ref> The NKVD task forces followed the Red Army to remove 'hostile elements' from the conquered territories in what was known as the 'revolution by hanging'.<ref name="Urban/Verlust"/> Polish historian, Prof. ], has noted parallels between the Nazi ] and these Soviet units.<ref> with Tomasz Strzembosz: ''Die verschwiegene Kollaboration'' Transodra, 23. Dezember 2001, p. 2 {{in lang|de}}</ref> Many civilians tried to escape from the Soviet NKVD ]s; those who failed were taken into custody and afterwards they were deported to ] and vanished in the ]s.<ref name="Urban/Verlust">], '''' (PDF file, direct download), p. 145. Verlag C. H. Beck 2004, {{ISBN|3-406-54156-9}}. "Revolution durch den Strick."</ref> | German historian ]<ref name="OCLC/Urban">WorldCat, Library catalog. Holdings. Retrieved December 28, 2014.</ref> writes that the Soviet policy towards the people who fell under their control in occupied areas was harsh, showing strong elements of ].<ref name="Urban/Verlust2">Thomas Urban, '' {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20090327023913/http://www.dpg-brandenburg.de/nr23/die_verschwiegene_kollaboration_strzembosz.pdf |date=27 March 2009 }}'', p. 9 (ibidem): "Massendeportationen nach Rußland. Seit dem frühen Morgen zogen Wagen mit ganzen polnischen Familien durch die Stadt zum Bahnhof. Man schaffte reichere polnische Familien, Familien von national gesinnten Anhängern, polnischen Patrioten, die Intelligenz weg, Familien von Häftlingen in sowjetischen Gefängnissen, es war schwer, sich auch nur ein Bild davon zu machen, welche Kategorie Menschen deportiert wurden. Weinen, Stöhnen und schreckliche Verzweiflung in polnischen Seelen Sowjets freuen sich lautstark und drohen damit, daß bald alle Polen deportiert werden. Und man könnte das erwarten, weil sie den ganzen 20. Juni über und am folgenden 21. Juni pausenlos Menschen zum Bahnhof brachten." {{ndash}} Alojza Piesiewiczówna.</ref> The NKVD task forces followed the Red Army to remove 'hostile elements' from the conquered territories in what was known as the 'revolution by hanging'.<ref name="Urban/Verlust"/> Polish historian, Prof. ], has noted parallels between the Nazi ] and these Soviet units.<ref> {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20090327023913/http://www.dpg-brandenburg.de/nr23/die_verschwiegene_kollaboration_strzembosz.pdf |date=27 March 2009 }} with Tomasz Strzembosz: ''Die verschwiegene Kollaboration'' Transodra, 23. Dezember 2001, p. 2 {{in lang|de}}</ref> Many civilians tried to escape from the Soviet NKVD ]s; those who failed were taken into custody and afterwards they were deported to ] and vanished in the ]s.<ref name="Urban/Verlust">], '' {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20090327023913/http://www.dpg-brandenburg.de/nr23/die_verschwiegene_kollaboration_strzembosz.pdf |date=27 March 2009 }}'' (PDF file, direct download), p. 145. Verlag C. H. Beck 2004, {{ISBN|3-406-54156-9}}. "Revolution durch den Strick."</ref> | ||
Torture was used on a wide scale in various prisons, especially in those prisons that were located in small towns. Prisoners were scalded with boiling water in ]; in ], people's noses, ears, and fingers were cut off and their eyes were also put out; in ], the breasts of female inmates were cut off; and in ], victims were bound together with barbed wire.<ref name="JanTGross"/> Similar atrocities occurred in ], ], ], and ].<ref name="JanTGross">]. ''Revolution From Abroad: The Soviet Conquest of Poland's Western Ukraine and Western Belorussia.'' Princeton University Press, 2002. {{ISBN|0-691-09603-1}} pp. 181–182</ref> According to historian, Prof. ]: | |||
{{ |
{{blockquote|We cannot escape the conclusion: Soviet state security organs tortured their prisoners not only to extract confessions but also to put them to death. Not that the NKVD had sadists in its ranks who had run amok; rather, this was a wide and systematic procedure.|]<ref name="JanTGross"/>}} | ||
According to sociologist, Prof. ], during the years from 1939 to 1941, nearly 1.5 million persons (including both local inhabitants and refugees from German-occupied Poland) were deported from the Soviet-controlled areas of former eastern Poland deep into the Soviet Union, of whom 58.0% were Poles, 19.4% ] and the remainder other ethnic nationalities.<ref>Tadeusz Piotrowski (1998), ''Poland's Holocaust'', McFarland, {{ISBN|0-7864-0371-3}}. Chapter: Soviet terror, p.14 "By the time the war was over, some 1 million Polish citizens – |
According to sociologist, Prof. ], during the years from 1939 to 1941, nearly 1.5 million persons (including both local inhabitants and refugees from ]) were deported from the Soviet-controlled areas of former eastern Poland deep into the Soviet Union, of whom 58.0% were Poles, 19.4% ] and the remainder other ethnic nationalities.<ref>Tadeusz Piotrowski (1998), ''Poland's Holocaust'', McFarland, {{ISBN|0-7864-0371-3}}. Chapter: Soviet terror, p.14 "By the time the war was over, some 1 million Polish citizens – Christians and Jews alike – had died at the hands of the Soviets."</ref> Only a small number of these deportees returned to their homes after the war, when their homelands were annexed by the Soviet Union. According to American professor ], at least one third of the 320,000 Polish prisoners of war captured by the Red Army in 1939 were murdered.<ref name="Quigley, Tragedy">], ''Tragedy & Hope: A History of the World in Our Time'', G. S. G. & Associates, Incorporated; New Ed edition, June 1975, {{ISBN|0-945001-10-X}}</ref> | ||
It's estimated that between 10 |
It's estimated that between 10,000-35,000 prisoners were killed either in prisons or on prison trail to the Soviet Union in the few days after the 22 June 1941 German attack on the Soviets (prisons: ], ], ], ], and so on).<ref>Jerzy Węgierski, Lwów pod okupacją sowiecką 1939–1941, Warszawa 1991, Editions Spotkania, {{ISBN|83-85195-15-7}} s. 272-273</ref><ref>"W czterdziestym nas Matko na Sibir zesłali". Polska a Rosja 1939–42. Wybór i opracowanie Jan Tomasz Gross, Irena Grudzińska-Gross. Wyd. I krajowe Warszawa 1990, Wyd. Res Publica i Wyd. Libra {{ISBN|83-7046-032-1}}., s.60.</ref><ref>Gottfried Schramm, Jan T. Gross, Manfred Zeidler et al. (1997). ], ed. From Peace to War: Germany, Soviet Russia and the World, 1939–1941. Berghahn Books. pp. 47–79. {{ISBN|1-57181-882-0}}.</ref><ref>Snyder, Timothy. Bloodlands: Europe Between Hitler and Stalin. Basic Books, 2010. {{ISBN|0-465-00239-0}} p. 194</ref> | ||
====1944–1945==== | ====1944–1945==== | ||
In Poland, German ] ended by |
In Poland, German ] ended by 1945, but they were replaced by Soviet oppression with the advance of Red Army forces. Soviet soldiers often engaged in plunder, rape and other crimes against the Poles, causing the population to fear and hate the regime.<ref name="Baziur">Grzegorz Baziur, "Armia Czerwona na Pomorzu Gdańskim 1945–1947" ''Biuletyn Instytutu Pamięci Narodowej'' 2002, nr 7</ref><ref name="Jan">Janusz Wróbel, "Wyzwoliciele czy Okupanci. Żołnierze Sowieccy w Łódzkim 1945–1946" ''Biuletyn Instytutu Pamięci Narodowej'' 2002, nr 7.</ref><ref name="Kamin">Łukasz Kamiński "Obdarci,głodni,żli, Sowieci w oczach Polaków 1944–1948" ''Biuletyn Instytutu Pamięci Narodowej'' 2002, nr 7</ref><ref name="Krog">Mariusz Lesław Krogulski, "Okupacja w imię sojuszu" Poland 2001.</ref> | ||
Soldiers of the ] (Armia Krajowa) were persecuted and imprisoned by |
Soldiers of the ] (Armia Krajowa) were persecuted and imprisoned by Soviet forces as a matter of course.<ref name="Davies/reviews">From reviews of ], '']'', Columbia, {{ISBN|0231128177}}. "On the 22 August the NKVD was ordered to arrest and disarm all members of the Home Army who fell into their hands." {{mdash}} Carlo D'Este , New York Times, July 25, 2004. "While the NKVD under General Ivan Serov was unleashing another brutal purge against the Poles in the liberated territories of Poland." {{mdash}} Donald Davidson, {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20150924021022/http://www.gbrussia.org/reviews.php?id=80 |date=24 September 2015 }}, London, Macmillan, 2004. {{ISBN|0-333-90568-7}}. Retrieved December 28, 2014.</ref> Most victims were deported to the gulags in the Donetsk region.<ref name="Paczkowski/enemy">Andrzej Paczkowski, {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210121073022/http://www.warsawuprising.com/paper/nkvd.htm |date=21 January 2021 }}, pp. 372-375 (in) ''Black Book of Communism. Crimes, Terror, Repression.'' Harvard University Press, London, 1999. "The territories newly annexed by the USSR in the autumn of 1944 subsequently witnessed arrests on a massive scale followed by deportations to the gulags or transfer to forced-labor sites, particularly in the Donetsk region." Retrieved December 28, 2014.</ref> In 1945 alone, the number of members of the ] who were deported to Siberia and various labor camps in the Soviet Union reached 50,000.<ref name="Piotrowski, 131"> {{ISBN|0-7864-2913-5}}.</ref><ref name="Rzecz">], 02.10.04 Nr 232, '''' (Great hunt: the persecutions of AK soldiers in the People's Republic of Poland). Retrieved June 7, 2006.</ref> Units of the Red Army carried out campaigns against Polish partisans and civilians. During the ] in 1945, more than 2,000 Poles were captured and about 600 of them are presumed to have died in Soviet custody.<ref name=wywiad>Agnieszka Domanowska, '''' (Little Katyn. The 65 anniversary of Augustow roundup), ], 2010-07-20. {{in lang|pl}}</ref> | ||
It was a common Soviet practice to accuse their victims of being fascists in order to justify their death sentences. |
It was a common Soviet practice to accuse their victims of being fascists in order to justify their death sentences. The perversion of this Soviet tactic lay in the fact that practically all of the accused had in reality been fighting against the forces of Nazi Germany since September 1939. At that time the Soviets were still collaborating with Nazi Germany for more than 20 months before ] started. Precisely therefore these kinds of Poles were judged capable of resisting the Soviets, in the same way that they had resisted the Nazis. After the War, a more elaborate appearance of justice was given under the jurisdiction of the ] orchestrated by the Soviets in the form of ]. These were organized after victims had been arrested under false charges by the NKVD or other Soviet controlled security organisations such as the ]. At least 6,000 political death sentences were issued, and the majority of them were carried out.<ref name="ipn.gov.pl-2">{{cite web|url=http://www.ipn.gov.pl/portal/pl/2/1002/Otwarcie_wystawy_8222Zbrodnie_w_majestacie_prawa_1944821119568221_8211_Krakow_2_.html |title="Zbrodnie w majestacie prawa 1944–1956" – Kraków 2006 |publisher=] |author=IPN |access-date=30 September 2013 |url-status=unfit |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120930192920/http://www.ipn.gov.pl/portal/pl/2/1002/Otwarcie_wystawy_8222Zbrodnie_w_majestacie_prawa_1944821119568221_8211_Krakow_2_.html |archive-date=September 30, 2012 }}</ref> It is estimated that over 20,000 people died in Soviet prisons {{Citation needed|date=July 2021}}. Famous examples include ] or ].<ref name="Kaczyński">Andrzej Kaczyński (02.10.04), {{cite web|url=http://www.rzeczpospolita.pl/specjal_041002/specjal_a_6.html |title=''Wielkie polowanie: Prześladowania akowców w Polsce Ludowej'' |access-date=2011-11-06 |url-status=bot: unknown |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20071219051422/http://www.rzeczpospolita.pl/specjal_041002/specjal_a_6.html |archive-date=19 December 2007 }} (Great hunt: The persecutions of AK soldiers in the People's Republic of Poland), ], Nr 232, last accessed 30 September 2013. {{in lang|pl}}.</ref> | ||
The attitude of Soviet servicemen towards ethnic Poles was better than their attitude towards the Germans, but it was not entirely better. The ] in 1945 led to a ] of ]. Although the total number of victims remains a matter of guessing, the Polish state archives and statistics of the Ministry of Health indicate that it might have exceeded 100,000.<ref name="polityka">{{cite web|url=http://archiwum.polityka.pl/art/kobieca-gehenna,353703.html| |
The attitude of Soviet servicemen towards ethnic Poles was better than their attitude towards the Germans, but it was not entirely better. The ] in 1945 led to a ] of ]. Although the total number of victims remains a matter of guessing, the Polish state archives and statistics of the Ministry of Health indicate that it might have exceeded 100,000.<ref name="polityka">{{cite web |author1=Joanna Ostrowska |author2=Marcin Zaremba |date=2009-03-07 |title="Kobieca gehenna" (The women's ordeal) |url=http://archiwum.polityka.pl/art/kobieca-gehenna,353703.html |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20190323231246/https://archiwum.polityka.pl/art/kobieca-gehenna,353703.html |archive-date=23 March 2019 |access-date=April 21, 2011 |work=No 10 (2695) |publisher=] |pages=64–66 |language=pl |quote=Generally speaking, the attitude of Soviet servicemen toward women of Slavic background was better than toward those who spoke German. Whether the number of purely Polish victims could have reached or even exceeded 100,000 is only a matter of guessing.}} <br /> {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20111007025551/http://www.ihuw.pl/biogramy/index.php?UID=87|date=2011-10-07}} of ], the co-author of the article cited above – is a historian from ] Department of History Institute of 20th Century History (). Zaremba published a number of scholarly monographs, among them: ''Komunizm, legitymizacja, nacjonalizm'' (426 pages), ''Marzec 1968'' (274 pages), ''Dzień po dniu w raportach SB'' (274 pages), ''Immobilienwirtschaft'' (German, 359 pages), see <br /> {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160314212517/http://genderstudies.pl/index.php/zajecia/joanna_ostrowska/|date=14 March 2016}} of ], Poland, is a lecturer at Departments of Gender Studies at two universities: the ] of Kraków, the ] as well as, at the ]. She is the author of scholarly works on the subject of mass rape and forced prostitution in Poland in the Second World War (i.e. "Prostytucja jako praca przymusowa w czasie II Wojny Światowej. Próba odtabuizowania zjawiska," "Wielkie przemilczanie. Prostytucja w obozach koncentracyjnych," etc.), a recipient of ] research grant from ], and a historian associated with ].</ref> In ], the Soviet entry into the city was accompanied by mass rapes of Polish women and girls, as well as the plunder of private property by Red Army soldiers.<ref name="Alma"/> This behavior reached such a scale that even Polish Communists installed by the Soviet Union composed a letter of protest to ] himself, while ] ] were held in expectation of a Soviet withdrawal.<ref name="Alma">{{cite journal |url=http://www3.uj.edu.pl/alma/alma/64/01/02.html |title=Okupowany Kraków - z prorektorem Andrzejem Chwalbą rozmawia Rita Pagacz-Moczarska |trans-title=Prof. Andrzej Chwalba talks about the Soviet-occupied Kraków |publisher=] |journal=Alma Mater |issue=4 |year=2004 |access-date=January 5, 2014 |author=Rita Pagacz-Moczarska |language=pl |quote=An interview with Andrzej Chwalba, Professor of history at the Jagiellonian University (and its prorector), conducted in Kraków by Rita Pagacz-Moczarska, and published by an online version of the Jagiellonian University's bulletin ''Alma Mater''. |archive-date=24 May 2008 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20080524235517/http://www3.uj.edu.pl/alma/alma/64/01/02.html |url-status=dead }} The article concerning World War II history of the city ("Occupied Krakow"), makes references to the fifth volume of entitled "Kraków in the years 1939-1945," ({{ISBN|83-08-03289-3}}) written by Chwalba from a historical perspective, also |url-status=bot: unknown |title=OKUPOWANY KRAKÓW | ||
- z prorektorem Andrzejem Chwalbą rozmawia Rita Pagacz-Moczarska|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20080524235517/http://www3.uj.edu.pl/alma/alma/64/01/02.html |archive-date=May 24, 2008 }}</ref> | |||
Red Army was also involved in ] |
The Red Army was also involved in ] in liberated territories. | ||
===Finland=== | ===Finland and Ingria=== | ||
{{Further|Winter War|Soviet partisans in Finland|Finnish prisoners of war in the Soviet Union}} | {{Further|Winter War|Soviet partisans in Finland|Finnish prisoners of war in the Soviet Union}} | ||
] in Finnish Lapland 1942 |
] in Finnish Lapland, 1942]] | ||
Between 1941 and 1944, ], attacking villages and other civilian targets. In November 2006, photographs showing Soviet atrocities were declassified by the Finnish authorities. These include images of slain women and children.<ref>{{cite news|last=Nykänen|first=Anna-Stina|url=http://www.hs.fi/English/article/Too+awful+an+image+of+war/1135223124092|title=Too awful an image of war: Sixty years on, there are no grounds to withhold images kept in a Finnish Defence Forces' safe|newspaper=Helsingin Sanomat|date=19 November 2006|url-status=dead|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20061216201947/http://www.hs.fi/English/article/Too+awful+an+image+of+war/1135223124092|archive-date=16 December 2006}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.iltalehti.fi/kuvagalleria/data/yleinen/544/1.shtml|title=Iltalehti |
Between 1941 and 1944, ], attacking villages and other civilian targets. In November 2006, photographs showing Soviet atrocities were declassified by the Finnish authorities. These include images of slain women and children.<ref>{{cite news|last=Nykänen|first=Anna-Stina|url=http://www.hs.fi/English/article/Too+awful+an+image+of+war/1135223124092|title=Too awful an image of war: Sixty years on, there are no grounds to withhold images kept in a Finnish Defence Forces' safe|newspaper=Helsingin Sanomat|date=19 November 2006|url-status=dead|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20061216201947/http://www.hs.fi/English/article/Too+awful+an+image+of+war/1135223124092|archive-date=16 December 2006}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.iltalehti.fi/kuvagalleria/data/yleinen/544/1.shtml|title=Iltalehti – Kuvagalleria|access-date=14 February 2016|archive-date=19 December 2008|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20081219221756/http://www.iltalehti.fi/kuvagalleria/data/yleinen/544/1.shtml|url-status=dead}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.iltalehti.fi/kuvagalleria/data/yleinen/546/4.shtml|title=Iltalehti – Kuvagalleria|access-date=14 February 2016|archive-date=19 December 2008|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20081219221801/http://www.iltalehti.fi/kuvagalleria/data/yleinen/546/4.shtml|url-status=dead}}</ref> The partisans usually executed their military and civilian prisoners after a minor interrogation.<ref>{{cite book |last=Nikkilä | first=Reijo |editor1-first=Teuvo |editor1-last=Alava |editor2-first=Dmitri |editor2-last=Frolov |editor3-first=Reijo |editor3-last=Nikkilä |title=Rukiver!: Suomalaiset sotavangit Neuvostoliitossa |publisher=Edita |year=2002 |page=17 |language=fi |isbn=951-37-3706-3}}</ref> | ||
Around 3,500 Finnish prisoners of war, of whom five were women, were captured by the Red Army. Their mortality rate is estimated to have been about 40 percent. The most common causes of death were hunger, cold and oppressive transportation.<ref name="pikkujattilainen-malmi">{{cite book |last=Malmi | first=Timo |editor1-first=Jari |editor1-last=Leskinen |editor2-first=Antti |editor2-last=Juutilainen |title=Jatkosodan pikkujättiläinen |edition=1st |publisher=Werner Söderström Osakeyhtiö |year=2005 |pages=1022–1032 |chapter=Jatkosodan suomalaiset sotavangit |language=fi |isbn=951-0-28690-7}}</ref> | Around 3,500 Finnish prisoners of war, of whom five were women, were captured by the Red Army. Their mortality rate is estimated to have been about 40 percent. The most common causes of death were hunger, cold and oppressive transportation.<ref name="pikkujattilainen-malmi">{{cite book |last=Malmi | first=Timo |editor1-first=Jari |editor1-last=Leskinen |editor2-first=Antti |editor2-last=Juutilainen |title=Jatkosodan pikkujättiläinen |edition=1st |publisher=Werner Söderström Osakeyhtiö |year=2005 |pages=1022–1032 |chapter=Jatkosodan suomalaiset sotavangit |language=fi |isbn=951-0-28690-7}}</ref> | ||
====Deportation of the Ingrian Finns==== | |||
{{Main|Deportations of the Ingrian Finns}} | |||
By 1939 the Ingrian Finnish population had decreased to about 50,000, which was about 43% of 1928 population figures,<ref name="Taagepera2">], p. 144</ref> and the Ingrian Finn national district was abolished.,<ref name="Taagepera1">], p. 143</ref> Following the ] and the beginning of the ], in early 1942 all 20,000 Ingrian Finns remaining in Soviet-controlled territory were deported to ]. Most of the Ingrian Finns together with ] and ] living in German-occupied territory were evacuated to Finland in 1943–1944. Finland was forced to return the evacuees per the ].<ref name="Taagepera2"/> Soviet authorities did not allow the 55,733 people who had been handed over to settle back in Ingria, and instead deported them to central regions of Russia.<ref name="Taagepera2"/><ref name="Scott">], pp. 59–60</ref> The main regions of ] forced settlement were the interior areas of Siberia, ], and ].<ref name="Evmenov">], p. 92</ref> | |||
===Soviet Union=== | ===Soviet Union=== | ||
])]] | |||
==== Deportation of kulaks ==== | |||
{{main|Dekulakization}} | |||
Large numbers of ]s regardless of their nationality were resettled to ] and ]. According to data from Soviet archives, which were published in 1990, 1,803,392 people were sent to labor colonies and camps in 1930 and 1931, and 1,317,022 reached the destination. Deportations on a smaller scale continued after 1931. Data from the Soviet archives indicates 2.4 million Kulaks were deported from 1930 to 1934.<ref name="Against Their Will">{{cite book |last1=Polian |first1=Polian |title=Against Their Will |date=2004 |publisher=Central European Press |location=Hungary |isbn=9639241687 |page=313}}</ref> The reported number of kulaks and their relatives who had died in labour colonies from 1932 to 1940 was 389,521.<ref name="The Stalinist Penal System">{{cite book |last1=Pohl |first1=J. Otto |title=The Stalinist Penal System |date=1997 |publisher=McFarland |isbn=0786403365 |page=58}}</ref><ref> 14 January 2009 at the ].</ref> ] estimated that 15 million kulaks and their families were deported by 1937, during the deportation many people died, but the full number is not known.<ref>Sebag Montefiore, Simon (2014). ''Stalin: The Court of the Red Tsar''. W&N. p. 84. {{ISBN|978-1780228358}}. "By 1937, 18,5 million were collevtivized but there were now only 19.9 million households: 5.7 million households, perhaps 15 million persons, had been deported, many of them dead"</ref> | |||
====Retreat by Soviet forces in 1941==== | ====Retreat by Soviet forces in 1941==== | ||
Line 153: | Line 252: | ||
====Deportation of Greeks==== | ====Deportation of Greeks==== | ||
{{Main|Deportation of the Soviet Greeks}} | {{Main|Deportation of the Soviet Greeks}} | ||
The prosecution of Greeks in the USSR was gradual: at first the authorities shut down the Greek schools, cultural centres, and publishing houses. Then, in 1942, 1944 and 1949, the NKVD indiscriminately arrested all Greek men 16 years old or older. All Greeks who were wealthy or self-employed professionals were sought for prosecution first. |
The prosecution of Greeks in the USSR was gradual: at first the authorities shut down the Greek schools, cultural centres, and publishing houses. Then, in 1942, 1944 and 1949, the NKVD indiscriminately arrested all Greek men 16 years old or older. All Greeks who were wealthy or self-employed professionals were sought for prosecution first. This affected mostly ] and other Minorities in the ] and along the ] coast. By one estimate, around 50,000 Greeks were deported.{{sfn|Voutira|2011|p=170}}<ref name="ka">, ''ΕΛΛΑΔΑ'', 09.12.2007</ref> | ||
On 25 September 1956, MVD Order N 0402 was adopted and defined the removal of restrictions towards the deported peoples in the special settlements.{{sfn|Bugay|1996|p=94}} Afterward, the Soviet Greeks started returning to their homes, or emigrating towards Greece. | On 25 September 1956, MVD Order N 0402 was adopted and defined the removal of restrictions towards the deported peoples in the special settlements.{{sfn|Bugay|1996|p=94}} Afterward, the Soviet Greeks started returning to their homes, or emigrating towards Greece. | ||
Line 159: | Line 258: | ||
====Deportation of Kalmyks==== | ====Deportation of Kalmyks==== | ||
{{Main|Kalmyk deportations of 1943}} | {{Main|Kalmyk deportations of 1943}} | ||
During the ], codenamed '''Operation |
During the ], codenamed '''Operation Ulussy''' (Операция "Улусы"), the ] of most people of the ] (as well as Russian women married to Kalmyks, but not Kalmyk women married to people of other nationalities) in the Soviet Union (USSR), around half of all (97–98,000) Kalmyk people deported to Siberia died before being allowed to return home in 1957.<ref>{{Cite news|url=http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/europe/country_profiles/4580467.stm|title=Regions and territories: Kalmykia|date=29 November 2011|accessdate=22 August 2022|via=news.bbc.co.uk}}</ref> | ||
====Deportation of Crimean Tatars==== | ====Deportation of Crimean Tatars==== | ||
{{Main|Deportation of the Crimean Tatars}} | {{Main|Deportation of the Crimean Tatars}} | ||
After the retreat of the ''Wehrmacht'' from Crimea, the NKVD deported around 200,000 Crimean Tatars from the peninsula on 18 May 1944.<ref>{{cite web| title=Press briefing notes on Crimean Tatars| url=https://www.ohchr.org/EN/NewsEvents/Pages/DisplayNews.aspx?NewsID=19970&LangID=E| date=17 May 2016| work=]|access-date=18 July 2019}}</ref> | After the retreat of the ''Wehrmacht'' from Crimea, the NKVD deported around 200,000 ] from the peninsula on 18 May 1944.<ref>{{cite web| title=Press briefing notes on Crimean Tatars| url=https://www.ohchr.org/EN/NewsEvents/Pages/DisplayNews.aspx?NewsID=19970&LangID=E| date=17 May 2016| work=]|access-date=18 July 2019}}</ref> 109,956 of them died, which represents 46% of the entire Crimean Tatar population.<ref>{{Cite web |last=] |year=1973 |url=https://www.amnesty.org/download/Documents/204000/eur460021975eng.pdf |title=A Chronicle of Current Events - Journal of the Human Rights Movement in the USSR |issue=28–31}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web |last=] |year=1991 |url=https://www.hrw.org/reports/pdfs/u/ussr/ussr.919/usssr919full.pdf |title=Punished Peoples" of the Soviet Union: The Continuing Legacy of Stalin's Deportations |location=New York City |lccn=91076226}}</ref> | ||
==== |
====Northern Caucasus==== | ||
{{Main| |
{{Main|Deportation of the Meskhetian Turks|Deportation of the Karachays}} | ||
In 1943 and 1944, the Soviet government accused several entire ethnic groups of Axis collaboration. As a punishment, several entire ethnic groups were deported, mostly to Central Asia and Siberia into ]. | |||
By 1939 the Ingrian Finnish population had decreased to about 50,000, which was about 43% of 1928 population figures,<ref name="Taagepera2">], p. 144</ref> and the Ingrian Finn national district was abolished.,<ref name="Taagepera1">], p. 143</ref> Following the ] and the beginning of the ], in early 1942 all 20,000 Ingrian Finns remaining in Soviet-controlled territory were deported to ]. Most of the Ingrian Finns together with ] and ] living in German-occupied territory were evacuated to Finland in 1943–1944. After Finland ], it was forced to return the evacuees.<ref name="Taagepera2"/> Soviet authorities did not allow the 55,733 people who had been handed over to settle back in Ingria, and instead deported them to central regions of Russia.<ref name="Taagepera2"/><ref name="Scott">], pp. 59–60</ref> The main regions of Ingrian Finns forced settlement were the interior areas of Siberia, ], and ].<ref name="Evmenov">], p. 92</ref> | |||
=====Chechnya-Ingushetia===== | |||
{{Main|Deportation of the Chechens and Ingush}} | |||
] | |||
On 23 February 1944, ], the head of the ], ordered the deportation of the entire Chechen and Ingush population of the ] by freight trains to remote areas of the Soviet Union (such as Siberia, the Urals and Central Asia). The operation was called "Chechevitsa" (Operation Lentil),{{sfn|Wood|2007|p=36}} (its first two syllables pointing at its intended targets), and is often referred to by Chechens as the "Aardakh" (the Exodus).{{Sfn|Werth|2008|p=412}} The operation was started following complaints by the NKVD of "low level of discipline, prevalence of banditry and terrorism, disloyalty of the Chechens to the Communist party" and alleged "collaboration with the occupying German forces", citing an alleged confession of a German agent where he supposedly claimed that the German forces had "major support among the Ingush".{{sfn|Fowkes|1998|p=10}} The Chechen-Ingush Republic was never occupied by the German army, but the repressions were officially justified by "an armed resistance to Soviet power", although the charges of local collaboration with the Nazis were never subsequently proven in any Soviet court.{{sfn|Burds|2007|p=16–26}}{{sfn|Dushnyck|1975|p=503}} | |||
NKVD troops went systematically from house to house to collect individuals, the inhabitants were rounded up and imprisoned in ]s, before being packed into unheated and uninsulated ], with the locals being given only about 15 to 30 minutes to pack for the surprise transfer.{{sfn|Gammer|2006|p=170}}{{sfn|Gammer|2006|p=167}} According to a correspondence dated March 3, 1944, at least 19,000 officers and 100,000 NKVD soldiers from all over the USSR were sent to implement this operation.{{sfn|Bugay|1996|p=106}} The plan envisaged that 300,000 people were to be deported from the lowland in the first three days, while the remaining 150,000 people living in the mountain regions would be deported by the next days; some 500 people were also deported by mistake, even though they were not Chechens or Ingush.{{sfn|Gammer|2006|p=166}} Through the initial deportations, ~478,479 people were forcibly resettled in the Aardakh: 387,229 Chechens and 91,250 Ingush; in May 1944, Beria issued a directive ordering the NKVD to browse the entire USSR in search for any remaining members of these ethnic groups, as a result, an additional 4,146 Chechens and Ingush were found in ], ], ], ], ] and ], with the total number of deportees being reported by the NKVD as around 493,269 by May and ~496,460 by July.{{sfn|Tishkov|2004|p=25}} They were loaded onto 180 special trains, about 40 to 45 persons into each ], each family was allowed to carry up to 500 kg of personal belongings on the trip, Some 40% to 50% of the deportees were children.;{{sfn|Dunlop|1998|p=67}} 333,739 people were evicted, of which 176,950 were sent to trains already on the first day of the operation, with Beriya reporting that there were only about six "cases of resistance", while 842 were "subject to isolation" and another 94,741 were removed from their homes by 11 PM, Much of the ] owned by locals was later sent to ]es in ], ], ] and ], many of these animals perished from exhaustion during the following months.{{sfn|Dunlop|1998|p=74}} | |||
The people were transported in cattle trains that were not appropriate for human transfer, lacking electricity, heating or ]. The exiles inside endured many ] (such as ]), which lead to deaths from ] or hunger, survivors recall that the wagons were so full of people that there was barely any space to move inside them, and that the deportees were given food only sporadically during the transit and were not told where they would be taken to.{{sfn|Gammer|2006|p=173}}{{Sfn|Brauer|2010|p=387}} The wagons did not even stop for ] breaks, with the passengers being forced to make holes in the floor to relieve themselves.{{Sfn|Gessen|2015|p=18}} The transit to Central Asia lasted for almost a month, with the special trains traveling almost 2,000 miles to reach their destinations.{{sfn|Pokalova|2015|p=16}} 239,768 Chechens and 78,479 Ingush were sent to the ], whereas 70,089 Chechens and 2,278 Ingush arrived in ]. Smaller numbers of the remaining deportees were sent to ], ] and ], the deportees arrived at the regions without shelter or food, and were in many occasions taken to ], where all prisoners aged 16–45 would be forced to work in mines, farms, factories or construction in return for food stamps (with the threat of severe punishment if non-compliant), as well as report monthly to the NKVD office at the camp.{{sfn|Dunlop|1998|p=68}} Those that attempted to escape would be sent to ]s, and the children of the prisoners would inherit their "exile" status. Malnutrition (caused by the negligence of the authorities to provide food for the prisoners), alongside exhaustion (from overworking) and mistreatment from Soviet forces led to high death rates among the local population.{{Sfn|Lee|Thomas|2012|p=185}} Many deported children were beaten by the local guards for "disobedience", and many families were left without proper housing: only 5,000 out of the 31,000 families in Kirgiz SSR were provided with housing, with one district having prepared only 18 apartments for over 900 families, the Chechen and Ingush children also had to attend school in the local language, not their own.{{sfn|Dunlop|1998|p=69}}{{Sfn|Gessen|2015|p=20}} | |||
On many occasions, resistance was met with slaughter, and in one such instance, in the ] of Khaibakh, about ] by NKVD General Mikheil Gveshiani, who was praised for this and promised a medal by Beria.{{sfn|Gammer|2006|p=170}} Many people from remote villages were executed per Beria's verbal order that any Chechen or Ingush deemed 'untransportable should be liquidated' on the spot.{{sfn|Burds|2007|p=16–26}} This meant that those deemed too old or weak were to either be shot or left to starve in their beds alone. The soldiers would also sometimes rob from the empty homes.{{sfn|Gammer|2006|p=169}} Those who resisted, protested or "walked too slow" were shot on the spot; in one incident, NKVD soldiers climbed up the Moysty mountain and found 60 villagers there, even though their commander ordered the soldiers to shoot the villagers, many soldiers instead fired in the air, the commander then ordered many of these soldiers to join the villagers while another platoon fired at all of them.{{sfn|Gammer|2006|p=169, 170}} | |||
=====Kabardino-Balkaria===== | |||
====Deportation of Chechens and Ingush==== | |||
{{ |
{{main|Deportation of the Balkars}} | ||
] arrived in ] on 2 March 1944, and in the early morning of March 8, 1944, two days earlier than planned, Balkar's population was ordered to get ready to leave their homes. The entire operation lasted about two hours, with the entire Balkar population of the region being evicted. Around 17,000 ] troops and 4,000 local agents participated in this operation.{{sfn|Richmond|2008|p=117}} By 9 March, 37,713 Balkars were deported in 14 train convoys, they arrived at their destinations in the Kazakh and Kyrgiz socialist republics and by 23 March. | |||
In 1943 and 1944, the Soviet government accused several entire ethnic groups of Axis collaboration. As a punishment, several entire ethnic groups were deported, mostly to Central Asia and Siberia into ]. The ] described the deportation of Chechens and Ingush, where around a quarter people perished, an act of ] in 2004:<ref name=Europarl>{{cite web|url=http://www.unpo.org/article/438|publisher=]|title=Chechnya: European Parliament recognises the genocide of the Chechen People in 1944|date=February 27, 2004|access-date=May 23, 2012|url-status=live|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120604125012/http://www.unpo.org/article/438|archive-date=June 4, 2012|df=mdy-all}}</ref> | |||
Official Soviet documents reveal that 562 people died during the deportation.{{sfn|Richmond|2008|p=117}} Many more died during the harsh years in exile and in ]: in total, it is estimated that 7,600 Balkars died as a consequence of the deportation, amounting to 19.82 percent of their entire ethnic group.{{sfn|Buckley|Ruble|Hofmann|2008|p=207}} | |||
{{quote|...Believes that the deportation of the entire Chechen people to Central Asia on 23 February 1944 on the orders of Stalin constitutes an act of genocide within the meaning of the Fourth Hague Convention of 1907 and the Convention for the Prevention and Repression of the Crime of Genocide adopted by the UN General Assembly on 9 December 1948.<ref>{{cite web|date=26 February 2004|location=Brussels|title=Texts adopted: Final edition EU-Russia relations|url=http://www.europarl.europa.eu/sides/getDoc.do?type=TA&language=EN&reference=P5-TA-2004-0121|publisher=European Parliament|access-date=22 September 2017|url-status=live|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20170923003031/http://www.europarl.europa.eu/sides/getDoc.do?type=TA&language=EN&reference=P5-TA-2004-0121|archive-date=September 23, 2017|df=mdy-all}}</ref>}} | |||
===Germany=== | ===Germany=== | ||
{{Main|Flight and evacuation of German civilians during the end of World War II|Flight and expulsion of Germans (1944–50)|Rape during the occupation of Germany#Soviet Military}} | {{Main|Flight and evacuation of German civilians during the end of World War II|Flight and expulsion of Germans (1944–50)|Rape during the occupation of Germany#Soviet Military}} | ||
According to historian ], statements in Soviet military newspapers and the orders of the Soviet high command were jointly responsible for the excesses of the Red Army. Propaganda proclaimed that the Red Army had entered Germany as an avenger to punish all Germans.<ref name="The Russians in Germany: A History of the Soviet Zone of Occupation, |
According to historian ], statements in Soviet military newspapers and the orders of the Soviet high command were jointly responsible for the excesses of the Red Army. Propaganda proclaimed that the Red Army had entered Germany as an avenger to punish all Germans.<ref name="The Russians in Germany: A History of the Soviet Zone of Occupation, 1945–1949">] Cambridge: Belknap, 1995 {{ISBN|0-674-78405-7}}</ref> | ||
Some historians dispute this, referring to an order issued on 19 January 1945, which required the prevention of mistreatment of civilians. An order of the military council of the ], signed by Marshal Rokossovsky, ordered the shooting of looters and rapists at the scene of the crime. An order issued by Stavka on 20 April 1945 said that there was a need to maintain good relations with German civilians in order to decrease resistance and bring a quicker end to hostilities.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://actualhistory.ru/51|title=Н. Мендкович. Кто "изнасиловал Германию"? (часть 1)|author=Yamaletdinov Ruslan aka Dime|access-date=14 February 2016}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|last=Rzheshevskii|first=Oleg Aleksandrovich|url=http://gpw.tellur.ru/page.html?r=books&s=beevor|script-title=ru:Берлинская операция 1945 г.: дискуссия продолжается|trans-title=The Berlin Operation of 1945: The debate continues|language=ru|publisher=gpw.tellur.ru|url-status=dead|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120401022017/http://gpw.tellur.ru/page.html?r=books&s=beevor|archive-date=1 April 2012}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|last=Turchenko|first=Sergei|url=http://svpressa.ru/war/article/8271/|script-title=ru:Секс-Освобождение: эротические мифы Второй мировой|trans-title=Sexual Liberation: erotic myths about the Second World|language=ru|publisher=svpressa.ru|date=5 May 2011|access-date=18 June 2017|url-status=dead|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20140530214602/http://svpressa.ru/war/article/8271/|archive-date=30 May 2014|df=dmy-all}}</ref> | Some historians dispute this, referring to an order issued on 19 January 1945, which required the prevention of mistreatment of civilians. An order of the military council of the ], signed by ], ordered the shooting of looters and rapists at the scene of the crime. An order issued by Stavka on 20 April 1945 said that there was a need to maintain good relations with German civilians in order to decrease resistance and bring a quicker end to hostilities.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://actualhistory.ru/51|title=Н. Мендкович. Кто "изнасиловал Германию"? (часть 1)|author=Yamaletdinov Ruslan aka Dime|access-date=14 February 2016|archive-date=11 August 2011|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110811032916/http://actualhistory.ru/51|url-status=dead}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|last=Rzheshevskii|first=Oleg Aleksandrovich|url=http://gpw.tellur.ru/page.html?r=books&s=beevor|script-title=ru:Берлинская операция 1945 г.: дискуссия продолжается|trans-title=The Berlin Operation of 1945: The debate continues|language=ru|publisher=gpw.tellur.ru|url-status=dead|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120401022017/http://gpw.tellur.ru/page.html?r=books&s=beevor|archive-date=1 April 2012}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|last=Turchenko|first=Sergei|url=http://svpressa.ru/war/article/8271/|script-title=ru:Секс-Освобождение: эротические мифы Второй мировой|trans-title=Sexual Liberation: erotic myths about the Second World|language=ru|publisher=svpressa.ru|date=5 May 2011|access-date=18 June 2017|url-status=dead|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20140530214602/http://svpressa.ru/war/article/8271/|archive-date=30 May 2014|df=dmy-all}}</ref> | ||
====Murders of civilians==== | ====Murders of civilians==== | ||
]]] | ]]] | ||
On several occasions during World War II, Soviet soldiers set fire to buildings, villages, or parts of cities, and they used deadly force against locals who attempted to put out the fires. Most Red Army atrocities took place only in what was regarded as hostile territory |
On several occasions during World War II, Soviet soldiers set fire to buildings, villages, or parts of cities, and they used deadly force against locals who attempted to put out the fires. Most Red Army atrocities took place only in what was regarded as hostile territory, however, there were several massacres committed in Poland, e.g. the ]. Soldiers of the Red Army, together with members of the NKVD, frequently looted German transport trains in Poland in 1944 and 1945.<ref name="Urban, Der Verlust">] ''Der Verlust'', p. 145, Verlag C. H. Beck 2004, {{ISBN|3-406-54156-9}}</ref> | ||
For the Germans, the organized ] was delayed by the Nazi government, so as not to demoralize the troops, who were by now fighting in their own country. |
For the Germans, the organized ] was delayed by the Nazi government, so as not to demoralize the troops, who were by now fighting in their own country. Nazi propaganda—originally meant to stiffen civil resistance by describing in gory and embellished detail Red Army atrocities such as the ]—often backfired and created panic. Whenever possible, as soon as the Wehrmacht retreated, local civilians began to flee westward on their own initiative.{{Citation needed|date=November 2010}} | ||
Fleeing before the advancing Red Army, large numbers of the inhabitants of the German provinces of ], ], and ] died during the evacuations, some from cold and starvation, some during combat operations. A significant percentage of this death toll, however, occurred when evacuation columns encountered units of the Red Army. Civilians were run over by tanks, shot, or otherwise murdered. Women and young girls were raped and left to die.<ref name="Beevor, Downfall">], ''Berlin: The Downfall 1945'', Penguin Books, 2002, {{ISBN|0-670-88695-5}}</ref>{{pages needed|date=July 2017}}<ref name="ARD Dokumentation"> {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20070807171305/http://kriegsende.ard.de/pages_std_lib/0,3275,OID1088988,00.html |date=7 August 2007 }} on German public TV (ARD) of 2005</ref>{{better source needed|date=July 2017}}<ref name="Darnstädt, Wiegrefe, Vater, erschieß mich!">Thomas Darnstädt, Klaus Wiegrefe ''"Vater, erschieß mich!"'' in ''Die Flucht'', S. 28/29 (Herausgeber ] und Stephan Burgdorff), dtv und SPIEGEL-Buchverlag, {{ISBN|3-423-34181-5}}</ref> | Fleeing before the advancing Red Army, large numbers of the inhabitants of the German provinces of ], ], and ] died during the evacuations, some from cold and starvation, some during combat operations. A significant percentage of this death toll, however, occurred when evacuation columns encountered units of the Red Army. Civilians were run over by tanks, shot, or otherwise murdered. Women and young girls were raped and left to die.<ref name="Beevor, Downfall">], ''Berlin: The Downfall 1945'', Penguin Books, 2002, {{ISBN|0-670-88695-5}}</ref>{{pages needed|date=July 2017}}<ref name="ARD Dokumentation"> {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20070807171305/http://kriegsende.ard.de/pages_std_lib/0,3275,OID1088988,00.html |date=7 August 2007 }} on German public TV (ARD) of 2005</ref>{{better source needed|date=July 2017}}<ref name="Darnstädt, Wiegrefe, Vater, erschieß mich!">Thomas Darnstädt, Klaus Wiegrefe ''"Vater, erschieß mich!"'' in ''Die Flucht'', S. 28/29 (Herausgeber ] und Stephan Burgdorff), dtv und SPIEGEL-Buchverlag, {{ISBN|3-423-34181-5}}</ref> | ||
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In addition, ] of the Soviet ] flew bombing and strafing missions that targeted columns of refugees.<ref name="Beevor, Downfall"/>{{pages needed|date=July 2017}}<ref name="ARD Dokumentation" />{{better source needed|date=July 2017}} | In addition, ] of the Soviet ] flew bombing and strafing missions that targeted columns of refugees.<ref name="Beevor, Downfall"/>{{pages needed|date=July 2017}}<ref name="ARD Dokumentation" />{{better source needed|date=July 2017}} | ||
] for taking legal measures against rampant looting, burning of houses, and killing of civilians by the Red Army soldiers. Transcript available at the image description.]] | |||
While serving as a ] Captain in ], future ] and ]-winning author ], commanded an artillery unit which participated in crimes against civilians. In '']'', he wrote, "There is nothing that so assists the awakening of omniscience within us as insistent thoughts about one's own transgressions, errors, mistakes. After the difficult cycles of such ponderings over many years, whenever I mentioned the heartlessness of our highest-ranking bureaucrats, the cruelty of our executioners, I remember myself in my Captain's shoulder boards and the forward march of my battery through East Prussia, enshrouded in fire, and I say: 'So were ''we'' any better?'"<ref>Ericson, ''The Solzhenitsyn Reader; New and Essential Writings, 1947-2006'', page 266.</ref> | |||
Although mass executions of civilians by the Red Army were seldom publicly reported, there is a known incident, ]. During the first occupation of the town by the ], on April 21 or 22 a higher Soviet officer was shot. After that the ] briefly returned. After the second occupation of the town, Red Army soldiers rounded up the civilians and shot the adult men in a nearby forest. The official estimate is between 30 and 166 civilian victims. Some German sources claimed about 1,000 victims, but this must be rejected on the basis on the actual number of town residents.<ref>Petra Görlich: Die Toten von Treuenbrietzen. In: Referat für Presse- und Öffentlichkeitsarbeit der Universität Potsdam (Hrsg.): Portal - Das Potsdamer Universitätsmagazin. Nr. 04/2010, p. 41.</ref> | |||
] for taking legal measures against rampant looting, burning of houses, and killing of civilians by the Red Army soldiers. Transcript available at the image description]] | |||
The Red Army's violence against the local German population during the occupation of eastern Germany often led to incidents like that in ], a small city conquered by the Soviets in the spring of 1945. Despite its surrender, nearly 900 civilians committed suicide, fueled by instances of pillaging, rape, and executions.<ref name="dw.com"/> | |||
Although mass executions of civilians by the Red Army were seldom publicly reported, there is a known incident in ], where at least 88 male inhabitants were rounded up and shot on 1 May 1945. The incident took place after a victory celebration in which numerous girls from Treuenbrietzen were raped and a Red Army ] was shot by an unknown assailant. Some sources claim that as many as 1,000 civilians may have been executed during the incident.<ref group="notes" name="scheer">"Der Umgang mit den Denkmälern." Brandenburgische Landeszentrale für politische Bildung/Ministerium für Wissenschaft, Forschung und Kultur des Landes Brandenburg. ]: ''Documentation of State headquarters for political education / ministry for science, research and culture of the State of ]'', p. 89/90 </ref><ref> {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20071225050937/http://www.berlinonline.de/berliner-zeitung/archiv/.bin/dump.fcgi/1998/0508/blickpunkt/0003/index.html |date=25 December 2007 }}</ref><ref>Claus-Dieter Steyer, ''"Stadt ohne Männer"'' (''City without men''), ] at {{cite web |url=http://www.tagesspiegel.de/berlin/archiv/21.06.2006/2610181.asp |title=Archived copy |access-date=2012-05-27 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://archive.is/20120527030925/http://www.tagesspiegel.de/berlin/archiv/21.06.2006/2610181.asp |archive-date=27 May 2012 |df=dmy-all }}</ref> | |||
The first mayor of the ] district of Berlin, Walter Kilian, appointed by the Soviets after the war ended, reported extensive looting by Red Army soldiers in the area: "Individuals, department stores, shops, apartments ... all were robbed blind."<ref>{{cite book | author=Hubertus Knabe |author-link=Hubertus Knabe |language=de |title=Tag der Befreiung? Das Kriegsende in Ostdeutschland (A day of liberation? The end of the war in Eastern Germany) |publisher= Propyläen |year=2005 |isbn=3-549-07245-7 }}</ref>{{pages needed|date=July 2017}} | The first mayor of the ] district of Berlin, Walter Kilian, appointed by the Soviets after the war ended, reported extensive looting by Red Army soldiers in the area: "Individuals, department stores, shops, apartments ... all were robbed blind."<ref>{{cite book | author=Hubertus Knabe |author-link=Hubertus Knabe |language=de |title=Tag der Befreiung? Das Kriegsende in Ostdeutschland (A day of liberation? The end of the war in Eastern Germany) |publisher= Propyläen |year=2005 |isbn=3-549-07245-7 }}</ref>{{pages needed|date=July 2017}} | ||
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In the ], members of the ] reported to Stalin that looting and rape by Soviet soldiers could result in a negative reaction by the German population towards the Soviet Union and the future of socialism in East Germany. Stalin is said to have angrily reacted: "I shall not tolerate anybody dragging the honour of the Red Army through the mud."<ref name="Leonhard1979">{{cite book |last=Wolfgang |first=Leonhard |title=Child of the Revolution |publisher=Pathfinder Press |year=1979 |isbn=0-906133-26-2}}</ref>{{pages needed|date=July 2017}}<ref>Norman M. Naimark. ''The Russians in Germany: A History of the Soviet Zone of Occupation, 1945–1949.'' Harvard University Press, 1995. {{ISBN|0-674-78405-7}}</ref>{{pages needed|date=July 2017}} | In the ], members of the ] reported to Stalin that looting and rape by Soviet soldiers could result in a negative reaction by the German population towards the Soviet Union and the future of socialism in East Germany. Stalin is said to have angrily reacted: "I shall not tolerate anybody dragging the honour of the Red Army through the mud."<ref name="Leonhard1979">{{cite book |last=Wolfgang |first=Leonhard |title=Child of the Revolution |publisher=Pathfinder Press |year=1979 |isbn=0-906133-26-2}}</ref>{{pages needed|date=July 2017}}<ref>Norman M. Naimark. ''The Russians in Germany: A History of the Soviet Zone of Occupation, 1945–1949.'' Harvard University Press, 1995. {{ISBN|0-674-78405-7}}</ref>{{pages needed|date=July 2017}} | ||
Accordingly, all |
Accordingly, all evidence—such as reports, photos and other documents of looting, rape, the burning down of farms and villages by the Red Army—was deleted from all archives in the future ].<ref name="Leonhard1979" />{{Page needed|date=September 2024}} | ||
A study published by the German government in 1974 estimated the number of German civilian victims of crimes during ] between 1945 and 1948 to be over 600,000, with about 400,000 deaths in the areas east of Oder and Neisse (ca. 120,000 in acts of direct violence, mostly by Soviet troops but also by Poles, 60,000 in Polish and 40,000 in Soviet concentration camps or prisons mostly from hunger and disease, and 200,000 deaths among civilian deportees to ]), 130,000 in Czechoslovakia (thereof 100,000 in camps) and 80,000 in Yugoslavia (thereof 15,000 to 20,000 from violence outside of and in camps and 59,000 deaths from hunger and disease in camps).<ref>Vertreibung und Vertreibungsverbrechen 1945–1978. Bericht des Bundesarchivs vom 28 Mai 1974. Archivalien und ausgewälte Erlebenisberichte, Bonn 1989, pp. 40-41, 46-47, 51-53)</ref> These figures do not include up to 125,000 civilian deaths in the ].<ref>Clodfelter, |
A study published by the German government in 1974 estimated the number of German civilian victims of crimes during ] between 1945 and 1948 to be over 600,000, with about 400,000 deaths in the areas east of Oder and Neisse (ca. 120,000 in acts of direct violence, mostly by Soviet troops but also by Poles, 60,000 in Polish and 40,000 in Soviet concentration camps or prisons mostly from hunger and disease, and 200,000 deaths among civilian deportees to ]), 130,000 in Czechoslovakia (thereof 100,000 in camps) and 80,000 in Yugoslavia (thereof 15,000 to 20,000 from violence outside of and in camps and 59,000 deaths from hunger and disease in camps).<ref>Vertreibung und Vertreibungsverbrechen 1945–1978. Bericht des Bundesarchivs vom 28 Mai 1974. Archivalien und ausgewälte Erlebenisberichte, Bonn 1989, pp. 40-41, 46-47, 51-53)</ref> These figures do not include up to 125,000 civilian deaths in the ].<ref>Clodfelter, Micheal, ''Warfare and Armed Conflicts: A Statistical Reference to Casualty and Other Figures, 1500–2000'', 2nd Ed. {{ISBN|0-7864-1204-6}}, p. 515</ref> About 22,000 civilians are estimated to have been killed during the fighting in Berlin only.<ref>Peter Antill/Peter Dennis, Berlin 1945: End of the Thousand Year Reich, 2005 Osprey Publishing, p. 85</ref> | ||
====Mass rapes==== | ====Mass rapes==== | ||
{{main|Rape during the Soviet occupation of Poland|Rape during the occupation of Germany}} | {{main|Rape during the Soviet occupation of Poland|Rape during the occupation of Germany}} | ||
Western estimates of the traceable number of rape victims range from two hundred thousand to two million.<ref>Hanna Schissler ''The Miracle Years: A Cultural History of West Germany, 1949–1968'' </ref> Following the ] of 1945, mass rape by Soviet males occurred in all major cities taken by the Red Army. Women were gang raped by as many as several dozen soldiers ]. In some cases victims who did not hide in the basements all day were raped up to 15 times.<ref name="polityka"/><ref name="Krytyka"> Source: ] nr 10/2009 (2695).</ref> According to historian ], following the Red Army's capture of Berlin in 1945, Soviet troops raped German women and girls as young as eight years old.<ref>, ''The Guardian''</ref> | As Allied troops entered and occupied German territory during the later stages of World War II, mass rapes of women took place both in connection with combat operations and during the subsequent occupation of Germany. Scholars agree that the majority of the rapes were committed by ].<ref>{{cite book|title=Women and War|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=lyZYS_GxglIC&pg=PA480|year=2006|publisher=ABC-CLIO|isbn=978-1-85109-770-8|pages=480–}}</ref><ref name="The Independent">{{cite web|url=https://www.independent.co.uk/news/world/europe/raped-by-the-red-army-two-million-german-women-speak-out-1669074.html|title=Raped by the Red Army: Two million German women speak out|work=The Independent|date=15 April 2009|access-date=10 December 2014}}</ref><ref name="Susanne Beyer">{{cite news|url=http://www.spiegel.de/international/germany/0,1518,680354,00.html|title=Harrowing Memoir: German Woman Writes Ground-Breaking Account of WW2 Rape|author=Susanne Beyer|newspaper=Der Spiegel|date=26 February 2010|publisher=Spiegel.de|access-date=10 December 2014}}</ref> Western estimates of the traceable number of rape victims range from two hundred thousand to two million.<ref>Hanna Schissler ''The Miracle Years: A Cultural History of West Germany, 1949–1968'' </ref> Following the ] of 1945, mass rape by Soviet males occurred in all major cities taken by the Red Army. Women were gang raped by as many as several dozen soldiers ]. In some cases victims who did not hide in the basements all day were raped up to 15 times.<ref name="polityka"/><ref name="Krytyka"> Source: ] nr 10/2009 (2695).</ref> According to historian ], following the Red Army's capture of Berlin in 1945, Soviet troops raped German women and girls as young as eight years old.<ref>, ''The Guardian''</ref> | ||
The explanation of "revenge" is disputed by Beevor, at least with regard to the mass rapes. Beevor has written that Red Army soldiers also raped Soviet and ] women liberated from ]s, and he contends that this undermines the revenge explanation,<ref>{{cite news|url=https://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/worldnews/europe/russia/1382565/Red-Army-troops-raped-even-Russian-women-as-they-freed-them-from-camps.html |archive-url=https://ghostarchive.org/archive/20220112/https://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/worldnews/europe/russia/1382565/Red-Army-troops-raped-even-Russian-women-as-they-freed-them-from-camps.html |archive-date=12 January 2022 |url-access=subscription |url-status=live|title=Red Army troops raped even Russian women as they freed them from camps|author=Daniel Johnson|date=24 January 2002|work=Telegraph.co.uk|access-date=14 February 2016}}{{cbignore}}</ref> they were often committed by rear echelon units.<ref>{{Cite book|title=Berlin The Downfall 1945|last=Beevor|first=Antony|publisher=Viking Press|year=2002|isbn=978-0-670-03041-5|pages=326–327}}</ref> | |||
According to Norman Naimark, after the summer of 1945, Soviet soldiers caught raping civilians usually received punishments ranging from arrest to execution.<ref>{{cite book |last=Naimark |first=Norman M. |title=The Russians in Germany: A History of the Soviet Zone of Occupation, 1945–1949 |year=1995 |publisher=Belknap |location=Cambridge |isbn=0-674-78405-7 |page=92}}</ref> However, Naimark contends that the rapes continued until the winter of 1947–48, when Soviet occupation authorities finally confined troops to strictly guarded posts and camps.<ref>Naimark 1995, p. 79.</ref> |
According to Norman Naimark, after the summer of 1945, Soviet soldiers caught raping civilians usually received punishments ranging from arrest to execution.<ref>{{cite book |last=Naimark |first=Norman M. |title=The Russians in Germany: A History of the Soviet Zone of Occupation, 1945–1949 |year=1995 |publisher=Belknap |location=Cambridge |isbn=0-674-78405-7 |page=92}}</ref> However, Naimark contends that the rapes continued until the winter of 1947–48, when Soviet occupation authorities finally confined troops to strictly guarded posts and camps.<ref>Naimark 1995, p. 79.</ref> Naimark concluded that "The social psychology of women and men in the Soviet zone of occupation was marked by the crime of rape from the first days of occupation, through the founding of the GDR in the fall of 1949, until, one could argue, the present."<ref>Naimark 1995, pp. 132-133.</ref> | ||
According to ], the Russians refused to acknowledge Soviet war crimes, partly "because they felt that much of it was justified vengeance against an enemy who committed much worse, and partly it was because they were writing the victors' history."<ref name="RedArmy">{{cite news|last=Summers|first=Chris|url=http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/world/europe/1939174.stm|title=Red Army rapists exposed|work=bbc.co.uk|date=29 April 2002|access-date=18 June 2017}}</ref> | According to ], the Russians refused to acknowledge Soviet war crimes, partly "because they felt that much of it was justified vengeance against an enemy who committed much worse, and partly it was because they were writing the victors' history."<ref name="RedArmy">{{cite news|last=Summers|first=Chris|url=http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/world/europe/1939174.stm|title=Red Army rapists exposed|work=bbc.co.uk|date=29 April 2002|access-date=18 June 2017}}</ref> | ||
===Hungary=== | ===Hungary=== | ||
According to researcher and author ], some 38,000 ]s were killed during the ]: about 13,000 from military action and 25,000 from starvation, disease and other causes. Included in the latter figure are about 15,000 Jews, largely victims of executions by Nazi SS and ] ]s. Ungváry writes that when the Soviets finally claimed victory, they initiated an orgy of violence, including the wholesale theft of anything they could lay their hands on, random executions and mass rape. Estimates of the number of rape victims vary from 5,000 to 200,000.<ref>{{cite book |last=Bessel |first=Richard |author2=Dirk Schumann |title=Life after Death: Approaches to a Cultural and Social History of Europe |publisher=Cambridge University Press |year=2003 |isbn=0-521-00922-7 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=NilW70Yol74C |page=132}}</ref><ref name=Ungvary>{{cite book |first=Krisztian |last=Ungvary |title=The Siege of Budapest |publisher=Yale University Press |location=New Haven |year=2005 |pages= |isbn=0-300-10468-5 |url=https://archive.org/details/siegeofbudapesto0000ungv/page/348 }}</ref><ref name=Mark>{{cite journal| first=Mark| last=James| title=Remembering Rape: Divided Social Memory and the Red Army in Hungary 1944–1945| journal=] |url=http://muse.jhu.edu/journals/past_and_present/v188/188.1mark.html| doi=10.1093/pastj/gti020 |
According to researcher and author ], some 38,000 ]s were killed during the ]: about 13,000 from military action and 25,000 from starvation, disease and other causes. Included in the latter figure are about 15,000 Jews, largely victims of executions by Nazi SS and ] ]s. Ungváry writes that when the Soviets finally claimed victory, they initiated an orgy of violence, including the wholesale theft of anything they could lay their hands on, random executions and mass rape. Estimates of the number of rape victims vary from 5,000 to 200,000.<ref>{{cite book |last=Bessel |first=Richard | author1-link = Richard Bessel |author2=Dirk Schumann |title=Life after Death: Approaches to a Cultural and Social History of Europe |publisher=Cambridge University Press |year=2003 |isbn=0-521-00922-7 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=NilW70Yol74C |page=132}}</ref><ref name=Ungvary>{{cite book |first=Krisztian |last=Ungvary |title=The Siege of Budapest |publisher=Yale University Press |location=New Haven |year=2005 |pages= |isbn=0-300-10468-5 |url=https://archive.org/details/siegeofbudapesto0000ungv/page/348 }}</ref><ref name=Mark>{{cite journal| first=Mark| last=James| title=Remembering Rape: Divided Social Memory and the Red Army in Hungary 1944–1945| journal=] |url=http://muse.jhu.edu/journals/past_and_present/v188/188.1mark.html| doi=10.1093/pastj/gti020| issue=August 2005| pages=133–161| issn=1477-464X| publisher=Oxford University Press| year=2005| s2cid=162539651}}</ref> According to ], Hungarian girls were kidnapped and taken to Red Army quarters, where they were imprisoned, repeatedly raped and sometimes murdered.<ref name="Naimark">{{cite book |first=Norman M. |last=Naimark |title=The Russians in Germany: A History of the Soviet Zone of Occupation, 1945–1949 |publisher=Cambridge: Belknap |year=1995 |isbn=0-674-78405-7 |pages=70–71}}</ref> | ||
Even embassy staff from neutral countries were captured and raped, as was documented when Soviet soldiers attacked the Swedish legation in Germany.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://cdi.org/russia/Johnson/6225-9.cfm |title=Johnson's Russia List |last=Birstein |first=Vadim |date=3 May 2002 |access-date=2015-02-11 |quote=What makes this particular memoir unusual is that Soviet officials confirmed at the diplomatic level one of his descriptions – the rape of a woman servant at the Swedish Legation |url-status=unfit |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120109062452/http://cdi.org/russia/Johnson/6225-9.cfm |archive-date=January 9, 2012 }}</ref> | Even embassy staff from neutral countries were captured and raped, as was documented when Soviet soldiers attacked the Swedish legation in Germany.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://cdi.org/russia/Johnson/6225-9.cfm |title=Johnson's Russia List |last=Birstein |first=Vadim |date=3 May 2002 |access-date=2015-02-11 |quote=What makes this particular memoir unusual is that Soviet officials confirmed at the diplomatic level one of his descriptions – the rape of a woman servant at the Swedish Legation |url-status=unfit |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120109062452/http://cdi.org/russia/Johnson/6225-9.cfm |archive-date=January 9, 2012 }}</ref> | ||
A report by the ] in Budapest describes the Red Army's entry into the city: | A report by the ] in Budapest describes the Red Army's entry into the city: | ||
{{quote|During the siege of Budapest and also during the following weeks, Russian troops looted the city freely. They entered practically every habitation, the very poorest as well as the richest. They took away everything they wanted, especially food, clothing and valuables... every apartment, shop, bank, etc. was looted several times. Furniture and larger objects of art, etc. that could not be taken away were frequently simply destroyed. In many cases, after looting, the homes were also put on fire, causing a vast total loss... Bank safes were emptied without exception — even the British and American safes — and whatever was found was taken.<ref>{{cite book| url=http://www.hungarianhistory.com/lib/montgo/montgo21.htm |title=Swiss Legation Report of the Russian Invasion of Hungary in the Spring of 1945 |work=Hungary – The Unwilling Satellite |first=John Flournoy |last=Montgomery |publisher=The Devin Adair Co |location=New York |year=1947 |isbn=1-931313-57-1 |page=Appendix III}}</ref>}} | |||
{{blockquote|During the siege of Budapest and also during the following weeks, Russian troops looted the city freely. They entered practically every habitation, the very poorest as well as the richest. They took away everything they wanted, especially food, clothing and valuables... every apartment, shop, bank, etc. was looted several times. Furniture and larger objects of art, etc. that could not be taken away were frequently simply destroyed. In many cases, after looting, the homes were also put on fire, causing a vast total loss... Bank safes were emptied without exception—even the British and American safes—and whatever was found was taken.<ref>{{cite book| url=http://www.hungarianhistory.com/lib/montgo/montgo21.htm |title=Swiss Legation Report of the Russian Invasion of Hungary in the Spring of 1945 |first=John Flournoy |last=Montgomery |publisher=The Devin Adair Co |location=New York |year=1947 |isbn=1-931313-57-1 |page=Appendix III}}</ref>}} | |||
According to historian James Mark, memories and opinions of the Red Army in Hungary are mixed.<ref name=Mark/> | According to historian James Mark, memories and opinions of the Red Army in Hungary are mixed.<ref name=Mark/> | ||
===Romania=== | |||
{{Main|Soviet occupation of Bessarabia and Northern Bukovina|Soviet deportations from Bessarabia and Northern Bukovina|Fântâna Albă massacre|Lunca massacre|Soviet occupation of Romania|Religious persecution during the Soviet occupation of Bessarabia and Northern Bukovina}} | |||
{{Expand section|date=June 2021}} | |||
The Soviet Union also committed war crimes in ] or against ] from the beginning of the occupation of ] and Northern ] in 1940 all the way to the German invasion in 1941, and later from the expulsion of the Germans in the region until 1958. One example was the ], in which 44–3,000 Romanians were killed by the ] and the ] while attempting to escape to Romania.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.adevarul.ro/exclusiv_adevarul/Masacrul-Fantana-Alba-sovietice-Romania_0_245975565.html|title=Masacrul de la Fântâna Albă, îngropat de KGB: peste 2000 de români ucişi de trupele sovietice|language=Romanian|newspaper=]|date= April 18, 2010}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|first=Gabriel|last=Gherasim|title=Românii bucovineni sub cizma străină|url=http://www.ziua.net/display.php?id=182813&data=2005-08-16|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20070218005215/http://www.ziua.net/display.php?id=182813&data=2005-08-16|url-status=dead|archive-date=2007-02-18|website=ziua.net |publisher=]|date=2005|access-date=11 May 2020}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=https://adevarul.ro/locale/alexandria/masacrul-fantana-alba-fost-omorati-3000-romani-granita-romania-1-aprilie-1941-paste-1_56fcf95c5ab6550cb86cd167/index.html|title=Masacrul de la Fântâna Albă. Cum au fost omorâți 3.000 de români, la granița cu România, pe 1 aprilie 1941, de Paște|newspaper=]| language=Romanian|date=April 1, 2016|first=Elisabeth|last= Bouleanu|access-date=April 4, 2020}}</ref> Such event has been referred to as the "Romanian Katyn".<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.romaniajournal.ro/society-people/75-years-since-the-romanian-katyn-massacre-at-fantana-alba-3000-romanians-killed/|title=75 Years Since 'The Romanian Katyn' Massacre At Fântâna Albă – 3,000 Romanians Killed|first=Victor|last= Lupu| date=April 1, 2016|access-date=April 4, 2020}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.agerpres.ro/english/2017/04/02/reportage-commemoration-of-fantana-alba-massacre-tears-grief-gratitude-16-35-25|title=Commemoration of Fântâna Albă massacre: tears, grief, gratitude|website=agerpres.ro|date=April 2, 2017|access-date=April 5, 2020|archive-date=19 January 2021|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210119194457/https://www.agerpres.ro/english/2017/04/02/reportage-commemoration-of-fantana-alba-massacre-tears-grief-gratitude-16-35-25|url-status=dead}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.digi24.ro/special/campanii-digi24/23-august/masacrul-de-la-fantana-alba-in-aprilie-1941-trupele-nkvd-au-ucis-3-000-de-romani-107970|title=Masacrul de la Fântâna Albă. În aprilie 1941, trupele NKVD au ucis 3.000 de români|trans-title=The Fântâna Albă Massacre. In April 1941, NKVD troops killed 3,000 Romanians|language=Romanian|website=digi24.ro| date=August 20, 2013|access-date=April 5, 2020}}</ref> | |||
Another infamous massacre committed by Soviet troops was the ], where Soviet border troops opened fire against several Romanian civilians attempting to escape into Romania, killing 600 of them, only 57 managed to escape, with another 44 being arrested and tried as "members of a counter-revolutionary organization", 12 of them were sentenced to death, with the rest being sentenced to 10 years forced labour and 5 years loss of civil rights, the family members of those arrested and shot would later be arrested and sent to Siberia and Central Asia<ref name="Pădurean">{{cite web|first=Bianca|last=Pădurean|title=Pagina de istorie: Masacrul de la Lunca, pedeapsa pentru cei care au dorit să evadeze din "paradisul sovietic"|url=https://www.rfi.ro/politica-101050-pagina-de-istorie-masacrul-lunca-pedeapsa-dorit-evadeze|website=rfi.ro|publisher=]|date=7 February 2018|access-date=7 February 2022|language=Romanian}}</ref> | |||
During the occupation, the Soviet government and army deported thousands of Romanian civilians from the occupied regions into "special settlements". According to a secret ] report dated December 1965, 46,000 people were deported from the ] for the period 1940−1953.{{sfn|Mawdsley|1998|p=73}} | |||
Religious persecution was also widespread, the Soviet government sought to exterminate all forms of organized religion in its occupied territories, often persecuting the Catholic, Orthodox, Muslim and Jewish churches, the Soviet ] arrested numerous ]s, with others being arrested and interrogated by the Soviet NKVD itself, then deported to the interior of the ], and killed.<ref>{{in lang|ro}}''Martiri pentru Hristos, din România, în perioada regimului comunist'', Editura Institutului Biblic şi de Misiune al Bisericii Ortodoxe Române, București, 2007, pp. 34–35.</ref> | |||
Thousands of ] would later be deported from 1944 to 1949 under Soviet occupation, with hundreds or even thousands dying on their way to camps in Siberia and Central Asia before being able to come back to their home country.<ref>Marga</ref> | |||
===Yugoslavia=== | ===Yugoslavia=== | ||
Line 234: | Line 354: | ||
The meeting with Korneev not only "ended without results", it also caused Stalin to personally attack Djilas during his next visit to ]. In tears, Stalin denounced "the Yugoslav Army and how it was administered." He then "spoke agitatedly about the sufferings of the Red Army and the horrors that it was forced to endure while it was fighting through thousands of kilometers of devastated country." Stalin climaxed with the words, "And such an Army was insulted by no one else but Djilas! Djilas, of whom I could least have expected such a thing, a man whom I received so well! And an Army which did not spare its blood for you! Does Djilas, who is himself a writer, not know what human suffering and the human heart are? Can't he understand it if a soldier who has crossed thousands of kilometers through blood and fire and death has fun with a woman or takes some trifle?"<ref>Djilas (1962), page 95.</ref> | The meeting with Korneev not only "ended without results", it also caused Stalin to personally attack Djilas during his next visit to ]. In tears, Stalin denounced "the Yugoslav Army and how it was administered." He then "spoke agitatedly about the sufferings of the Red Army and the horrors that it was forced to endure while it was fighting through thousands of kilometers of devastated country." Stalin climaxed with the words, "And such an Army was insulted by no one else but Djilas! Djilas, of whom I could least have expected such a thing, a man whom I received so well! And an Army which did not spare its blood for you! Does Djilas, who is himself a writer, not know what human suffering and the human heart are? Can't he understand it if a soldier who has crossed thousands of kilometers through blood and fire and death has fun with a woman or takes some trifle?"<ref>Djilas (1962), page 95.</ref> | ||
According to Djilas, the Soviet refusal to address protests against Red Army war crimes in Yugoslavia enraged Tito's |
According to Djilas, the Soviet refusal to address protests against Red Army war crimes in Yugoslavia enraged Tito's government and it was a contributing factor in Yugoslavia's subsequent exit from the ]. | ||
===Czechoslovakia (1945)=== | ===Czechoslovakia (1945)=== | ||
Line 240: | Line 360: | ||
===China=== | ===China=== | ||
{{Further|Gegenmiao massacre|{{ill|Mashan massacre|ja|麻山事件}}|{{ill|Sado Settlement Site massacre|ja|佐渡開拓団跡事件}}|{{ill|Jingyi Buddhist Pioneers massacre|ja|仁義佛立講開拓団}}}} | |||
{{See|Gegenmiao massacre}} | |||
During the ], Soviet and ] soldiers attacked and raped |
During the ], Soviet and ] soldiers attacked and raped Japanese civilians, often encouraged by the local Chinese population who were resentful of Japanese rule.<ref name="Itoh_34">Mayumi Itoh<!--Mayumi Itoh is a former professor of Political Science at the University of Nevada, Las Vegas.-->, ''Japanese War Orphans in Manchuria: Forgotten Victims of World War II'', Palgrave Macmillan, April 2010, {{ISBN|978-0-230-62281-4}}, </ref> The local Chinese population sometimes even joined in these attacks against the Japanese population with the Soviet soldiers. In one famous example, during the ], Soviet soldiers, encouraged by the local Chinese population, raped and massacred over one thousand Japanese women and children.<ref name="Fujiwara, 1995 p.323">]</ref><ref name="Itoh_34"/><ref name=Ealey>{{cite web|last=Ealey|first=Mark|title=An August Storm: the Soviet-Japan Endgame in the Pacific War|url=http://japanfocus.org/-mark-ealey/1988|work=Japan Focus|access-date=21 February 2014}}</ref> Property of the Japanese were also looted by the Soviet soldiers and Chinese.<ref>]</ref> Many Japanese women married themselves to local Manchurian men to protect themselves from persecution by Soviet soldiers. These Japanese women mostly married Chinese men and became known as "stranded war wives" (zanryu fujin).<ref name="Fujiwara, 1995 p.323"/> | ||
Following the ] of the Japanese ] of ] (]), the Soviets laid claim to valuable Japanese materials and industrial equipment in the region.<ref name=FCJones>{{cite book |author=F. C. Jones |year=1949 |title=Manchuria since 1931 |publisher=Royal Institute of International Affairs |location=London, Oxford University Press |chapter=Chapter XII |
Following the ] of the Japanese ] of ] (]), the Soviets laid claim to valuable Japanese materials and industrial equipment in the region.<ref name=FCJones>{{cite book |author=F. C. Jones |year=1949 |title=Manchuria since 1931 |publisher=Royal Institute of International Affairs |location=London, Oxford University Press |chapter=Chapter XII – Events in Manchuria, 1945–47 |pages=224–5 and pp.227–9 |chapter-url=http://oudl.osmania.ac.in/bitstream/handle/OUDL/13712/216873_Manchuria_Since_1931.pdf?sequence=2 |access-date=17 May 2012 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20131219040912/http://oudl.osmania.ac.in/bitstream/handle/OUDL/13712/216873_Manchuria_Since_1931.pdf?sequence=2 |archive-date=19 December 2013 |df=dmy-all }}</ref> A foreigner witnessed Soviet troops, formerly stationed in Berlin, who were allowed by the Soviet military to go at the city "for three days of rape and pillage." Most of ] was gone. Convict soldiers were then used to replace them; it was testified that they "stole everything in sight, broke up bathtubs and toilets with hammers, pulled electric-light wiring out of the plaster, built fires on the floor and either burned down the house or at least a big hole in the floor, and in general behaved completely like savages."<ref>{{cite book|url=https://archive.org/details/lastempressmadam00paku_0|url-access=registration|quote=mukden berlin rape and pillage.|title=The last empress: Madame Chiang Kai-Shek and the birth of modern China|author=Hannah Pakula|year=2009|publisher=Simon and Schuster|page=|isbn=978-1-4391-4893-8|access-date=2010-06-28}}</ref> | ||
According to some |
According to some British and American sources, the Soviets made it a policy to loot and rape civilians in Manchuria. In ], the Chinese posted slogans such as "Down with Red Imperialism!" Soviet forces faced some protests by Chinese communist party leaders against the looting and rapes committed by troops in Manchuria.<ref>{{cite book|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=yCDv67C2BzkC&q=red+army+rape+manchuria&pg=PA82|title=The Soviet Union and communist China, 1945-1950: the arduous road to the alliance|author=Dieter Heinzig|year=2004|publisher=M.E. Sharpe|page=82|isbn=0-7656-0785-9|access-date=2010-11-28}}</ref><ref>{{cite book|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=falbrObQ11IC&q=red+army+rape+manchuria&pg=PA86|title=The geopolitics of East Asia: the search for equilibrium|author=Robyn Lim|year=2003|publisher=Psychology Press|page=86|isbn=0-415-29717-6|access-date=2010-11-28}}</ref><ref>{{cite book|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=9hE2xFxbca0C&q=red+army+rape+manchuria&pg=PA33|title=In the Ruins of Empire: The Japanese Surrender and the Battle for Postwar Asia|author=Ronald H. Spector|year=2008|publisher=Random House, Inc.|page=33|isbn=978-0-8129-6732-6|access-date=2010-11-28|author-link=Ronald H. Spector}}</ref> There were several instances where Chinese police forces in Manchuria arrested or even killed Soviet troops for various crimes, leading to some conflicts between the Soviet and Chinese authorities in Manchuria.<ref>{{cite web |last1=Hess |first1=Christian A. |title=From Colonial Jewel to Socialist Metropolis: Dalian 1895-1955 |url=https://escholarship.org/content/qt2zb7n2x9/qt2zb7n2x9.pdf}}</ref> | ||
Russian historian Konstantin Asmolov argues that such Western accounts of Soviet violence against civilians in the Far East are exaggerations of isolated incidents and the documents of the time don't support the claims of mass crimes. Asmolov also claims that the Soviets, unlike the Germans and the Japanese, prosecuted their soldiers and officers for such acts.<ref name=Asmolov>{{cite encyclopedia |last=Asmolov |first=Konstantin |title=Pobeda na Dal'nem Vostoke |trans-title=Victory in the Far East |editor1-last=Dyukov |editor1-first=Aleksandr |editor2-last=Pyhalov |editor2-first=Igor |encyclopedia=Velikaya obolgannaya voina |volume=2 |publisher=Yauza |location=Moscow |year=2008 |language=ru |url=http://militera.lib.ru/research/pyhalov_dukov/07.html}}</ref> Indeed, the incidence of rape committed in the Far East was far less than the number of incidents committed by Soviet soldiers in Europe.<ref>{{cite |
Russian historian Konstantin Asmolov argues that such Western accounts of Soviet violence against civilians in the Far East are exaggerations of isolated incidents and the documents of the time don't support the claims of mass crimes. Asmolov also claims that the Soviets, unlike the Germans and the Japanese, prosecuted their soldiers and officers for such acts.<ref name=Asmolov>{{cite encyclopedia |last=Asmolov |first=Konstantin |title=Pobeda na Dal'nem Vostoke |trans-title=Victory in the Far East |editor1-last=Dyukov |editor1-first=Aleksandr |editor2-last=Pyhalov |editor2-first=Igor |encyclopedia=Velikaya obolgannaya voina |volume=2 |publisher=Yauza |location=Moscow |year=2008 |language=ru |url=http://militera.lib.ru/research/pyhalov_dukov/07.html |access-date=27 September 2012 |archive-date=4 September 2017 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20170904114137/http://militera.lib.ru/research/pyhalov_dukov/07.html |url-status=dead }}</ref> Indeed, the incidence of rape committed in the Far East was far less than the number of incidents committed by Soviet soldiers in Europe.<ref>{{cite book |last1=Edele |first1=Mark |title=The Cambridge History of the Second World War |chapter=Soviet liberations and occupations, 1939–1949 |year=2015 |volume=2 |pages=487–508 |publisher=Cambridge University Press |doi=10.1017/CHO9781139524377.024 |isbn=9781107034075 |url=https://www.cambridge.org/core/books/cambridge-history-of-the-second-world-war/soviet-liberations-and-occupations-19391949/348C49251BFAB830DAC03CF957F37291/core-reader}}</ref> | ||
Japanese women in Manchukuo were repeatedly raped by Russian soldiers every day including underage girls from the families of Japanese who worked for the military and the Manchukuo rail at ] and Japanese military nurses. The Russians seized Japanese civilian girls at Beian airport where there were a total of 1000 Japanese civilians, repeatedly raping 10 girls each day as recalled by Yoshida Reiko and repeatedly raped 75 Japanese nurses at the Sunwu military hospital in Manchukuo during the occupation. The Russians rejected all the pleading by the Japanese officers to stop the rapes. The Japanese were told by the Russians that they had to give their women for rape as war spoils.<ref>{{cite book |last=Tanaka |first=Yuki |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=eWClDwAAQBAJ&dq=Japanese+officers+to+provide+a+number+of+nurses+as+prostitutes,+as+they+believed+this+would+minimize+the+number+of+rapes+by+Soviet+soldiers&pg=PT99 |title=Hidden Horrors: Japanese War Crimes In World War Ii |date=2019 |publisher=Routledge |isbn=978-0429720895 |edition=reprint |page=102}}</ref><ref>{{cite book |last=Askin |first=Kelly Dawn |title=War Crimes Against Women: Prosecution in International War Crimes Tribunals |title-link=War Crimes Against Women |date=1997 |publisher=Martinus Nijhoff Publishers |isbn=9041104860 |edition=illustrated |volume=1 |page=64}}</ref><ref>{{cite book |last=Tanaka |first=Toshiyuki |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=bPNmAAAAMAAJ|title=Hidden Horrors: Japanese War Crimes In World War Ii |date=1996 |publisher=Avalon Publishing |isbn=0813327172 |edition=3, illustrated |series=Transitions: Asia and the Pacific |page=102}}</ref><ref>{{cite book |last=Tanaka |first=Yuki |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=CCkzDwAAQBAJ&dq=asking+the+Japanese+officers+to+provide+a+number+of+nurses+as+prostitutes,+as+they+believed+this+would+minimize+the+number+of+rapes+by+Soviet+soldiers&pg=PA114 |title=Hidden Horrors: Japanese War Crimes in World War II |date=2017 |publisher=Rowman & Littlefield |isbn=978-1538102701 |edition=2, illustrated, reprint |page=114}}</ref><ref>{{cite book |last=Tanaka |first=Yuki |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=PeuPAAAAMAAJ&q=75+asking+the+Japanese+officers+to+provide+a+number+of+nurses+as+prostitutes,+as+they+believed+this+would+minimize+the+number+of+rapes+by+Soviet+soldiers |title=Common Grounds: Violence Against Women in War and Armed Conflict Situations |date=1998 |publisher=Asian Center for Women's Human Rights |isbn=9719199105 |editor-last=Sajor |editor-first=Indai Lourdes |page=173}}</ref><ref>{{cite book |last1=Tanaka |first1=Toshiyuki |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=I1zzAAAAMAAJ&q=asking+the+Japanese+officers+to+provide+a+number+of+nurses+as+prostitutes,+as+they+believed+this+would+minimize+the+number+of+rapes+by+Soviet+soldiers |title=Rape and War: The Japanese Experience |last2=Tanaka |first2=Yukiko |date=1995 |publisher=Japanese Studies Centre |isbn=0732606462 |volume=24 of Papers of the Japanese Studies Centre |page=38 |issn=0725-0177}}</ref> | |||
Soviet soldiers raped Japanese women from a group of Japanese families that were with Yamada Tami that attempted to flee their settlements on 14 August and go to Mudanjiang. Another group of Japanese women that were with Ikeda Hiroko that on 15 August tried to flee to Harbin but returned to their settlements were raped by Soviet soldiers.<ref>{{cite journal |last=Ward |first=Rowena |date=1 March 2007 |title=Left Behind: Japan's Wartime Defeat and the Stranded Women of Manchukuo |url=https://apjjf.org/-Rowena-Ward/2374/article.html |journal=The Asia-Pacific Journal: Japan Focus |volume=5 |issue=3}}</ref> | |||
===Japan=== | ===Japan=== | ||
{{Main|Evacuation of Karafuto and Kuriles|Soviet assault on Maoka}} | {{Main|Evacuation of Karafuto and Kuriles|Soviet assault on Maoka}} | ||
{{further interlanguage link|Maoka Post Office incident|ja|真岡郵便電信局事件}} | |||
The Soviet Army committed crimes against the Japanese civilian populations and surrendered military personnel in the closing stages of World War II during the assaults on ] and ].<ref name="ealey-2006"/> | The Soviet Army committed crimes against the Japanese civilian populations and surrendered military personnel in the closing stages of World War II during the assaults on ] and ].<ref name="ealey-2006"/> | ||
On August 10, 1945, Soviet forces carried out fierce naval bombardment and artillery strikes against civilians awaiting evacuation as well as Japanese installations in Maoka. Nearly 1,000 civilians were killed by the invading forces.<ref name="ealey-2006">{{cite web |url=http://japanfocus.org/-mark-ealey/1988/article.html |title=An August Storm: the Soviet-Japan Endgame in the Pacific War |first=Mark |last=Ealey |date=February 26, 2006 |publisher=The Asia-Pacific Journal: Japan Focus |access-date=November 14, 2010}}</ref> | On August 10, 1945, Soviet forces carried out fierce naval bombardment and artillery strikes against civilians awaiting evacuation as well as Japanese installations in Maoka. Nearly 1,000 civilians were killed by the invading forces.<ref name="ealey-2006">{{cite web |url=http://japanfocus.org/-mark-ealey/1988/article.html |title=An August Storm: the Soviet-Japan Endgame in the Pacific War |first=Mark |last=Ealey |date=February 26, 2006 |publisher=The Asia-Pacific Journal: Japan Focus |access-date=November 14, 2010}}</ref> | ||
After the 15 August 1945 Gyokuon broadcast, telephone operators at the Maoka Post Office were on duty without having been evacuated. On 20 August, Soviet troops landed in Moka and 10 of the 12 female telephone operators on duty in fear of war crimes committed by Soviet troops, attempted suicide in the station, nine of which were killed. Apart from the telephone operator who committed suicide, other station employees who remained behind and those who were not on duty that day were killed by grenades and gunfire from Soviet soldiers, bringing the total number of those killed at the Maoka station to 19.<ref>{{Cite web| url = http://pucchi.net/hokkaido/karafuto/maoka19450820.php| title = 北のひめゆり事件と九人の乙女| publisher = ]| date = 2010-02-17| accessdate = 2012-02-09}}</ref><ref name="karafuto_shusenshi">「樺太終戦史」(昭和48年発行 樺太終戦史刊行会編纂)</ref> | |||
During the evacuation of the Kuriles and Karafuto, civilian convoys were attacked by Soviet submarines in the ]. Soviet ] ''L-12'' and ''L-19'' sank two Japanese refugee transport ships ''Ogasawara Maru'' and ''Taito Maru'' while also damaging ''No.2 Shinko Maru'' on August 22, 7 days after ] had announced Japan's unconditional surrender. Over 2,400 civilians were killed.<ref name="ealey-2006" /> | |||
During the evacuation of the Kuriles and Karafuto, civilian convoys ] by Soviet submarines in the ]. Soviet ] ''L-12'' and ''L-19'' sank two Japanese refugee transport ships ''Ogasawara Maru'' and '']'' while also damaging ''No.2 Shinko Maru'' on August 22, 7 days after ] had announced Japan's unconditional surrender. Over 2,400 civilians were killed.<ref name="ealey-2006" /> | |||
===Treatment of prisoners of war=== | ===Treatment of prisoners of war=== | ||
{{main|Soviet atrocities committed against prisoners of war during World War II}} | |||
Although the Soviet Union had not formally signed the Hague Convention, it considered itself bound by the convention's provisions.<ref>Jacob Robinson. Transfer of Property in Enemy Occupied Territory. ''The American Journal of International Law'', Vol. 39, No. 2 (Apr., 1945), pp. 216-230</ref><ref>''Isvestiya'', 28 April 1942.</ref> | |||
Although the Soviet Union had not formally signed the Hague Convention, it declared itself bound by the convention's provisions as well as by its own "Regulations for the Treatment of PoWs".<ref>Jacob Robinson. Transfer of Property in Enemy Occupied Territory. ''The American Journal of International Law'', Vol. 39, No. 2 (Apr., 1945), pp. 216-230</ref><ref>''Isvestiya'', 28 April 1942.</ref> However, in practice, it often ignored the convention as well as its own rules. ] wrote that Soviet public declarations and laws on the humane treatment of PoWs were "part of the Soviet 'big lie' for ]".<ref name="Sanford" />{{Rp|pages=41}} One of the Soviet Union's earliest war crimes were those against ] in the aftermath of the ] in the 1939; it is estimated that during that conflict, approximately 2,500 Polish soldiers were murdered in various executions and reprisals for offering resistance by Soviets and ]. The most infamous of these was the ], a series of ] of nearly 22,000 ] ] and ] carried out by the Soviet Union, specifically the ] in April and May 1940. Though the killings took place at several places, the massacre is named after the ] Forest, where some of the ] were first discovered.<ref>{{Cite journal |last=Szymczak |first=Robert |date=2008 |title=The Vindication of Memory: The Katyn Case in the West, Poland, and Russia, 1952-2008 |url=https://www.jstor.org/stable/25779772 |journal=The Polish Review |volume=53 |issue=4 |pages=419–443 |jstor=25779772 |issn=0032-2970}}</ref><ref>{{Citation |last=Fredericks |first=Vanessa |title=The Katyn Massacre and the Ethics of War: Negotiating Justice and Law |date=2011-04-23 |work=Thinking About War and Peace: Past, Present, and Future |pages=63–71 |url=https://brill.com/display/book/9781848880849/BP000008.xml |access-date=2024-10-20 |publisher=Brill |language=en |isbn=978-1-84888-084-9}}</ref><ref name="Sanford">{{Cite book |last=Sanford |first=George |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=PZXvUuvfv-oC&dq=Soviet+invasion+of+Poland+1939&pg=PA20 |title=Katyn and the Soviet Massacre of 1940: Truth, Justice and Memory |date=2005 |publisher=Routledge |isbn=978-0-415-33873-8 |pages= |language=en}}</ref>{{Rp|pages=20–23, 39–41}} | |||
Throughout the Second World War, the Wehrmacht War Crimes Bureau collected and investigated reports of crimes against the Axis POWs. According to Cuban-American writer ], "For the entire duration of the Russian campaign, reports of torture and murder of German prisoners did not cease. The War Crimes Bureau had five major sources of information: (1) captured enemy papers, especially orders, reports of operations, and propaganda leaflets; (2) intercepted radio and wireless messages; (3) testimony of Soviet prisoners of war; (4) testimony of captured Germans who had escaped; and (5) testimony of Germans who saw the corpses or mutilated bodies of executed prisoners of war. From 1941 to 1945 the Bureau compiled several thousand depositions, reports, and captured papers which, if nothing else, indicate that the killing of German prisoners of war upon capture or shortly after their interrogation was not an isolated occurrence. Documents relating to the war in France, Italy, and North Africa contain some reports on the deliberate killing of German prisoners of war, but there can be no comparison with the events on the Eastern Front."<ref>Alfred-Maurice de Zayas (1990), ''The Wehrmacht War Crimes Bureau, |
Throughout the Second World War, the Wehrmacht War Crimes Bureau collected and investigated reports of crimes against the Axis POWs. According to Cuban-American writer ], "For the entire duration of the Russian campaign, reports of torture and murder of German prisoners did not cease. The War Crimes Bureau had five major sources of information: (1) captured enemy papers, especially orders, reports of operations, and propaganda leaflets; (2) intercepted radio and wireless messages; (3) testimony of Soviet prisoners of war; (4) testimony of captured Germans who had escaped; and (5) testimony of Germans who saw the corpses or mutilated bodies of executed prisoners of war. From 1941 to 1945 the Bureau compiled several thousand depositions, reports, and captured papers which, if nothing else, indicate that the killing of German prisoners of war upon capture or shortly after their interrogation was not an isolated occurrence. Documents relating to the war in France, Italy, and North Africa contain some reports on the deliberate killing of German prisoners of war, but there can be no comparison with the events on the Eastern Front."<ref>Alfred-Maurice de Zayas (1990), ''The Wehrmacht War Crimes Bureau, 1939–1945'', ] Press. pp. 164-165</ref> | ||
In a November 1941 report, the Wehrmacht War Crimes Bureau accused the Red Army of employing "a terror policy... against defenseless German soldiers that have fallen into its hands and against members of the German medical corps. At the same time... it has made use of the following means of camouflage: in a Red Army order that bears the approval of the ], dated 1 July 1941, the norms of international law are made public, which the Red Army in the spirit of the Hague Regulations on Land Warfare are supposed to follow... This... Russian order probably had very little distribution, and surely it has not been followed at all. Otherwise the unspeakable crimes would not have occurred."<ref>Zayas (1990), page 178.</ref> | In a November 1941 report, the Wehrmacht War Crimes Bureau accused the Red Army of employing "a terror policy... against defenseless German soldiers that have fallen into its hands and against members of the German medical corps. At the same time... it has made use of the following means of camouflage: in a Red Army order that bears the approval of the ], dated 1 July 1941, the norms of international law are made public, which the Red Army in the spirit of the ] on Land Warfare are supposed to follow... This... Russian order probably had very little distribution, and surely it has not been followed at all. Otherwise the unspeakable crimes would not have occurred."<ref>Zayas (1990), page 178.</ref> | ||
According to the depositions, Soviet massacres of German, Italian, Spanish, and other Axis POWs were often incited by unit ]s, who claimed to be acting under orders from Stalin and the ]. Other evidence cemented the War Crimes Bureau's belief that Stalin had given secret orders about the massacre of POWs.<ref>Zayas (1990), pp. 162-210.</ref> | According to the depositions, Soviet massacres of German, Italian, Spanish, and other Axis POWs were often incited by unit ]s, who claimed to be acting under orders from Stalin and the ]. Other evidence cemented the War Crimes Bureau's belief that Stalin had given secret orders about the massacre of POWs.<ref>Zayas (1990), pp. 162-210.</ref> | ||
During the winter of 1941–42, the Red Army captured approximately 10,000 German soldiers each month, but the death rate became so high that the absolute number of prisoners decreased (or was bureaucratically reduced).<ref name="Knabe, Tag der Befreiung?">] ''Tag der Befreiung? Das Kriegsende in Ostdeutschland'', Propyläen 2005, {{ISBN|3-549-07245-7}}</ref>{{ |
During the winter of 1941–42, the Red Army captured approximately 10,000 German soldiers each month, but the death rate became so high that the absolute number of prisoners decreased (or was bureaucratically reduced).<ref name="Knabe, Tag der Befreiung?">] ''Tag der Befreiung? Das Kriegsende in Ostdeutschland'', Propyläen 2005, {{ISBN|3-549-07245-7}}</ref>{{request quotation|date=August 2015}}{{page needed|date=January 2022}} | ||
Soviet sources list the deaths of 474,967 of the 2,652,672 German Armed Forces taken prisoner in the War.<ref>Rossiiskaia Akademiia nauk. ''Liudskie poteri SSSR v period vtoroi mirovoi voiny:sbornik statei''. Sankt-Peterburg 1995 {{ISBN|5-86789-023-6}}</ref>{{ |
Soviet sources list the deaths of 474,967 of the 2,652,672 German Armed Forces taken prisoner in the War.<ref>Rossiiskaia Akademiia nauk. ''Liudskie poteri SSSR v period vtoroi mirovoi voiny:sbornik statei''. Sankt-Peterburg 1995 {{ISBN|5-86789-023-6}}</ref>{{request quotation|date=August 2015}}{{page needed|date=January 2022}} ] believes that it seems entirely plausible, while not provable, that additional German military personnel listed as missing actually died in Soviet custody as POWs, putting the estimates of the actual death toll of German POW in the USSR at about 1.0 million.<ref>Rüdiger Overmans. ''Deutsche militärische Verluste im Zweiten Weltkrieg''. Oldenbourg 2000. {{ISBN|3-486-56531-1}}</ref> | ||
====Massacre of Feodosia==== | ====Massacre of Feodosia==== | ||
] | |||
Soviet soldiers rarely bothered to treat wounded German POWs. A ] took place after the Crimean city of ] was briefly recaptured by Soviet forces on December 29, 1942. 160 wounded soldiers had been left in military hospitals by the retreating Wehrmacht. After the Germans retook Feodosia, it was learned that every wounded soldier had been massacred by Red Army, Navy, and ] personnel. Some had been shot in their hospital beds, others repeatedly bludgeoned to death, still others were found to have been thrown from hospital windows before being repeatedly drenched with freezing water until they died of ].<ref>Zayas (1990), pp. 180-186.</ref> | Soviet soldiers rarely bothered to treat wounded German POWs. A ] took place after the Crimean city of ] was briefly recaptured by Soviet forces on December 29, 1942. 160 wounded soldiers had been left in military hospitals by the retreating Wehrmacht. After the Germans retook Feodosia, it was learned that every wounded soldier had been massacred by Red Army, Navy, and ] personnel. Some had been shot in their hospital beds, others repeatedly bludgeoned to death, still others were found to have been thrown from hospital windows before being repeatedly drenched with freezing water until they died of ].<ref>Zayas (1990), pp. 180-186.</ref> | ||
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The ] was committed by an armoured division of the Red Army in February 1943 in the eastern Ukrainian towns of ], Postyschevo and Grischino. The ] Untersuchungsstelle also known as WuSt (Wehrmacht criminal investigating authority), announced that among the victims were 406 soldiers of the Wehrmacht, 58 members of the ] (including two ] nationals), 89 ] soldiers, 9 Romanian soldiers, 4 ] soldiers, 15 German civil officials, 7 German civilian workers and 8 Ukrainian volunteers. | The ] was committed by an armoured division of the Red Army in February 1943 in the eastern Ukrainian towns of ], Postyschevo and Grischino. The ] Untersuchungsstelle also known as WuSt (Wehrmacht criminal investigating authority), announced that among the victims were 406 soldiers of the Wehrmacht, 58 members of the ] (including two ] nationals), 89 ] soldiers, 9 Romanian soldiers, 4 ] soldiers, 15 German civil officials, 7 German civilian workers and 8 Ukrainian volunteers. | ||
The places were overrun by the Soviet 4th Guards Tank Corps on the night of 10 and 11 February 1943. After the reconquest by the ] with the support of 333 Infantry Division and the 7th Panzer Division on 18 February 1943 the Wehrmacht soldiers discovered numerous deaths. Many of the bodies were horribly mutilated, ears and noses cut off and genital organs amputated and stuffed into their mouths. Breasts of some of the nurses were cut off, the women being brutally raped. A German military judge who was at the scene stated in an interview during the 1970s that he saw a female body with her legs spread-eagled and a broomstick rammed into her genitals. In the cellar of the main train station around 120 Germans were herded into a large storage room and then mowed down with machine guns.<ref>Zayas (1990), pp. 187-191.</ref> | The places were overrun by the ] on the night of 10 and 11 February 1943. After the reconquest by the ] with the support of 333 Infantry Division and the ] on 18 February 1943 the Wehrmacht soldiers discovered numerous deaths. Many of the bodies were horribly mutilated, ears and noses cut off and genital organs amputated and stuffed into their mouths. Breasts of some of the nurses were cut off, the women being brutally raped. A German military judge who was at the scene stated in an interview during the 1970s that he saw a female body with her legs spread-eagled and a broomstick rammed into her genitals. In the cellar of the main train station around 120 Germans were herded into a large storage room and then mowed down with machine guns.<ref>Zayas (1990), pp. 187-191.</ref> | ||
====Postwar==== | ====Postwar==== | ||
Some German prisoners were released soon after the war. Many others, however, remained in the ] long after the surrender of Nazi Germany. Among the most famous German POWs to die in Soviet captivity was Captain ], who died of injuries, sustained possibly under torture, in a concentration camp near ] in 1952. In 2009, Captain Hosenfeld was posthumously honored by the ] for his role in saving Jewish lives during |
Some German prisoners were released soon after the war. Many others, however, remained in the ] long after the surrender of Nazi Germany. Among the most famous German POWs to die in Soviet captivity was Captain ], who died of injuries, sustained possibly under torture,{{citation needed|reason=who says so?|date=January 2022}} in a concentration camp near ] in 1952. In 2009, Captain Hosenfeld was posthumously honored by the ] for his role in saving Jewish lives during ]. Similar was the fate of Swedish diplomat and ] operative ].{{citation needed|reason=who says so?|date=January 2022}} | ||
==After World War II== | ==After World War II== | ||
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] | ] | ||
{{Main|Hungarian Revolution of 1956}} | {{Main|Hungarian Revolution of 1956}} | ||
According to the United Nations Report of the Special Committee on the problem of Hungary (1957): "Soviet tanks fired indiscriminately at every building from which they believed themselves to be under fire."<ref>{{cite book |title=United Nations Report of the Special Committee on the problem of Hungary |year=1957 |url=http://mek.oszk.hu/01200/01274/01274.pdf}}</ref> The UN commission received numerous reports of Soviet mortar and artillery fire into inhabited quarters in the Buda section of the city |
According to the United Nations Report of the Special Committee on the problem of Hungary (1957): "Soviet tanks fired indiscriminately at every building from which they believed themselves to be under fire."<ref>{{cite book |title=United Nations Report of the Special Committee on the problem of Hungary |year=1957 |url=http://mek.oszk.hu/01200/01274/01274.pdf}}</ref> The UN commission received numerous reports of Soviet mortar and artillery fire into inhabited quarters in the Buda section of the city, despite no return fire, and of "haphazard shooting at defenseless passers-by." | ||
=== Czechoslovakia 1968 === | |||
During the ] by the ], 72 ] and ] were killed (19 in ]), 266 seriously wounded and another 436 lightly wounded.<ref> - ''Springtime for Prague.'' Accessed 08/28/2017.</ref><ref>Williams (1997), p. 158.</ref> | |||
===Afghanistan (1979–1989)=== | ===Afghanistan (1979–1989)=== | ||
{{Further|Soviet–Afghan War |
{{Further|Soviet–Afghan War}} | ||
] | ] | ||
Scholars Mohammad Kakar, W. Michael Reisman and Charles Norchi believe that the Soviet Union was guilty of committing a genocide in Afghanistan.<ref name=":0" /><ref name=":223">{{Cite web|url=http://www.paulbogdanor.com/left/afghan/genocide.pdf|title=Genocide and the Soviet Occupation of Afghanistan|last1=Reisman|first1=W. Michael|last2=Norchi|first2=Charles H.|access-date=7 January 2017|quote=According to widely reported accounts, substantial programmes of depopulation have been conducted in these Afghan provinces: Ghazni, Nagarhar, Lagham, Qandahar, Zabul, Badakhshan, Lowgar, Paktia, Paktika and Kunar...There is considerable evidence that genocide has been committed against the Afghan people by the combined forces of the Democratic Republic of Afghanistan and the Soviet Union.}}</ref> The army of the Soviet Union killed large numbers of Afghans to suppress their resistance.<ref name=":0">{{Cite book|url=http://publishing.cdlib.org/ucpressebooks/view?docId=ft7b69p12h;brand=ucpress|title=The Soviet Invasion and the Afghan Response, 1979-1982|last=Kakar|first=Mohammed|publisher=University of California Press|isbn=9780520208933|quote=The Afghans are among the latest victims of genocide by a superpower. Large numbers of Afghans were killed to suppress resistance to the army of the Soviet Union, which wished to vindicate its client regime and realize its goal in Afghanistan.|date=3 March 1997}}</ref> Up to 2 million Afghans were killed |
Scholars Mohammad Kakar, W. Michael Reisman and Charles Norchi believe that the Soviet Union was guilty of committing a genocide in Afghanistan.<ref name=":0" /><ref name=":223">{{Cite web|url=http://www.paulbogdanor.com/left/afghan/genocide.pdf|title=Genocide and the Soviet Occupation of Afghanistan|last1=Reisman|first1=W. Michael|last2=Norchi|first2=Charles H.|access-date=7 January 2017|quote=According to widely reported accounts, substantial programmes of depopulation have been conducted in these Afghan provinces: Ghazni, Nagarhar, Lagham, Qandahar, Zabul, Badakhshan, Lowgar, Paktia, Paktika and Kunar...There is considerable evidence that genocide has been committed against the Afghan people by the combined forces of the Democratic Republic of Afghanistan and the Soviet Union.|archive-date=26 October 2016|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20161026182528/http://www.paulbogdanor.com/left/afghan/genocide.pdf|url-status=dead}}</ref> The army of the Soviet Union killed large numbers of Afghans to suppress their resistance.<ref name=":0">{{Cite book|url=http://publishing.cdlib.org/ucpressebooks/view?docId=ft7b69p12h;brand=ucpress|title=The Soviet Invasion and the Afghan Response, 1979-1982|last=Kakar|first=Mohammed|publisher=University of California Press|isbn=9780520208933|quote=The Afghans are among the latest victims of genocide by a superpower. Large numbers of Afghans were killed to suppress resistance to the army of the Soviet Union, which wished to vindicate its client regime and realize its goal in Afghanistan.|date=3 March 1997}}</ref> Up to 2 million Afghans were killed during the war, many of them by Soviet forces and their Afghan allies.<ref>{{Cite book|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=I2chrSJCW54C&q=2+million+afghans+killed+soviet&pg=PA129|title=The Widening Circle of Genocide|last=Klass |first=Rosanne|publisher=Transaction Publishers|year=1994|isbn=9781412839655|pages=129|quote=During the intervening fourteen years of Communist rule, an estimated 1.5 to 2 million Afghan civilians were killed in the war, many by Soviet forces and their Afghan allies.- the four Communist regimes in Kabul, and the East Germans, Bulgarians, Czechs, Cubans, Palestinians, Indians and others who assisted them. These were not battle casualties or the unavoidable civilian victims of warfare. Soviet and local Communist forces seldom attacked the scattered guerrilla bands of the Afghan Resistance except, in a few strategic locales like the Panjsher valley. Instead they deliberately targeted the civilian population, primarily in the rural areas.}}</ref> In one notable incident the Soviet Army committed mass killing of civilians in the summer of 1980.<ref name=":5">{{Cite book|url=http://publishing.cdlib.org/ucpressebooks/view?docId=ft7b69p12h&chunk.id=d0e5195&toc.depth=1&toc.id=d0e5195&brand=ucpress|title=The Soviet Invasion and the Afghan Response, 1979-1982|last=Kakar|first=Mohammed|publisher=University of California Press|isbn=9780520208933|quote=Incidents of the mass killing of noncombatant civilians were observed in the summer of 1980...the Soviets felt it necessary to suppress defenseless civilians by killing them indiscriminately, by compelling them to flee abroad, and by destroying their crops and means of irrigation, the basis of their livelihood. The dropping of booby traps from the air, the planting of mines, and the use of chemical substances, though not on a wide scale, were also meant to serve the same purpose...they undertook military operations in an effort to ensure speedy submission: hence the wide use of aerial weapons, in particular helicopter gunships or the kind of inaccurate weapons that cannot discriminate between combatants and noncombatants.|date=3 March 1997}}</ref> One notable war crime was the ] in April 1985 in the villages of Kas-Aziz-Khan, Charbagh, Bala Bagh, Sabzabad, Mamdrawer, Haider Khan and Pul-i-Joghi<ref name="UPI">{{cite news| title=Diplomats report massacre in Afghanistan | work=]| url=https://www.upi.com/Archives/1985/05/14/Diplomats-report-massacre-in-Afghanistan/5791484891200/ |date=14 May 1985| access-date=24 August 2020}}</ref> in the ]. At least 500 civilians were killed.<ref>{{cite book|last=Bellamy| first=Alex J. | title=Massacres and Morality: Mass Atrocities in an Age of Civilian Immunity|publisher=OUP Oxford| year= 2012 | ||
|isbn= 9780199288427 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=EK8eK2xPCycC&pg=PA281 |page=281}}</ref> In the ] on 12 October 1983, the Red Army gathered 360 people at the village square and shot them, including 20 girls and over a dozen older people.<ref>{{cite news |work=The New York Times| title=U.N. Rights Study Finds Afghan Abuses by Soviets|author=]| url=http://www.nytimes.com/1985/03/01/world/un-rights-studt-finds-afghan-abuses-by-soviet.html| date=1 March 1985|access-date=17 April 2021}}</ref><ref>{{cite news |work=The Sydney Morning Herald |location= Sydney, New South Wales | date=4 March 1985| page=7| title=UN report attacks Afghan massacres |url=https://www.newspapers.com/newspage/121128050/ |access-date=17 April 2021}}</ref><ref>{{cite journal| url=https://digitallibrary.un.org/record/86023?ln=en| title=Report on the situation of human rights in Afghanistan / prepared by the Special Rapporteur, Felix Ermacora, in accordance with Commission on Human Rights resolution 1984/55| year=1985 |page=31| journal=United Nations Commission on Human Rights |location=Geneva|access-date=17 April 2021| last1=Ermacora| first1=Felix}}</ref> The ] and ] were also documented.<ref name=HRW1984>{{cite web|last=Human Rights Watch|year=1984|url=https://www.hrw.org/reports/1984/afghan1284.pdf|title=Tears, Blood and Cries. Human Rights in Afghanistan Since the Invasion 1979–1984|pages=37–38|accessdate=6 July 2021}}</ref> | |||
|isbn= 9780199288427 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=EK8eK2xPCycC&pg=PA281 |page=281}}</ref> | |||
In order to separate the mujahideen from the local populations and eliminate their support, the Soviet army killed and drove off civilians, and used scorched earth tactics to prevent their return. They used booby traps, mines, and chemical substances throughout the country.<ref name=":5" /> The Soviet army |
In order to separate the mujahideen from the local populations and eliminate their support, the Soviet army killed and drove off civilians, and used scorched earth tactics to prevent their return. They used booby traps, mines, and chemical substances throughout the country.<ref name=":5" /> The Soviet army indiscriminately killed combatants and noncombatants to ensure submission by the local populations.<ref name=":5" /> The provinces of ], ], ], ], ], ], ], ], ] and ] witnessed extensive depopulation programmes by the Soviet forces.<ref name=":223" /> The Soviet forces abducted Afghan women in helicopters while flying in the country in search of mujahideen. In November 1980, a number of such incidents had taken place in various parts of the country, including Laghman and Kama. Soviet soldiers as well as ] agents kidnapped young women from the city of ] and the areas of Darul Aman and ], near the Soviet garrisons, to rape them.<ref>{{Cite book|url=http://publishing.cdlib.org/ucpressebooks/view?docId=ft7b69p12h&brand=ucpress|title=The Soviet Invasion and the Afghan Response, 1979-1982|last=Kakar|first=M. Hassan|publisher=University of California Press|year=1995|isbn=9780520208933|quote=While military operations in the country were going on, women were abducted. While flying in the country in search of mujahideen, helicopters would land in fields where women were spotted. While Afghan women do mainly domestic chores, they also work in fields assisting their husbands or performing tasks by themselves. The women were now exposed to the Soviet, who kidnapped them with helicopters. By November 1980 a number of such incidents had taken place in various parts of the country, including Laghman and Kama. In the city of Kabul, too, the Soviets kidnapped women, taking them away in tanks and other vehicles, especially after dark. Such incidents happened mainly in the areas of Darul Aman and Khair Khana, near the Soviet garrisons. At times such acts were committed even during the day. KhAD agents also did the same. Small groups of them would pick up young women in the streets, apparently to question them but in reality to satisfy their lust: in the name of security, they had the power to commit excesses.}}</ref> Women who were taken and raped by soldiers were considered 'dishonoured' by their families if they returned home.<ref>{{Cite book|title=The War Chronicles: From Flintlocks to Machine Guns|year=2009 |publisher=Fair Winds|isbn=9781616734046|pages=393|quote=A final weapon of terror the Soviets used against the mujahideen was the abduction of Afghan women. Soldiers flying in helicopters would scan for women working in the fields in the absence of their men, land, and take the women captive. Russian soldiers in the city of Kabul would also steal young women. The object was rape, although sometimes the women were killed, as well. The women who returned home were often considered dishonored for life.}}</ref> Deserters from the Soviet Army in 1984 claimed that they had heard of Afghan women being raped.<ref>{{Cite news|url=https://www.nytimes.com/1984/08/03/world/4-soviet-deserters-tell-of-cruel-afghanistan-war.html|title=4 Soviet Deserters Tell Of Cruel Afghanistan War|last=Sciolino|first=Elaine|date=August 3, 1984|work=The New York Times|quote='I can't hide the fact that women and children have been killed,' Nikolay Movchan, 20, a Ukrainian who was a sergeant and headed a grenade-launching team, said in an interview later. 'And I've heard of Afghan women being raped.'|access-date=6 January 2017}}</ref> The rape of Afghan women by Soviet troops was common and 11.8 percent of the Soviet war criminals in Afghanistan were convicted for the offence of rape.<ref>{{cite book|author=Carol Harrington|title=Politicization of Sexual Violence: From Abolitionism to Peacekeeping|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=QbsFDAAAQBAJ&pg=PA104|date=22 April 2016|publisher=Routledge|isbn=978-1-317-07861-6|pages=104–}}</ref> There was an outcry against the press in the Soviet Union for depicting the Soviet "war heroes" as "murderers", "aggressors", "rapists" and "junkies".<ref>{{cite book|author=Rodric Braithwaite|title=Afgantsy: The Russians in Afghanistan 1979-89|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=13cTDAAAQBAJ|date=11 September 2013|publisher=Oxford University Press|isbn=978-0-19-932248-0|pages=323–324}}</ref> | ||
=== Pressure in Azerbaijan (1988–1991) === | === Pressure in Azerbaijan (1988–1991) === | ||
{{Main|Black January}} | {{Main|Black January}} | ||
Black January ({{ |
Black January ({{langx|az|Qara Yanvar}}), also known as Black Saturday or the January Massacre, was a violent crackdown in ] on 19–20 January 1990, pursuant to a ] during the ]. | ||
In a resolution of 22 January 1990, the ] declared that the decree of the ] of 19 January, used to impose emergency rule in ] and military deployment, constituted an act of aggression.<ref>Kushen, Neier, p. 45</ref> Black January is associated with the rebirth of the ]. It was one of the occasions during the '']'' and '']'' era in which the USSR used force against dissidents. | In a resolution of 22 January 1990, the ] declared that the decree of the ] of 19 January, used to impose emergency rule in ] and military deployment, constituted an act of aggression.<ref>Kushen, Neier, p. 45</ref> Black January is associated with the rebirth of the ]. It was one of the occasions during the '']'' and '']'' era in which the USSR used force against dissidents. | ||
According to official estimates of Azerbaijan, 147 civilians were killed, 800 people were injured,<ref>{{Cite news|url=http://www.mfa.gov.az/en/news/909/4633|title=A Glance at the Tragedy of 20 January 1990|last=FS|work=mfa.gov.az|access-date=20 January 2018}}</ref> and five people went missing. | |||
==War crimes trials and legal prosecution== | ==War crimes trials and legal prosecution== | ||
In 1995, Latvian courts sentenced former KGB officer ] to |
In 1995, Latvian courts sentenced former KGB officer ] to ] for ] due to forced deportations in the 1940s.<ref> Associated Press. The New York Times. 14 December 1995</ref> | ||
In 2003, |
In 2003, August Kolk (born 1924), an Estonian national, and Petr Kislyiy (born 1921), a Russian national, were convicted of crimes against humanity by Estonian courts and each sentenced to eight years in prison. They were found guilty of ]. Kolk and Kislyiy lodged a complaint at the ], alleging that the Criminal Code of 1946 of the ] (RSFSR) was valid at the time, applicable also in Estonia, and that the said Code had not provided for punishment of crimes against humanity. Their appeal was rejected since the court found that Resolution 95 of the ], adopted on 11 December 1946, confirmed deportations of civilians as a crime against humanity under ].<ref>{{cite web| title=Full text of European Court of Human Rights Decision on the case Kolk and Kislyiy v. Estonia: Non-Applicability of Statutory Limitations to Crimes against Humanity |work=Council of Europe| url=http://www.derechos.org/nizkor/impu/kolk.html| date=17 January 2006}}</ref> | ||
In 2004, ], a ] during World War II, was convicted by |
In 2004, ], a ] during World War II, was convicted by ] as a ] for killing three women, one of whom was pregnant.<ref> {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20150402153002/http://at.gov.lv/lv/pazinojumi-presei/par-notikumiem/2007/septembris/109-augstakas-tiesas-parstavji-strasbura-gust-ieskatu-cilvektiesibu-aizsardziba/ |date=2 April 2015 }}, Augstākās Tiesa. 24 septembris 2007. Retrieved 19 March 2015.</ref><ref name=CKL>, European Court of Human Rights. 17 May 2010. Retrieved 18 May 2010.</ref> He is the only former Soviet partisan convicted of ].<ref>, Radio Free Europe. Claire Bigg. 7 May 2010. Retrieved 18 May 2010.</ref> The sentence was condemned by various high-ranking Russian officials.<ref>, ]. Charles Gurin. 3 May 2004. Retrieved 18 May 2010.</ref> | ||
On 27 March 2019, Lithuania convicted 67 former Soviet military and KGB officials who were given sentences of between four and 14 years for the ]. Only two were present—Yuriy Mel, a former Soviet tank officer, and Gennady Ivanov, a former Soviet munitions officer—while the |
On 27 March 2019, Lithuania convicted 67 former Soviet military and KGB officials who were given sentences of between four and 14 years for the ]. Only two were present—Yuriy Mel, a former Soviet tank officer, and ], a former Soviet munitions officer—while the others were sentenced '']'' because they were residing in Russia.<ref>{{cite news| publisher=BBC News| date=27 March 2019 |access-date=16 July 2019| title=Lithuania convicts Russians of war crimes under Soviet rule| url=https://www.bbc.com/news/world-europe-47725239}}</ref> | ||
==In popular culture== | ==In popular culture== | ||
===Film=== | ===Film=== | ||
* '']'' (2008) depicts the mass sexual assaults committed by Soviet soldiers in the ] of ]. It is based on ] of ].<ref> (German), {{in lang|ru}}</ref> | * '']'' (2008) depicts the mass sexual assaults committed by Soviet soldiers in the ] of ]. It is based on ] of ].<ref> (German), {{in lang|ru}}</ref> | ||
* '']'' (2008), a film set during the ], depicts Red soldiers and sailors committing numerous massacres of former members of the ]'s ]. | * '']'' (2008), a film set during the ], depicts Red soldiers and sailors committing numerous massacres of former members of the ]'s ]. | ||
* '']'' (1988) a film set during the Soviet–Afghan War, depicts Red Army war crimes against civilian noncombatants and a ] clan's quest for revenge. | * '']'' (1988), a film set during the Soviet–Afghan War, depicts Red Army war crimes against civilian noncombatants and a ] clan's quest for revenge. | ||
* '']'' (2007), set during the Soviet–Afghan War, accuses the Soviet |
* '']'' (2007), set during the Soviet–Afghan War, accuses the Soviet state of systematic ] against Afghan civilians. It is mentioned that Soviet forces are leaving no one alive and are even slaughtering livestock in order to starve the Afghan people into submission. | ||
* '']'' (2007), depicts the ] through the eyes of its victims and the decades long battle by their families to learn the truth. | * '']'' (2007), depicts the ] through the eyes of its victims and the decades long battle by their families to learn the truth. | ||
===Literature=== | ===Literature=== | ||
* '']'' (1974) a ] by ]. The narrator, a Red Army officer, approves of the troops' crimes as revenge for Nazi atrocities in Russia, and hopes to take part in the plundering himself. The poem describes the gang-rape of a ] woman whom the ] soldiers had mistaken for a German.<ref>Davies, Norman (1982) ''God's Playground. A History of Poland'', Columbia University Press, Vol. II, {{ISBN|0-231-12819-3}}</ref> According to a review for '']'', Solzhenitsyn wrote the poem in ], "in imitation of, and argument with the most famous Russian war poem, ]'s '']''."<ref name ="NYT">{{cite news|last=Proffer|first=Carl R.|author-link=Carl Ray Proffer|url=https://www.nytimes.com/books/98/03/01/home/solz-prussian.html|title=Russia in Prussia| |
* '']'' (1974) a ] by ]. The narrator, a Red Army officer, approves of the troops' crimes as revenge for Nazi atrocities in Russia, and hopes to take part in the plundering himself. The poem describes the gang-rape of a ] woman whom the ] soldiers had mistaken for a German.<ref>Davies, Norman (1982) ''God's Playground. A History of Poland'', Columbia University Press, Vol. II, {{ISBN|0-231-12819-3}}</ref> According to a review for '']'', Solzhenitsyn wrote the poem in ], "in imitation of, and argument with the most famous Russian war poem, ]'s '']''."<ref name ="NYT">{{cite news|last=Proffer|first=Carl R.|author-link=Carl Ray Proffer|url=https://www.nytimes.com/books/98/03/01/home/solz-prussian.html|title=Russia in Prussia|work=The New York Times|date=7 August 1977|access-date=18 June 2017}}</ref> | ||
* '' |
* ''Apricot Jam and Other Stories'' (2010) by ]. In a ] about Marshal ]'s futile attempts at writing his memoirs, the retired Marshal reminisces about serving against the ]. He recalls ]'s arrival to take command of the campaign and his first address to his men. He announced that ] and ] tactics are to be used against civilians who assist or even sympathize with the peasant rebels. Zhukov proudly recalls how Tukhachevsky's tactics were adopted and succeeded in breaking the uprising. In the process, however, they virtually depopulated the surrounding countryside. | ||
* '' |
* ''A Man without Breath'' (2013) by ]. A 1993 ] ] which delves into the ]'s investigations of Soviet war crimes. Kerr noted in his Afterward that the Wehrmacht War Crimes Bureau continued to exist until 1945. It has been written about in the book of the same name by Alfred M. de Zayas, published by the University of Nebraska Press in 1989.<ref>''A Man without Breath'', p. 463-4.</ref> {{ISBN|978-0-399-16079-0}}. | ||
===Art=== | ===Art=== | ||
* On 12 October 2013 a then 26-year-old Polish art student, Jerzy Bohdan Szumczyk, erected a movable statue next to the Soviet World War II memorial in the Polish city of ]. The statue depicted a Soviet soldier attempting to rape a pregnant woman; pulling her hair with one hand whilst pushing a pistol into her mouth. Authorities removed the artwork because it had been erected without an official permit, but there was widespread interest in many online publications. The act promoted an angry reaction from the Russian ambassador in Poland.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.rawstory.com/rs/2013/10/16/polish-artist-in-hot-water-over-soviet-rapist-sculpture/|title=Polish artist in hot water over Soviet rapist sculpture|access-date=14 February 2016}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.news.net/article/572837/Technology/ |title=Poland will not charge artist over Soviet rapist sculpture |
* On 12 October 2013 a then 26-year-old Polish art student, Jerzy Bohdan Szumczyk, erected a movable statue next to the Soviet World War II memorial in the Polish city of ]. The statue depicted a Soviet soldier attempting to rape a pregnant woman; pulling her hair with one hand whilst pushing a pistol into her mouth. Authorities removed the artwork because it had been erected without an official permit, but there was widespread interest in many online publications. The act promoted an angry reaction from the Russian ambassador in Poland.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.rawstory.com/rs/2013/10/16/polish-artist-in-hot-water-over-soviet-rapist-sculpture/|title=Polish artist in hot water over Soviet rapist sculpture|access-date=14 February 2016|archive-date=21 October 2013|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20131021172610/http://www.rawstory.com/rs/2013/10/16/polish-artist-in-hot-water-over-soviet-rapist-sculpture/|url-status=dead}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.news.net/article/572837/Technology/ |title=Poland will not charge artist over Soviet rapist sculpture – news.net |date=20 October 2013 |url-status=bot: unknown |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20131020102443/http://www.news.net/article/572837/Technology/ |archive-date=20 October 2013 }}</ref><ref>{{cite news|url=http://www.spiegel.de/politik/ausland/skulptur-einer-vergewaltigung-in-polen-schockiert-russischen-botschafter-a-928457.html|title=Skulptur einer Vergewaltigung in Polen schockiert russischen Botschafter|author=SPIEGEL ONLINE, Hamburg, Germany|date=17 October 2013|newspaper=SPIEGEL ONLINE|access-date=14 February 2016}}</ref> | ||
== See also == | == See also == | ||
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== |
== References == | ||
===Notes=== | |||
<references group="notes"/> | |||
{{reflist|group=lower-alpha}} | |||
== |
===Citations=== | ||
{{reflist}} | {{reflist}} | ||
== Sources == | == Sources == | ||
{{refbegin}} | |||
* , '']: Six Weeks in the Conquered City'' Translated by Anthes Bell, {{ISBN|0-8050-7540-2}} | |||
* ], ''Berlin: The Downfall 1945'', Penguin Books, 2002, {{ISBN|0-670-88695-5}} | * ], ''Berlin: The Downfall 1945'', Penguin Books, 2002, {{ISBN|0-670-88695-5}} | ||
* Bergstrom, Christer (2007). ''Barbarossa – The Air Battle: July–December 1941''. London: Chevron/Ian Allan. {{ISBN|978-1-85780-270-2}} |
* Bergstrom, Christer (2007). ''Barbarossa – The Air Battle: July–December 1941''. London: Chevron/Ian Allan. {{ISBN|978-1-85780-270-2}}. | ||
* {{cite journal|last=Brauer|first=Birgit|year=2010|title=Chechens and the survival of their cultural identity in exile|volume=4|issue=3|pages=387–400|doi=10.1080/14623520220151970|journal=Journal of Genocide Research |s2cid=72355205}} | |||
* Hall and Quinlan (2000). ''KG55''. Red Kite. {{ISBN|0-9538061-0-3}} | |||
* {{cite book |last1=Buckley |first1=Cynthia J. |first2=Blair A. |last2=Ruble |first3=Erin Trouth |last3=Hofmann |title=Migration, Homeland, and Belonging in Eurasia |publisher=] |year=2008 |lccn=2008-015571 |page=207 |isbn=9780801890758}} | |||
* ], ''Armageddon: The Battle for Germany, 1944–1945'', Chapter 10: Blood and Ice: East Prussia {{ISBN|0-375-41433-9}} | |||
* {{cite book |last=Bugay| first=Nikolay |author-link=Nikolay Bugay | title=The Deportation of Peoples in the Soviet Union | year=1996 | publisher=] | isbn=9781560723714 |oclc=36402865 |location=New York City}} | |||
* Fisch, Bernhard, ''Nemmersdorf, Oktober 1944. Was in Ostpreußen tatsächlich geschah.'' Berlin: 1997. {{ISBN|3-932180-26-7}}. (about most of the ] atrocity having been set up by Goebbels) | |||
* {{cite journal |last=Burds |first=Jeffrey |title=The Soviet War against 'Fifth Columnists': The Case of Chechnya, 1942–4 |journal=] |volume=42 |issue=2 |pages=267–314 |year=2007 |doi=10.1177/0022009407075545 |s2cid=159523593}} | |||
* John Toland, ''The Last 100 Days'', Chapter Two: Five Minutes before Midnight {{ISBN|0-8129-6859-X}} | |||
* ], '']'' (in Misplaced Pages). Preface by Professor Howard Levie. Lincoln: University of Nebraska Press, 1989. {{ISBN|0-8032-9908-7}}. New revised edition with Picton Press, Rockland, Maine, {{ISBN|0-89725-421-X}}. | |||
* ], ''The Russians in Germany: A History of the Soviet Zone of Occupation, 1945–1949.'' Harvard University Press, 1995. {{ISBN|0-674-78405-7}} | |||
* de Zayas, Alfred-Maurice, ''A Terrible Revenge. The Ethnic Cleansing of the East European Germans, 1944–1950'', ], New York, 1994, {{ISBN|0-312-12159-8}} | |||
* ], ''Ivan's War, the Red Army 1939–1945'', London: Faber and Faber, 2005, {{ISBN|0-571-21808-3}} | |||
* {{cite book |last=Dunlop |first=John B. |author-link=John B. Dunlop |title=Russia Confronts Chechnya: Roots of a Separatist Conflict |publisher=] |year=1998 |isbn=9780521636193 |lccn=97051840 |location=Cambridge}} | |||
* ], '']'' (in Misplaced Pages). Preface by Professor Howard Levie. Lincoln: University of Nebraska Press, 1989. {{ISBN|0-8032-9908-7}}. New revised edition with Picton Press, Rockland, Maine, {{ISBN|0-89725-421-X}}. | |||
* {{cite book |last=Dushnyck |first=Walter |chapter=Discrimination and Abuse of Power in the USSR |year=1975 |page=503 |title=Case Studies on Human Rights and Fundamental Freedoms Volume Two: A World Survey |editor-first=Willem Adriaan |editor-last=Veenhoven |publisher=] |isbn=9789024717811 |lccn=76352642}} | |||
* Alfred-Maurice de Zayas, ''A Terrible Revenge. The Ethnic Cleansing of the East European Germans, 1944–1950'', St. Martin's Press, New York, 1994, {{ISBN|0-312-12159-8}} | |||
* {{cite book |editor-last=Fowkes |editor-first=Ben |title=Russia and Chechnia: The Permanent Crisis: Essays on Russo-Chechen Relations |publisher=] UK |year=1998 |isbn=9781349263516 |lccn=97037269}} | |||
* Elizabeth B. Walter, ''Barefoot in the Rubble'' 1997, {{ISBN|0-9657793-0-0}} | |||
* Hall, Steve and Lionel Quinlan (2000). ''KG55: Greif Geshwader''. Walton on Thames: Red Kite. {{ISBN|0-9538061-0-3}} | |||
* {{cite book|last=Gammer|first=Moshe|title=The Lone Wolf and the Bear: Three Centuries of Chechen Defiance of Russian Rule|publisher=C. Hurst & Co. Publishers|year=2006|isbn=9781850657484}} | |||
* {{cite book|last=Gessen|first=Masha|author-link=Masha Gessen|year=2015|page=|title=The Brothers: The Road to an American Tragedy|isbn=9781594632648|lccn=2015295427|publisher=]|url=https://archive.org/details/brothersroadtoam0000gess/page/18}} | |||
* ], ''Armageddon: The Battle for Germany, 1944–1945'', Chapter 10: Blood and Ice: East Prussia {{ISBN|0-375-41433-9}} | |||
* ], '']: Six Weeks in the Conquered City'' Translated by Anthes Bell, {{ISBN|0-8050-7540-2}} | |||
* ], ''Nemmersdorf, Oktober 1944. Was in Ostpreußen tatsächlich geschah.'' Berlin: 1997. {{ISBN|3-932180-26-7}}. | |||
* {{cite book |editor1-last=Lee |editor1-first=Philip |editor2-last=Thomas |editor2-first=Pradip |year=2012 |page=185 |title=Public Memory, Public Media and the Politics of Justice |publisher=Springer |isbn=9781137265173 |lccn=2012023556}} | |||
* {{cite book|last=Marshall|first=Alex|year=2010|title=The Caucasus Under Soviet Rule| publisher=Routledge| lccn=2010003007 |isbn=9781136938252}} | |||
* {{cite book|last=Mawdsley|first=Evan|year=1998|title=The Stalin Years: The Soviet Union, 1929–1953|publisher=]|isbn=9780719046001|lccn=2003046365}} | |||
* ], ''Ivan's War, the Red Army 1939–1945'', London: Faber and Faber, 2005, {{ISBN|0-571-21808-3}} | |||
* ], ''The Russians in Germany: A History of the Soviet Zone of Occupation, 1945–1949.'' Harvard University Press, 1995. {{ISBN|0-674-78405-7}} | |||
* {{cite book |last=Pokalova |first=Elena |year=2015 |page=16 |title=Chechnya's Terrorist Network: The Evolution of Terrorism in Russia's North Caucasus |publisher=] |isbn=9781440831553 |lccn=2014038634}} | |||
*{{cite book|last=Richmond|first=Walter |year=2008 |page=117 |title=The Northwest Caucasus: Past, Present, Future |publisher=Routledge |isbn=9780415776158 |lccn=2008001048 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=E6Z5AgAAQBAJ&pg=PA117}} | |||
* {{Cite book|last=Tishkov|first=Valery|author-link=Valery Tishkov|year=2004|page=33|title=Chechnya: Life in a War-Torn Society|volume=6|publisher=]|isbn=9780520930209|lccn=2003017330|location=]}} | |||
* ], ''The Last 100 Days'', Chapter Two: Five Minutes before Midnight {{ISBN|0-8129-6859-X}} | |||
* {{cite book | last=Voutira| first=Eftihia | title=The 'Right to Return' and the Meaning of 'Home': A Post-Soviet Greek Diaspora Becoming European?|year=2011| publisher=LIT Verlag Münster|isbn=9783643901071| oclc=777781352| location=Zürich| url=https://books.google.com/books?id=guEiBa8esvMC&dq=greeks+ukraine+91,500&pg=PA337}} | |||
* Walter, Elizabeth B., ''Barefoot in the Rubble'' 1997, {{ISBN|0-9657793-0-0}} | |||
* {{cite book|last=Werth|first=Nicholas|chapter=The Crimes of the Stalin Regime: Outline for an Inventory and Classification|editor-last=Stone|editor-first=Dan|edition=repeated|lccn=2007048561|title=The Historiography of Genocide|url=https://archive.org/details/historiographyge00ston|url-access=limited|publisher=]|year=2008|isbn=9780230297784|location=Basingstoke |page=}} | |||
* {{cite book|last=Wood|first=Tony|title=Chechnya: The Case for Independence|publisher=]|year=2007|isbn=9781844671144|lccn=2007273825|location=New York, London}} | |||
{{refend}} | |||
== External links == | == External links == | ||
{{commons category |
{{commons category-inline}} | ||
* : Masculinities and rape in Berlin, 1945, James W. Messerschmidt, University of Southern Maine | * : Masculinities and rape in Berlin, 1945, James W. Messerschmidt, University of Southern Maine | ||
* : ''A Woman in Berlin: Eight Weeks in the Conquered City'', {{ISBN|0-8050-7540-2}} | * : ''A Woman in Berlin: Eight Weeks in the Conquered City'', {{ISBN|0-8050-7540-2}} | ||
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* , Kate Connolly, ], June 23, 2002 | * , Kate Connolly, ], June 23, 2002 | ||
* , Antony Beevor, ], 1 May 2002 | * , Antony Beevor, ], 1 May 2002 | ||
* The Struggle for Europe: The Turbulent History of a Divided Continent 1945–2002 – ] – 2003 – {{ISBN|0-385-49798-9}} ( ]) | * {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20070313150136/http://www.randomhouse.ca/catalog/display.pperl?isbn=9780385497992&view=excerpt |date=13 March 2007 }} The Struggle for Europe: The Turbulent History of a Divided Continent 1945–2002 – ] – 2003 – {{ISBN|0-385-49798-9}} ( ]) | ||
* , quotations from ], poems by anti-cruelty Red Army officers and details of suicides and rapings of German women and children in ]. | * , quotations from ], poems by anti-cruelty Red Army officers and details of suicides and rapings of German women and children in ]. | ||
* | * | ||
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* | * | ||
* Report of an eyewitness: Erika Morgenstern, who survived Königsberg 1945 as a child (in German): {{YouTube|GWz4e2Tua1w|part 1}}, {{YouTube|YlJkfWCGEds|part 2}}, {{YouTube|PELbpe35URQ|part 3}} | * Report of an eyewitness: Erika Morgenstern, who survived Königsberg 1945 as a child (in German): {{YouTube|GWz4e2Tua1w|part 1}}, {{YouTube|YlJkfWCGEds|part 2}}, {{YouTube|PELbpe35URQ|part 3}} | ||
{{War crimes}}{{World War II}} | |||
{{World War II}} | |||
{{Joseph Stalin}} | {{Joseph Stalin}} | ||
{{DEFAULTSORT:Soviet War Crimes}} | {{DEFAULTSORT:Soviet War Crimes}} | ||
] | ] | ||
] | ] | ||
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Latest revision as of 09:00, 26 December 2024
War crimes and crimes against humanity committed by the Soviet Union
Soviet war crimes | |
---|---|
Katyn massacre 1943 exhumation | |
Location | |
Date | 1918 to 1991 |
Target |
|
Attack type | Genocide, mass murder, ethnic cleansing, war crimes, forced labour, genocidal rape, mass looting |
Perpetrators | Soviet Russia (1918–1922) Soviet Union (1922–1991) |
Motive |
From 1917 to 1991, a multitude of war crimes and crimes against humanity were carried out by the Soviet Union or any of its Soviet republics, including the Russian Soviet Federative Socialist Republic and its armed forces. They include acts which were committed by the Red Army (later called the Soviet Army) as well as acts which were committed by the country's secret police, NKVD, including its Internal Troops. In many cases, these acts were committed upon the direct orders of Soviet leaders Vladimir Lenin and Joseph Stalin in pursuance of the early Soviet policy of Red Terror as a means to justify executions and political repression. In other instances they were committed without orders by Soviet troops against prisoners of war or civilians of countries that had been in armed conflict with the USSR, or they were committed during partisan warfare.
A significant number of these incidents occurred in Northern, Central, and Eastern Europe before, during, and in the aftermath of World War II, involving summary executions and the mass murder of prisoners of war, such as in the Katyn massacre and mass rape by troops of the Red Army in territories they occupied.
In the 1990s and 2000s, war crimes trials held in the Baltic states led to the prosecution of some Russians, mostly in absentia, for crimes against humanity committed during or shortly after World War II, including killings or deportations of civilians. Today, the Russian government engages in historical negationism. Russian media refers to the Soviet crimes against humanity and war crimes as a "Western myth". In Russian history textbooks, the atrocities are either altered to portray the Soviets positively or omitted entirely. In 2017, Russian President Vladimir Putin, himself a war crime fugitive since 2023, while acknowledging the "horrors of Stalinism", criticized the "excessive demonization of Stalin" by "Russia's enemies".
Background
The Soviet Union did not recognize Imperial Russia's signing of the Hague Conventions of 1899 and 1907 as binding, and as a result, it refused to recognize them until 1955. This created a situation in which war crimes by the Soviet armed forces could be justified, and also gave Nazi Germany a legal cover for the atrocities it committed against Soviet prisoners of war.
Russian Civil War
Blagoveshchensk massacre
In March 1918, over a thousand residents of Blagoveshchensk fell victim to the Red Guards, who seized the city after the mutiny of Ataman I. M. Gamov. As reported in 1922 by the prominent Chekist I. P. Pavlunovsky:
"A mass of workers from the mines rushed into the city, stormed it, and organized a massacre of the bourgeoisie ‘in general’. They went in squads from house to house and slaughtered all those suspected of rebellion and those sympathizing with them. By the way, they slaughtered almost the entire staff of the Blagoveshchensk City Administration and especially cut up the specialists and employees of the mining offices."
The press in the spring of 1919 reported on terrorist actions in Blagoveshchensk under the Reds:
"Bolshevik atrocities in the city reached terrible proportions. From the local population, more than 1,000 people were shot. Excavation of graves has started. After the capture of the city, most of the students joined our army as volunteers."
I. I. Zhukovsky-Zhuk, a well-known Far Eastern Socialist-Revolutionaries-Maximalist, wrote:
"almost all revolutionaries in the D.-East, especially in Blagoveshchensk on the Amur River, resorted to the ‘ragtag’ methods, i.e., to the methods of active, ruthless revolutionary struggle that knew no compromise. Shootings without trial, which served as the main accusation against the ragpickers, were not uncommon here. Individual representatives of the Amur authorities, such as Matveev, the head of the regional prison, and his assistant S. Dimitriev (both Communists), shot dozens of persons suspected and accused of counter-revolution and White Guardism without trial. This was known to the Revolutionary Committee, and many people in the city also learned about it, but no one protested against it, with the exception of the Blagoveshchensk group of anarchists, because everyone was so "accustomed" to this kind of phenomenon."
Vladivostok massacre
At the beginning of April 1920, the former head of Kolchak's government, P. V. Volgodsky, met in Shanghai with two officers who had escaped from the Red Terror in Vladivostok, who said that there, despite the coalition socialist government of A. S. Medvedev, "the Bolsheviks were actually at work there," arresting and, after almost obligatory torture, killing Whites:
"...In Vladivostok, there are systematic murders of White Guard officers. They are arrested and shot on their way to prison under the pretext of stopping escape attempts, etc."
Chita massacre and the elimination of the so-called "Semyonov jam"
The partisan detachment of the Red Army under Nestor Kalandarishvili participated in the capture of Chita and the elimination of the so-called "Semyonov jam", during which his detachment habitually attacked the Buryats population, which actively supported the whites. For example, in the Fall of 1920 the Khamnigan-Buryat Khoshun of Aginsky Aimag was brutally defeated by partisans: three of its somons were completely deserted, in the other two less than 200 out of 6000 inhabitants remained. The rest fled to Mongolia, but many of them were killed and their corpses were left unburied in March 1921. More than 70 bodies, mostly monks, women, and children, were found in and around Byrtsin datsan. In late 1920, Kalandarishvili's unit not only robbed the local population, but also raped Buryat women and girls. The command of the 5th Army of the Eastern Front — which was advancing on Chita — accused the former guerrillas of undermining the Soviet power, because the criminal situation in the ranks of Kalandarishvili's unit constantly threatened the peaceful population. However, the military authorities did not sanction Kalandarishvili. (At that time, Nestor Kalandarishvili's position had been strengthened by Lenin.)
Amur River massacre
The movement of about two thousand troops of Yakov Ivanovich Tryapitsyn and Nina Lebedeva-Kiyashko down the Amur River was accompanied by the almost complete extermination of rural intellectuals (for revolutionary "passivity") and anyone who looked like a town "bourgeois"; priests were drowned in ice-holes, or taken prisoner. Even those who voluntarily went to the partisans were shot.
One of Tryapitsyn's assistants, Ivan Lapta (Yakov Rogozin), organized a Red Army detachment that "raided villages and camps, robbed and killed people,". They killed those who did not give up gold at the Limursk mines, and looted the Amgun gold mines and surrounding villages. Lapta's detachments, together with the Tryapitsyns Zavarzin, Bitsenko, Dyldin, Otsevilli, and Sasov, killed hundreds of Lower Amurians even before the occupation of the regional center.
In Tryapitsyn's detachment, there were about 200 Chinese and the same number of Koreans recruited from the gold mines of the Taiga (the latter were commanded by Ilya Pak), to whom the ataman gave a generous cash advance, promising gold from the mines, and many Russian women. Partisan chiefs were appointed by the most determined and cruel personalities, who kept the units in submission by giving them the right to plunder and kill.
Nikolaevsk-on-Amur massacre
See also: Nikolayevsk incidentIn 1920, Soviet Russia and Japan discussed a buffer state in the Russian Far East. Recognizing that Kolchak's government had collapsed, the Japanese agreed to allow the Red Army to enter Vladivostok in late January 1920. With so many foreign troops stationed in Primorye, the Bolsheviks were forced to accept the socialist zemstvo. At the same time Tryapitsyn besieged, and after an artillery bombardment at the end of February, captured Nikolaevsk-on-Amur where a Japanese battalion of 350 men and about the same number of White garrisons were stationed. There were no roads to it before the ice drift, so the defenders of the almost 20,000-strong city could rely only on their own forces. The Red Army entered the area after promising the Japanese and White garrisons that it would not commit atrocities. The Red Army signed a pact with the Japanese garrison on February 28, 1920, promising to abide by the agreement. Nevertheless, the Red Army immediately began looting and killing.
The Red guerrilla forces entered the city after agreeing to a peace with the Japanese garrison, but once inside they ignored the agreement and killed residents. The Red guerrilla forces arrested and executed civilians sympathetic to the White Movement, even wealthy civilians. Since then, Red guerrilla units have provoked the Japanese garrison. The Red guerrillas gave the Japanese garrison an ultimatum to disarm. The Japanese garrison refused the ultimatum. This led to the armed conflict on March 12. The Japanese realized that they were dealing with a Red Army that did not recognize any agreements, and that Tryapitsyn wanted to provoke the Japanese into action with this ultimatum. When the Red Army gave the Japanese garrison an ultimatum to disarm, Major Ishikawa — the Japanese garrison commander — refused. He launched a preemptive strike on 13 March. Tryapitsyn received two wounds in the surprise attack but was able to organize a resistance, and after a fierce battle, the Japanese garrison was crushed in numbers. The consul and all the staff died in the consulate set on fire by the guerrillas. Tryapitsyn's unit exterminated Jewish children and women during the purge. Children were killed along with their mothers, and women were raped before being executed. The guerrillas deliberately killed children as an unnecessary burden. Members of the Jewish community were taken by steamboat to the Amur River and drowned, young and old. The executions were carried out by specially designated squads of Russian Red Army partisans, Koreans and Chinese loyal to Tryapitsyn. Every night they went to the prison and killed a certain number of victims according to a list.
Tryapitsyn's unit retreated only after laying waste to the entire city, setting fire to wooden buildings and blowing up stone structures. In the last days of May and the first days of June 1920, on the orders of Tryapitsyn's headquarters, himself and a group of people close to him, the town of Nikolaevsk-on-Amur was blown up and burned, the surrounding fishing grounds along the coast were burned, the inhabitants of the town were killed according to the censorship of "trustworthiness" and social affiliation; surviving Japanese, who were kept as prisoners, as well as Red Army partisans who did not agree with Tryapitsyn's actions. As a result of the evacuation of part of the population to the taiga, almost all children under the age of 5 died. The remaining population of the city retreated together, and they were taken out of the city by force. The survivors were forcibly taken away by Red Army through the taiga to the middle Amur (to Red Army partisans hearth - the so-called "red island"). Desolate ashes were left in the place of Nikolaevsk. The Red Army massacred thousands of Russians.
The terror of 1920–1921 in the occupied Crimea
The Red Army carried out a mass extermination of the officers and soldiers of Pyotr Wrangel's army and the civilians who remained in the Crimea in late 1920 and the first half of 1921.
After the seizure of the Crimea on November 21, 1920, the Chekists created the so-called Crimean Strike Group at the Special Department of the VChK of the South-Western Front, which united a number of security officers headed by the deputy head of the department E. G. Evdokimov. The Chekists often did not open real investigative cases, but limited themselves to arrests and selection of questionnaires. The questionnaires were used to “judge” by troikas, which resulted in a single case for dozens and hundreds of those shot. A significant part of those arrested — among whom were often women and teenagers — were shot at once, the rest sent to concentration camps and exiled.
It is believed that Yefim Yevdokimov and his “expedition” of hundreds of special agents killed at least twelve thousand people. This figure is recorded in Yevdokimov's presentation to the Order of the Red Banner, where it was noted that under his leadership "...were shot up to 12 thousand people, including up to 30 governors, more than 150 generals, more than 300 colonels, several hundred counter-intelligence spies...".
In addition to the workers of special and transportation departments, in the extermination of Crimeans actively participated in the Chekists of territorial bodies - the VChK Polpresidency in the Crimea, Crimean Cheka, city and county Cheka. Meanwhile, the short-lived head of the Crimean Cheka (in the spring of 1921) M.M. Vikhman wrote twenty years later about his personal merits:
"During the capture of the Crimea was appointed personally by Mr. DZERZHINSKY as chairman of the Crimean Extraordinary Commission, where, on the instructions of the Party's fighting body VChK, he killed an ennite number of thousands of White Guards - the remnants of Wrangel's officers".
and the extermination of at least three thousand Crimeans by the Red partisans. However, the terror provoked not only armed resistance from part of the population, but also the indignation of many local communists, who actively complained to the central authorities. In this context, in June 1921, the Plenipotentiary Commission of the All-Russian Central Executive Committee and the RSFSR People's Commissariat for Crimean Affairs began its work on the peninsula. M.H. Sultan-Galiev, a member of the Commission and the Board of the RSFSR People's Commissariat, reported:
"According to the accounts of Crimean workers themselves, the number of Wrangel officers shot reaches from 20,000 to 25,000 throughout the Crimea. They point out that in Simferopol alone up to 12,000 were shot. Popular rumor exalts this figure for the whole Crimea up to 70.000. Whether this is really so, I have not been able to verify"
Wartime sexual violence
Wartime sexual violence in the Russian Civil War had a cultural component. Traditionally, a conquering warrior had the right to rape the defeated. As a European historian wrote, "the raids of the Cossacks in 1815, who chopped men with sabers and raped women, remain legendary in France to this day”.
In Babel's story “My First Goose” Budyonovets said about the mores of the red cavalry: “A man of the highest distinction - from him here the soul out. And if you spoil a lady, the cleanest lady, then you will get affection from the fighters...”.
In September 1920, in a letter to Lenin, commissioner N. Narimanov described the atrocities of the Red Army in Azerbaijan: “We receive amazing reports from the localities. It comes to open rape of girls and women...”.
In places of war captive women became a valuable commodity. One of the prominent Bolsheviks wrote in a personal letter from Uryankhai (Uyuk village) at the end of December, 1921: “Now. we are evacuating Bakich's gang to Siberia. There are many women for whom I, as the ‘head’ of the region, have demands, but I myself have not acquired a single one, although my official position requires me to have a whole harem.”
Irregular units were characterized by an increased propensity to violence of all kinds during the civil war. Some ethnographic peculiarities of the Trans-Ural peasants also contributed to the rampant sexual crime. It is known that in the Siberian village among young people there was an ancient custom of gang rape of girls. Lack of respect for women, promiscuity of morals combined with class hatred bore their fruits. During the guerrilla years, mass rape was ubiquitous. The rebels, who considered all women their legitimate prey, raped the wives of priests, civil servants, officers and merchants, nuns, teachers, but occasionally they willingly pounced on peasant women from neighboring villages.
In June 1919, in the village of Kolyon, Mariinsk uyezd, P.K. Lubkov's partisans gang-raped a teacher who went mad from the shock. Partisan gangs often took women into sexual slavery under the guise of hostages; after being abused, the unfortunate women were usually killed. The first mass murders of women by the Reds date back to the spring and summer of 1918 in Semirechye. In the Altai villages in the summer of 1918, the fighters of P.F. Sukhov's detachment not only robbed and massacred prisoners, but also kidnapped the wives and daughters of priests: "In Voznesenskoye the wife of the local priest was subjected to heinous violence and taken away by a gang...In Butyrskoye the same gangs took away the priest and his adult daughter. Leader of the detachment in Kuznetsk uyezd, Tomsk province. T.F. Putilov in May 1919 directly told the victims of the raid on a remote camp that he would take one of them with him "as a beautiful young woman". The partisans of the Amur region, among whom there were many Chinese, Koreans, Magyars and Caucasians, often took women with them when they attacked villages.
During the pogrom of the Barnaul Bogoroditse-Kazan nunnery by partisans in late 1919. “Many nuns were killed and raped”; some of them managed to escape. A well-known memoirist, describing the discovery of numerous remains of tortured Whites on the bank of one of the tributaries of the Yenisei in the spring of 1920, noted: “...We came across the corpse of a tortured woman, from the first glance at which it was clear what the unfortunate had to endure before a blessed bullet put an end to the abuse.”
The former Altai partisan mentioned several episodes of group violence by I.Y. Tretiak's division in Biysk uyezd dating back to the second half of 1919: “The partisan regiments stayed in Smolenskoye for about ten days and left again for Altaysk... After their departure there were more than a dozen ruined maidens and pregnant women...” When partisans in December 1919 once again captured the village of Charyshskaya, “hundreds of girls became women, and women became unwilling traitors to their husbands”. The objectivity of V.N. Shvetsov's memories is confirmed by documents. Cossacks of the Biysk line, complaining to the revcoms, in February 1920 claimed that in Cossack settlements partisans committed a lot of rapes, girls and women had to hide, “all kinds of venereal and other diseases developed”. On December 30, 1919, the Commissar of Justice of the Altgubrevkom noted that “the units standing in the village of Antonievskaya were committing violence against Cossack girls” and demanded that Nachdiv F.I. Arkhipov should bring the perpetrators to the court of tribunal, and the commanders of the units should be put on trial for inaction. This order was sabotaged.
The fighters of the West Siberian Peasant Red Army also abused women and committed rape. In the fall of 1919, during the capture of the Aul station, partisans raped women. During the partisan occupation of the Rubtsovka railway station, the company commander of the 2nd regiment, Syropyatov, raped and shot the wife of a railway worker, Filimonov.
The mass rape in Kuznetsk, Tomsk province, in December 1919 was reported in a Chekist information bulletin. Rogovtsy broke into houses, kidnapped women and girls, and used them for "brutal pleasure", including in their headquarters. Partisan memoirs contain the names of some of the victims: "The 18-year-old schoolteacher Inna P., daughter of one of the popes burned in the cathedral, was summoned to the headquarters 'on urgent business' and raped there. She fell ill with a nervous disorder. A 19-year-old girl, Polasukhina, was raped in her apartment. The girl almost went mad and soon died of shock. The 52-year-old widow of a prison official, Sycheva, was also raped in her apartment".
Mass rapes were characterized by the adventures of Y. Tryapitsyn's detachments (Sakhalin region), whose headquarters became the centers of mass rapes. Tryapitsyn's unit in the captured village, accustomed to wartime rape, violated human rights. Tryapitsyn's unit in the captured village of Susanino herded all the girls into one room and raped them, then tried to burn their victims alive, but were repelled by other Red Army partisans.
Red Army partisans often raped minors, often killing them afterwards. The opera singer Vera Davydova survived Tryapitsyn's unit at the age of 14 and told Nikolaev local historian V.I. Yuzefov that after the evacuation she was immediately seized by a group of Red Army partisans, forcibly separated from her parents, for allegedly sending her to the "headquarters." Her mother's screams attracted one of the Red Army partisan leaders, who recognized her as his former teacher and intervened. Tryapitsyn's unit also sexually assaulted women during their hasty escape from Nikolaevsk-on-Amur. N.D. Kolesnikova recalled: "It was forbidden for girls from the age of 16 to leave Nikolaevsk with their families. They had to go through the taiga together with the Red Army partisans. Luckily for me, I was only 13 years old."
The pogrom in Nikolaevsk-on-Amur and the subsequent Tryapitsyn's unit atrocities led not only to rape but also to the murder of young women and girls. In the summer of 1920, many corpses, mostly women and children, were fished out of the Amgun River: "Women, children, and rarely men—with cut ears, noses, severed fingers, and slashed and stabbed bayonet wounds." One of the acts drawn up in the village of Udinskoye in early July 1920 recorded the discovery of the body of Mozgunova, a girl of 15–17 years of age, with eight dagger wounds in the chest area.
Before World War II
The Soviets reportedly deployed mustard gas bombs during the 1934 Soviet invasion of Xinjiang, many civilians were also killed by conventional bombs dropped by Soviet and aligned during the invasion.
Red Army and pogroms
Further information: Antisemitism in the Soviet UnionThe early Soviet leaders publicly denounced antisemitism, efforts were made by Soviet authorities to contain anti-Jewish bigotry notably during the Russian Civil War, and soldiers were punished whenever the Red Army units perpetrated pogroms, as well as during the Soviet invasion of Poland in 1919–1920 at Baranovichi. Only a small number of pogroms were attributed to the Red Army, with the majority of the 'collectively violent' acts in the period having been committed by anti-communist and nationalist forces.
The pogroms were condemned by the Red Army high command and guilty units were disarmed, while individual pogromists were court-martialed and faced execution. Although pogroms by Ukrainian units of the Red Army still occurred even after this, Jews regarded the Red Army as the only force which was willing to protect them. It is estimated that 3,450 Jews or 2.3 percent of the Jewish victims killed during the Russian Civil War were murdered by the Bolshevik forces. In comparison, according to the Morgenthau Report, a total of about 300 Jews died in all incidents involving Polish responsibility. However, as William Korey wrote: "Anti-Jewish discrimination had become an integral part of Soviet state policy ever since the late thirties.", as the new Stalin government moved to fight against perceived "Jewish infiltration" in the country, as well as growing conspiracies of "Jewish collaboration with the west and the Bourgeoisie".
The Red Army and the NKVD
See also: NKVD prisoner massacres and Katyn massacreOn 6 February 1922, the Cheka (All-Russian Extraordinary Commission) secret police was replaced by the State Political Administration or OGPU, a section of the NKVD. The declared function of the NKVD was to protect the state security of the Soviet Union, which was accomplished by the large scale political persecution of "class enemies". The Red Army often gave support to the NKVD in the implementation of political repressions. As an internal security force and a prison guard contingent of the Gulag, the Internal Troops repressed political dissidents and engaged in war crimes during periods of military hostilities throughout Soviet history. They were specifically responsible for maintaining the political regime in the Gulag and conducting mass deportations and forced resettlement. The latter targeted a number of ethnic groups that the Soviet authorities presumed to be hostile to its policies and likely to collaborate with the enemy, including Chechens, Crimean Tatars, and Koreans.
World War II
"... Whenever I mentioned the heartlessness of our highest-ranking bureaucrats, the cruelty of our executioners, I remember myself in my Captain's shoulder boards and the forward march of my battery through East Prussia, enshrouded in fire, and I say: 'So were we any better?'"
— Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn, The Gulag Archipelago
War crimes by Soviet armed forces against civilians and prisoners of war in the territories occupied by the USSR between 1939 and 1941 in regions including Western Ukraine, the Baltic states and Bessarabia in Romania, along with war crimes in 1944–1945, have been ongoing issues within these countries. Since the dissolution of the Soviet Union, a more systematic, locally controlled discussion of these events has taken place.
Targets of Soviet atrocities included both collaborators with Germany after 1941 and the members of anti-communist resistance movements such as the Ukrainian Insurgent Army (UPA) in Ukraine, the Forest Brothers in Estonia, Latvia and Lithuania, and the Polish Armia Krajowa. The NKVD also conducted the Katyn massacre, summarily executing over 20,000 Polish military officer prisoners and intelligentsia in April and May 1940.
Baltic states
Estonia
Main article: Soviet occupation of EstoniaUnder the German-Soviet Molotov–Ribbentrop Pact, Estonia was annexed by the Soviet Union on 6 August 1940 and renamed the Estonian Soviet Socialist Republic. The Estonian standing army was broken up, and its officers executed or deported. In 1941, some 34,000 Estonians were drafted into the Red Army, of whom less than 30% survived the war. No more than half of those men were used for military service. The rest were sent to labour battalions where around 12,000 died, mainly in the early months of the war. After it became clear that the German invasion of Estonia would be successful, political prisoners who could not be evacuated were executed by the NKVD, so that they would not be able to make contact with the Nazi government. More than 300,000 citizens of Estonia, almost a third of the population at the time, were affected by deportations, arrests, execution and other acts of repression. As a result of the Soviet occupation, Estonia lost at least 200,000 people or 20% of its population to repression, exodus and war.
Soviet political repressions in Estonia were met by an armed resistance by the Forest Brothers, composed of former conscripts into the German military, Omakaitse militia and volunteers in the Finnish Infantry Regiment 200 who fought a guerrilla war, which was not completely suppressed until the late 1950s. In addition to the expected human and material losses suffered due to the fighting, over time this conflict led to the deportation of tens of thousands of people, along with hundreds of political prisoners and thousands of civilians died.
Mass deportations
Main article: Soviet deportations from EstoniaOn 14 June 1941, and the following two days, 9,254 to 10,861 people, mostly urban residents, of them over 5,000 women and over 2,500 children under 16, 439 Jews (more than 10% of the Estonian Jewish population) were deported, mostly to Kirov Oblast, Novosibirsk Oblast or prisons. Deportations were predominantly to Siberia and Kazakhstan by means of railroad cattle cars, without prior announcement, while the deported were given a few night hours at best to pack their belongings and separated from their families, usually also sent to the east. The procedure was established by the Serov Instructions. Estonians in Leningrad Oblast had already been subject to deportation since 1935.
Destruction battalions
Main article: Destruction battalions See also: Battle of KautlaIn 1941, to implement Stalin's scorched earth policy, destruction battalions were formed in the western regions of the Soviet Union. In Estonia, they killed thousands of people including many women and children, and burned down dozens of villages, schools and public buildings. Many atrocities were committed by these forces, such as the case of a school boy named Tullio Lindsaar, who had all of the bones in his hands broken for hoisting the flag of Estonia before being bayoneted to death, or Mauricius Parts, son of Estonian War of Independence veteran Karl Parts, who was killed after being doused in acid, just six weeks after the imprisonment of his father by Soviet occupation forces (who would later also be executed by Soviet forces while in prison). In August 1941, all residents of the village of Viru-Kabala were killed including a two-year-old child and a six-day-old infant, the battalions also occasionally burned people alive, according to survivors of the massacres. A partisan war broke out in response to the atrocities of the destruction battalions, with tens of thousands of men forming the Forest Brothers to protect the local population from these battalions; in general, the destruction battalions murdered ~1,850 people in Estonia, almost all of them partisans or unarmed civilians.
Another example of the destruction battalions' actions is the Kautla massacre, where twenty civilians were murdered and tens of farms and houses looted, burned down or destroyed, with many of the people killed after being tortured and beaten by Soviet troops. The low toll of human deaths in comparison with the number of burned farms is due to the Erna long-range reconnaissance group breaking the Red Army blockade on the area, allowing many civilians to escape.
Latvia
Main article: Soviet occupation of Latvia in 1940On 23 August 1939, the Soviet Union and Nazi Germany signed the Molotov–Ribbentrop Pact, in which Latvia was included in the Soviet sphere of influence. On 17 June 1940, Latvia was occupied by the Red Army. The Kārlis Ulmanis government was removed, and rigged elections were held on 21 June 1940 with only the Communist Latvian Working People's Bloc allowed to participate, "electing" the rubber stamp People's Parliament which made resolution to join the Soviet Union, with the resolution having already been drawn up in Moscow prior the election. Latvia was officially annexed by the Soviet Union on 5 August, and on 25 August all people in Latvia were declared citizens of the Soviet Union. The Ministry of Foreign Affairs was closed isolating Latvia from the rest of the world.
In the 1941 June deportation, tens of thousands of Latvians, including whole families with women, children and old people, were taken from their homes, loaded onto freight trains and taken to Gulag correctional labour camps or forced settlements in Siberia by the Soviet occupation regime on the orders of high authorities in Moscow. Prior to the deportation, the People's Commissariat established operational groups who performed arrests, and search and seizure of property. Arrests took place in all parts in Latvia including rural areas.
Lithuania
Main article: Occupation of the Baltic statesLithuania and the other Baltic States, fell victim to the secret addendum to the Molotov–Ribbentrop Pact between the USSR and Germany, signed in August 1939. First Lithuania was invaded by the Red Army on 15 June 1940, and then the Soviet Union annexed it on 3 August 1940. The annexation resulted in mass terror, the denial of civil liberties, the destruction of the economic system and the suppression of Lithuanian culture. Between 1940 and 1941, thousands of Lithuanians were arrested and hundreds of political prisoners were arbitrarily executed. More than 17,000 people were deported to Siberia in June 1941. After the German invasion of the Soviet Union, the Soviet political apparatus was either destroyed or retreated east. Lithuania was then occupied by Nazi Germany for a little over three years. In 1944, the Soviet Union reoccupied Lithuania. Following World War II and the subsequent suppression of the Lithuanian Forest Brothers, the Soviet authorities executed thousands of resistance fighters and civilians, whom they accused of helping them. Some 300,000 Lithuanians were deported or sentenced to terms in prison camps on political grounds. Lithuania lost an estimated nearly 780,000 citizens in the Soviet occupation. Of these, around 440,000 were war refugees.
The estimated death toll in Soviet prisons and camps between 1944 and 1953 was at least 14,000. The estimated death toll among deportees between 1945 and 1958 was 20,000, including 5,000 children.
During the restoration of Lithuanian independence in 1990 and 1991, the Soviet army killed 13 people in Vilnius during the January Events.
Poland
1939–1941
Main articles: Soviet invasion of Poland, Katyn massacre, Polish prisoners of war in the Soviet Union (after 1939), and NKVD prisoner massacresIn September 1939, the Red Army invaded eastern Poland and occupied it in accordance with the secret protocols of the Molotov–Ribbentrop Pact. The Soviets later forcefully occupied the Baltic States and parts of Romania, including Bessarabia and Northern Bukovina.
German historian Thomas Urban writes that the Soviet policy towards the people who fell under their control in occupied areas was harsh, showing strong elements of ethnic cleansing. The NKVD task forces followed the Red Army to remove 'hostile elements' from the conquered territories in what was known as the 'revolution by hanging'. Polish historian, Prof. Tomasz Strzembosz, has noted parallels between the Nazi Einsatzgruppen and these Soviet units. Many civilians tried to escape from the Soviet NKVD round-ups; those who failed were taken into custody and afterwards they were deported to Siberia and vanished in the Gulags.
Torture was used on a wide scale in various prisons, especially in those prisons that were located in small towns. Prisoners were scalded with boiling water in Bobrka; in Przemyślany, people's noses, ears, and fingers were cut off and their eyes were also put out; in Czortków, the breasts of female inmates were cut off; and in Drohobycz, victims were bound together with barbed wire. Similar atrocities occurred in Sambor, Stanisławów, Stryj, and Złoczów. According to historian, Prof. Jan T. Gross:
We cannot escape the conclusion: Soviet state security organs tortured their prisoners not only to extract confessions but also to put them to death. Not that the NKVD had sadists in its ranks who had run amok; rather, this was a wide and systematic procedure.
— Jan T. Gross
According to sociologist, Prof. Tadeusz Piotrowski, during the years from 1939 to 1941, nearly 1.5 million persons (including both local inhabitants and refugees from German-occupied Poland) were deported from the Soviet-controlled areas of former eastern Poland deep into the Soviet Union, of whom 58.0% were Poles, 19.4% Jews and the remainder other ethnic nationalities. Only a small number of these deportees returned to their homes after the war, when their homelands were annexed by the Soviet Union. According to American professor Carroll Quigley, at least one third of the 320,000 Polish prisoners of war captured by the Red Army in 1939 were murdered.
It's estimated that between 10,000-35,000 prisoners were killed either in prisons or on prison trail to the Soviet Union in the few days after the 22 June 1941 German attack on the Soviets (prisons: Brygidki, Złoczów, Dubno, Drohobycz, and so on).
1944–1945
In Poland, German Nazi atrocities ended by 1945, but they were replaced by Soviet oppression with the advance of Red Army forces. Soviet soldiers often engaged in plunder, rape and other crimes against the Poles, causing the population to fear and hate the regime.
Soldiers of the Polish Home Army (Armia Krajowa) were persecuted and imprisoned by Soviet forces as a matter of course. Most victims were deported to the gulags in the Donetsk region. In 1945 alone, the number of members of the Polish Underground State who were deported to Siberia and various labor camps in the Soviet Union reached 50,000. Units of the Red Army carried out campaigns against Polish partisans and civilians. During the Augustów chase in 1945, more than 2,000 Poles were captured and about 600 of them are presumed to have died in Soviet custody. It was a common Soviet practice to accuse their victims of being fascists in order to justify their death sentences. The perversion of this Soviet tactic lay in the fact that practically all of the accused had in reality been fighting against the forces of Nazi Germany since September 1939. At that time the Soviets were still collaborating with Nazi Germany for more than 20 months before Operation Barbarossa started. Precisely therefore these kinds of Poles were judged capable of resisting the Soviets, in the same way that they had resisted the Nazis. After the War, a more elaborate appearance of justice was given under the jurisdiction of the Polish People's Republic orchestrated by the Soviets in the form of mock trials. These were organized after victims had been arrested under false charges by the NKVD or other Soviet controlled security organisations such as the Ministry of Public Security. At least 6,000 political death sentences were issued, and the majority of them were carried out. It is estimated that over 20,000 people died in Soviet prisons . Famous examples include Witold Pilecki or Emil August Fieldorf.
The attitude of Soviet servicemen towards ethnic Poles was better than their attitude towards the Germans, but it was not entirely better. The scale of rape of Polish women in 1945 led to a pandemic of sexually transmitted diseases. Although the total number of victims remains a matter of guessing, the Polish state archives and statistics of the Ministry of Health indicate that it might have exceeded 100,000. In Kraków, the Soviet entry into the city was accompanied by mass rapes of Polish women and girls, as well as the plunder of private property by Red Army soldiers. This behavior reached such a scale that even Polish Communists installed by the Soviet Union composed a letter of protest to Joseph Stalin himself, while church Masses were held in expectation of a Soviet withdrawal.
The Red Army was also involved in mass-scale looting in liberated territories.
Finland and Ingria
Further information: Winter War, Soviet partisans in Finland, and Finnish prisoners of war in the Soviet UnionBetween 1941 and 1944, Soviet partisan units conducted raids deep inside Finnish territory, attacking villages and other civilian targets. In November 2006, photographs showing Soviet atrocities were declassified by the Finnish authorities. These include images of slain women and children. The partisans usually executed their military and civilian prisoners after a minor interrogation.
Around 3,500 Finnish prisoners of war, of whom five were women, were captured by the Red Army. Their mortality rate is estimated to have been about 40 percent. The most common causes of death were hunger, cold and oppressive transportation.
Deportation of the Ingrian Finns
Main article: Deportations of the Ingrian FinnsBy 1939 the Ingrian Finnish population had decreased to about 50,000, which was about 43% of 1928 population figures, and the Ingrian Finn national district was abolished., Following the German invasion of the Soviet Union and the beginning of the Leningrad Blockade, in early 1942 all 20,000 Ingrian Finns remaining in Soviet-controlled territory were deported to Siberia. Most of the Ingrian Finns together with Votes and Izhorians living in German-occupied territory were evacuated to Finland in 1943–1944. Finland was forced to return the evacuees per the Moscow Armistice. Soviet authorities did not allow the 55,733 people who had been handed over to settle back in Ingria, and instead deported them to central regions of Russia. The main regions of Ingrian Finns forced settlement were the interior areas of Siberia, Central Russia, and Tajikistan.
Soviet Union
Retreat by Soviet forces in 1941
Deportations, summary executions of political prisoners and the burning of foodstocks and villages took place when the Red Army retreated before the advancing Axis forces in 1941. In the Baltic States, Belarus, Ukraine, and Bessarabia, the NKVD and attached units of the Red Army massacred prisoners and political opponents before fleeing from the advancing Axis forces.
Deportation of Greeks
Main article: Deportation of the Soviet GreeksThe prosecution of Greeks in the USSR was gradual: at first the authorities shut down the Greek schools, cultural centres, and publishing houses. Then, in 1942, 1944 and 1949, the NKVD indiscriminately arrested all Greek men 16 years old or older. All Greeks who were wealthy or self-employed professionals were sought for prosecution first. This affected mostly Pontic Greeks and other Minorities in the Krasnodar Krai and along the Black Sea coast. By one estimate, around 50,000 Greeks were deported.
On 25 September 1956, MVD Order N 0402 was adopted and defined the removal of restrictions towards the deported peoples in the special settlements. Afterward, the Soviet Greeks started returning to their homes, or emigrating towards Greece.
Deportation of Kalmyks
Main article: Kalmyk deportations of 1943During the Kalmyk deportations of 1943, codenamed Operation Ulussy (Операция "Улусы"), the deportation of most people of the Kalmyk nationality (as well as Russian women married to Kalmyks, but not Kalmyk women married to people of other nationalities) in the Soviet Union (USSR), around half of all (97–98,000) Kalmyk people deported to Siberia died before being allowed to return home in 1957.
Deportation of Crimean Tatars
Main article: Deportation of the Crimean TatarsAfter the retreat of the Wehrmacht from Crimea, the NKVD deported around 200,000 Crimean Tatars from the peninsula on 18 May 1944. 109,956 of them died, which represents 46% of the entire Crimean Tatar population.
Northern Caucasus
Main articles: Deportation of the Meskhetian Turks and Deportation of the KarachaysIn 1943 and 1944, the Soviet government accused several entire ethnic groups of Axis collaboration. As a punishment, several entire ethnic groups were deported, mostly to Central Asia and Siberia into labor camps.
Chechnya-Ingushetia
Main article: Deportation of the Chechens and IngushOn 23 February 1944, Lavrentiy Beria, the head of the NKVD, ordered the deportation of the entire Chechen and Ingush population of the Checheno-Ingush ASSR by freight trains to remote areas of the Soviet Union (such as Siberia, the Urals and Central Asia). The operation was called "Chechevitsa" (Operation Lentil), (its first two syllables pointing at its intended targets), and is often referred to by Chechens as the "Aardakh" (the Exodus). The operation was started following complaints by the NKVD of "low level of discipline, prevalence of banditry and terrorism, disloyalty of the Chechens to the Communist party" and alleged "collaboration with the occupying German forces", citing an alleged confession of a German agent where he supposedly claimed that the German forces had "major support among the Ingush". The Chechen-Ingush Republic was never occupied by the German army, but the repressions were officially justified by "an armed resistance to Soviet power", although the charges of local collaboration with the Nazis were never subsequently proven in any Soviet court.
NKVD troops went systematically from house to house to collect individuals, the inhabitants were rounded up and imprisoned in Studebaker US6 trucks, before being packed into unheated and uninsulated freight cars, with the locals being given only about 15 to 30 minutes to pack for the surprise transfer. According to a correspondence dated March 3, 1944, at least 19,000 officers and 100,000 NKVD soldiers from all over the USSR were sent to implement this operation. The plan envisaged that 300,000 people were to be deported from the lowland in the first three days, while the remaining 150,000 people living in the mountain regions would be deported by the next days; some 500 people were also deported by mistake, even though they were not Chechens or Ingush. Through the initial deportations, ~478,479 people were forcibly resettled in the Aardakh: 387,229 Chechens and 91,250 Ingush; in May 1944, Beria issued a directive ordering the NKVD to browse the entire USSR in search for any remaining members of these ethnic groups, as a result, an additional 4,146 Chechens and Ingush were found in Dagestan, Azerbaijan, Georgia, Krasnodar, Rostov and Astrakhan, with the total number of deportees being reported by the NKVD as around 493,269 by May and ~496,460 by July. They were loaded onto 180 special trains, about 40 to 45 persons into each freight car, each family was allowed to carry up to 500 kg of personal belongings on the trip, Some 40% to 50% of the deportees were children.; 333,739 people were evicted, of which 176,950 were sent to trains already on the first day of the operation, with Beriya reporting that there were only about six "cases of resistance", while 842 were "subject to isolation" and another 94,741 were removed from their homes by 11 PM, Much of the livestock owned by locals was later sent to kolkhozes in Ukrainian SSR, Stavropol Krai, Voronezh and Orel Oblasts, many of these animals perished from exhaustion during the following months.
The people were transported in cattle trains that were not appropriate for human transfer, lacking electricity, heating or running water. The exiles inside endured many epidemics (such as typhus), which lead to deaths from infections or hunger, survivors recall that the wagons were so full of people that there was barely any space to move inside them, and that the deportees were given food only sporadically during the transit and were not told where they would be taken to. The wagons did not even stop for bathroom breaks, with the passengers being forced to make holes in the floor to relieve themselves. The transit to Central Asia lasted for almost a month, with the special trains traveling almost 2,000 miles to reach their destinations. 239,768 Chechens and 78,479 Ingush were sent to the Kazakh SSR, whereas 70,089 Chechens and 2,278 Ingush arrived in Kirgiz SSR. Smaller numbers of the remaining deportees were sent to Uzbek SSR, Russian SFSR and Tajik SSR, the deportees arrived at the regions without shelter or food, and were in many occasions taken to special settlements, where all prisoners aged 16–45 would be forced to work in mines, farms, factories or construction in return for food stamps (with the threat of severe punishment if non-compliant), as well as report monthly to the NKVD office at the camp. Those that attempted to escape would be sent to gulags, and the children of the prisoners would inherit their "exile" status. Malnutrition (caused by the negligence of the authorities to provide food for the prisoners), alongside exhaustion (from overworking) and mistreatment from Soviet forces led to high death rates among the local population. Many deported children were beaten by the local guards for "disobedience", and many families were left without proper housing: only 5,000 out of the 31,000 families in Kirgiz SSR were provided with housing, with one district having prepared only 18 apartments for over 900 families, the Chechen and Ingush children also had to attend school in the local language, not their own.
On many occasions, resistance was met with slaughter, and in one such instance, in the aul of Khaibakh, about 700 people were locked in a barn and burned to death by NKVD General Mikheil Gveshiani, who was praised for this and promised a medal by Beria. Many people from remote villages were executed per Beria's verbal order that any Chechen or Ingush deemed 'untransportable should be liquidated' on the spot. This meant that those deemed too old or weak were to either be shot or left to starve in their beds alone. The soldiers would also sometimes rob from the empty homes. Those who resisted, protested or "walked too slow" were shot on the spot; in one incident, NKVD soldiers climbed up the Moysty mountain and found 60 villagers there, even though their commander ordered the soldiers to shoot the villagers, many soldiers instead fired in the air, the commander then ordered many of these soldiers to join the villagers while another platoon fired at all of them.
Kabardino-Balkaria
Main article: Deportation of the BalkarsLavrentiy Beria arrived in Nalchik on 2 March 1944, and in the early morning of March 8, 1944, two days earlier than planned, Balkar's population was ordered to get ready to leave their homes. The entire operation lasted about two hours, with the entire Balkar population of the region being evicted. Around 17,000 NKVD troops and 4,000 local agents participated in this operation. By 9 March, 37,713 Balkars were deported in 14 train convoys, they arrived at their destinations in the Kazakh and Kyrgiz socialist republics and by 23 March.
Official Soviet documents reveal that 562 people died during the deportation. Many more died during the harsh years in exile and in labor camps: in total, it is estimated that 7,600 Balkars died as a consequence of the deportation, amounting to 19.82 percent of their entire ethnic group.
Germany
Main articles: Flight and evacuation of German civilians during the end of World War II, Flight and expulsion of Germans (1944–50), and Rape during the occupation of Germany § Soviet MilitaryAccording to historian Norman Naimark, statements in Soviet military newspapers and the orders of the Soviet high command were jointly responsible for the excesses of the Red Army. Propaganda proclaimed that the Red Army had entered Germany as an avenger to punish all Germans.
Some historians dispute this, referring to an order issued on 19 January 1945, which required the prevention of mistreatment of civilians. An order of the military council of the 1st Belorussian Front, signed by Marshal Rokossovsky, ordered the shooting of looters and rapists at the scene of the crime. An order issued by Stavka on 20 April 1945 said that there was a need to maintain good relations with German civilians in order to decrease resistance and bring a quicker end to hostilities.
Murders of civilians
On several occasions during World War II, Soviet soldiers set fire to buildings, villages, or parts of cities, and they used deadly force against locals who attempted to put out the fires. Most Red Army atrocities took place only in what was regarded as hostile territory, however, there were several massacres committed in Poland, e.g. the Przyszowice massacre. Soldiers of the Red Army, together with members of the NKVD, frequently looted German transport trains in Poland in 1944 and 1945.
For the Germans, the organized evacuation of civilians before the advancing Red Army was delayed by the Nazi government, so as not to demoralize the troops, who were by now fighting in their own country. Nazi propaganda—originally meant to stiffen civil resistance by describing in gory and embellished detail Red Army atrocities such as the Nemmersdorf massacre—often backfired and created panic. Whenever possible, as soon as the Wehrmacht retreated, local civilians began to flee westward on their own initiative.
Fleeing before the advancing Red Army, large numbers of the inhabitants of the German provinces of East Prussia, Silesia, and Pomerania died during the evacuations, some from cold and starvation, some during combat operations. A significant percentage of this death toll, however, occurred when evacuation columns encountered units of the Red Army. Civilians were run over by tanks, shot, or otherwise murdered. Women and young girls were raped and left to die.
In addition, fighter bombers of the Soviet air force flew bombing and strafing missions that targeted columns of refugees.
Although mass executions of civilians by the Red Army were seldom publicly reported, there is a known incident, Treuenbrietzen massacre. During the first occupation of the town by the Red Army, on April 21 or 22 a higher Soviet officer was shot. After that the Wehrmacht briefly returned. After the second occupation of the town, Red Army soldiers rounded up the civilians and shot the adult men in a nearby forest. The official estimate is between 30 and 166 civilian victims. Some German sources claimed about 1,000 victims, but this must be rejected on the basis on the actual number of town residents.
The first mayor of the Charlottenburg district of Berlin, Walter Kilian, appointed by the Soviets after the war ended, reported extensive looting by Red Army soldiers in the area: "Individuals, department stores, shops, apartments ... all were robbed blind."
In the Soviet occupation zone, members of the SED reported to Stalin that looting and rape by Soviet soldiers could result in a negative reaction by the German population towards the Soviet Union and the future of socialism in East Germany. Stalin is said to have angrily reacted: "I shall not tolerate anybody dragging the honour of the Red Army through the mud."
Accordingly, all evidence—such as reports, photos and other documents of looting, rape, the burning down of farms and villages by the Red Army—was deleted from all archives in the future GDR.
A study published by the German government in 1974 estimated the number of German civilian victims of crimes during expulsion of Germans after World War II between 1945 and 1948 to be over 600,000, with about 400,000 deaths in the areas east of Oder and Neisse (ca. 120,000 in acts of direct violence, mostly by Soviet troops but also by Poles, 60,000 in Polish and 40,000 in Soviet concentration camps or prisons mostly from hunger and disease, and 200,000 deaths among civilian deportees to forced labor of Germans in the Soviet Union), 130,000 in Czechoslovakia (thereof 100,000 in camps) and 80,000 in Yugoslavia (thereof 15,000 to 20,000 from violence outside of and in camps and 59,000 deaths from hunger and disease in camps). These figures do not include up to 125,000 civilian deaths in the Battle of Berlin. About 22,000 civilians are estimated to have been killed during the fighting in Berlin only.
Mass rapes
Main articles: Rape during the Soviet occupation of Poland and Rape during the occupation of GermanyAs Allied troops entered and occupied German territory during the later stages of World War II, mass rapes of women took place both in connection with combat operations and during the subsequent occupation of Germany. Scholars agree that the majority of the rapes were committed by Soviet occupation troops. Western estimates of the traceable number of rape victims range from two hundred thousand to two million. Following the Winter Offensive of 1945, mass rape by Soviet males occurred in all major cities taken by the Red Army. Women were gang raped by as many as several dozen soldiers during the occupation of Poland. In some cases victims who did not hide in the basements all day were raped up to 15 times. According to historian Antony Beevor, following the Red Army's capture of Berlin in 1945, Soviet troops raped German women and girls as young as eight years old.
The explanation of "revenge" is disputed by Beevor, at least with regard to the mass rapes. Beevor has written that Red Army soldiers also raped Soviet and Polish women liberated from concentration camps, and he contends that this undermines the revenge explanation, they were often committed by rear echelon units.
According to Norman Naimark, after the summer of 1945, Soviet soldiers caught raping civilians usually received punishments ranging from arrest to execution. However, Naimark contends that the rapes continued until the winter of 1947–48, when Soviet occupation authorities finally confined troops to strictly guarded posts and camps. Naimark concluded that "The social psychology of women and men in the Soviet zone of occupation was marked by the crime of rape from the first days of occupation, through the founding of the GDR in the fall of 1949, until, one could argue, the present."
According to Richard Overy, the Russians refused to acknowledge Soviet war crimes, partly "because they felt that much of it was justified vengeance against an enemy who committed much worse, and partly it was because they were writing the victors' history."
Hungary
According to researcher and author Krisztián Ungváry, some 38,000 civilians were killed during the Siege of Budapest: about 13,000 from military action and 25,000 from starvation, disease and other causes. Included in the latter figure are about 15,000 Jews, largely victims of executions by Nazi SS and Arrow Cross Party death squads. Ungváry writes that when the Soviets finally claimed victory, they initiated an orgy of violence, including the wholesale theft of anything they could lay their hands on, random executions and mass rape. Estimates of the number of rape victims vary from 5,000 to 200,000. According to Norman Naimark, Hungarian girls were kidnapped and taken to Red Army quarters, where they were imprisoned, repeatedly raped and sometimes murdered.
Even embassy staff from neutral countries were captured and raped, as was documented when Soviet soldiers attacked the Swedish legation in Germany.
A report by the Swiss legation in Budapest describes the Red Army's entry into the city:
During the siege of Budapest and also during the following weeks, Russian troops looted the city freely. They entered practically every habitation, the very poorest as well as the richest. They took away everything they wanted, especially food, clothing and valuables... every apartment, shop, bank, etc. was looted several times. Furniture and larger objects of art, etc. that could not be taken away were frequently simply destroyed. In many cases, after looting, the homes were also put on fire, causing a vast total loss... Bank safes were emptied without exception—even the British and American safes—and whatever was found was taken.
According to historian James Mark, memories and opinions of the Red Army in Hungary are mixed.
Romania
Main articles: Soviet occupation of Bessarabia and Northern Bukovina, Soviet deportations from Bessarabia and Northern Bukovina, Fântâna Albă massacre, Lunca massacre, Soviet occupation of Romania, and Religious persecution during the Soviet occupation of Bessarabia and Northern BukovinaThis section needs expansion. You can help by adding to it. (June 2021) |
The Soviet Union also committed war crimes in Romania or against Romanians from the beginning of the occupation of Bessarabia and Northern Bukovina in 1940 all the way to the German invasion in 1941, and later from the expulsion of the Germans in the region until 1958. One example was the Fântâna Albă massacre, in which 44–3,000 Romanians were killed by the Soviet Border Troops and the NKVD while attempting to escape to Romania. Such event has been referred to as the "Romanian Katyn".
Another infamous massacre committed by Soviet troops was the Lunca massacre, where Soviet border troops opened fire against several Romanian civilians attempting to escape into Romania, killing 600 of them, only 57 managed to escape, with another 44 being arrested and tried as "members of a counter-revolutionary organization", 12 of them were sentenced to death, with the rest being sentenced to 10 years forced labour and 5 years loss of civil rights, the family members of those arrested and shot would later be arrested and sent to Siberia and Central Asia
During the occupation, the Soviet government and army deported thousands of Romanian civilians from the occupied regions into "special settlements". According to a secret Soviet Ministry of Interior report dated December 1965, 46,000 people were deported from the Moldavian Soviet Socialist Republic for the period 1940−1953.
Religious persecution was also widespread, the Soviet government sought to exterminate all forms of organized religion in its occupied territories, often persecuting the Catholic, Orthodox, Muslim and Jewish churches, the Soviet political police arrested numerous priests, with others being arrested and interrogated by the Soviet NKVD itself, then deported to the interior of the USSR, and killed.
Thousands of Transylvanian Saxons would later be deported from 1944 to 1949 under Soviet occupation, with hundreds or even thousands dying on their way to camps in Siberia and Central Asia before being able to come back to their home country.
Yugoslavia
According to Yugoslav politician Milovan Djilas, at least 121 cases of rape were documented, 111 of which also involved murder. A total of 1,204 cases of looting with assault were also documented. Djilas described these figures as, "hardly insignificant if it is borne in mind that the Red Army crossed only the northeastern corner of Yugoslavia". This caused concern to the Yugoslav communist partisans, who feared that stories of crimes committed by their Soviet allies would weaken their standing among the population.
Djilas writes that in response, Yugoslav partisan leader Joseph Broz Tito summoned the chief of the Soviet military mission, General Korneev, and formally protested. Despite having been invited "as a comrade", Korneev exploded at them for offering "such insinuations" against the Red Army. Djilas, who was present at the meeting, spoke up and explained the British Army had never engaged in "such excesses" while liberating the other regions of Yugoslavia. General Korneev responded by screaming, "I protest most sharply at this insult given to the Red Army by comparing it with the armies of capitalist countries."
The meeting with Korneev not only "ended without results", it also caused Stalin to personally attack Djilas during his next visit to the Kremlin. In tears, Stalin denounced "the Yugoslav Army and how it was administered." He then "spoke agitatedly about the sufferings of the Red Army and the horrors that it was forced to endure while it was fighting through thousands of kilometers of devastated country." Stalin climaxed with the words, "And such an Army was insulted by no one else but Djilas! Djilas, of whom I could least have expected such a thing, a man whom I received so well! And an Army which did not spare its blood for you! Does Djilas, who is himself a writer, not know what human suffering and the human heart are? Can't he understand it if a soldier who has crossed thousands of kilometers through blood and fire and death has fun with a woman or takes some trifle?"
According to Djilas, the Soviet refusal to address protests against Red Army war crimes in Yugoslavia enraged Tito's government and it was a contributing factor in Yugoslavia's subsequent exit from the Soviet Bloc.
Czechoslovakia (1945)
Slovak communist leader Vlado Clementis complained to Marshal Ivan Konev about the behavior of Soviet troops in Czechoslovakia. Konev's response was to claim it was done mainly by Red Army deserters.
China
Further information: Gegenmiao massacre, ], ], and ]During the invasion of Manchuria, Soviet and Mongolian soldiers attacked and raped Japanese civilians, often encouraged by the local Chinese population who were resentful of Japanese rule. The local Chinese population sometimes even joined in these attacks against the Japanese population with the Soviet soldiers. In one famous example, during the Gegenmiao massacre, Soviet soldiers, encouraged by the local Chinese population, raped and massacred over one thousand Japanese women and children. Property of the Japanese were also looted by the Soviet soldiers and Chinese. Many Japanese women married themselves to local Manchurian men to protect themselves from persecution by Soviet soldiers. These Japanese women mostly married Chinese men and became known as "stranded war wives" (zanryu fujin).
Following the invasion of the Japanese puppet state of Manchukuo (Manchuria), the Soviets laid claim to valuable Japanese materials and industrial equipment in the region. A foreigner witnessed Soviet troops, formerly stationed in Berlin, who were allowed by the Soviet military to go at the city "for three days of rape and pillage." Most of Mukden was gone. Convict soldiers were then used to replace them; it was testified that they "stole everything in sight, broke up bathtubs and toilets with hammers, pulled electric-light wiring out of the plaster, built fires on the floor and either burned down the house or at least a big hole in the floor, and in general behaved completely like savages."
According to some British and American sources, the Soviets made it a policy to loot and rape civilians in Manchuria. In Harbin, the Chinese posted slogans such as "Down with Red Imperialism!" Soviet forces faced some protests by Chinese communist party leaders against the looting and rapes committed by troops in Manchuria. There were several instances where Chinese police forces in Manchuria arrested or even killed Soviet troops for various crimes, leading to some conflicts between the Soviet and Chinese authorities in Manchuria.
Russian historian Konstantin Asmolov argues that such Western accounts of Soviet violence against civilians in the Far East are exaggerations of isolated incidents and the documents of the time don't support the claims of mass crimes. Asmolov also claims that the Soviets, unlike the Germans and the Japanese, prosecuted their soldiers and officers for such acts. Indeed, the incidence of rape committed in the Far East was far less than the number of incidents committed by Soviet soldiers in Europe.
Japanese women in Manchukuo were repeatedly raped by Russian soldiers every day including underage girls from the families of Japanese who worked for the military and the Manchukuo rail at Beian airport and Japanese military nurses. The Russians seized Japanese civilian girls at Beian airport where there were a total of 1000 Japanese civilians, repeatedly raping 10 girls each day as recalled by Yoshida Reiko and repeatedly raped 75 Japanese nurses at the Sunwu military hospital in Manchukuo during the occupation. The Russians rejected all the pleading by the Japanese officers to stop the rapes. The Japanese were told by the Russians that they had to give their women for rape as war spoils.
Soviet soldiers raped Japanese women from a group of Japanese families that were with Yamada Tami that attempted to flee their settlements on 14 August and go to Mudanjiang. Another group of Japanese women that were with Ikeda Hiroko that on 15 August tried to flee to Harbin but returned to their settlements were raped by Soviet soldiers.
Japan
Main articles: Evacuation of Karafuto and Kuriles and Soviet assault on Maoka Further information (in Japanese): Maoka Post Office incidentThe Soviet Army committed crimes against the Japanese civilian populations and surrendered military personnel in the closing stages of World War II during the assaults on Sakhalin and Kuril Islands.
On August 10, 1945, Soviet forces carried out fierce naval bombardment and artillery strikes against civilians awaiting evacuation as well as Japanese installations in Maoka. Nearly 1,000 civilians were killed by the invading forces.
After the 15 August 1945 Gyokuon broadcast, telephone operators at the Maoka Post Office were on duty without having been evacuated. On 20 August, Soviet troops landed in Moka and 10 of the 12 female telephone operators on duty in fear of war crimes committed by Soviet troops, attempted suicide in the station, nine of which were killed. Apart from the telephone operator who committed suicide, other station employees who remained behind and those who were not on duty that day were killed by grenades and gunfire from Soviet soldiers, bringing the total number of those killed at the Maoka station to 19.
During the evacuation of the Kuriles and Karafuto, civilian convoys were attacked by Soviet submarines in the Aniva Gulf. Soviet Leninets-class submarine L-12 and L-19 sank two Japanese refugee transport ships Ogasawara Maru and Taito Maru while also damaging No.2 Shinko Maru on August 22, 7 days after Hirohito had announced Japan's unconditional surrender. Over 2,400 civilians were killed.
Treatment of prisoners of war
Main article: Soviet atrocities committed against prisoners of war during World War IIAlthough the Soviet Union had not formally signed the Hague Convention, it declared itself bound by the convention's provisions as well as by its own "Regulations for the Treatment of PoWs". However, in practice, it often ignored the convention as well as its own rules. George Sanford wrote that Soviet public declarations and laws on the humane treatment of PoWs were "part of the Soviet 'big lie' for propaganda". One of the Soviet Union's earliest war crimes were those against Polish prisoners of war in the aftermath of the Soviet invasion of Poland in the 1939; it is estimated that during that conflict, approximately 2,500 Polish soldiers were murdered in various executions and reprisals for offering resistance by Soviets and Ukrainian nationalists. The most infamous of these was the Katyn massacre, a series of mass executions of nearly 22,000 Polish military officers and intelligentsia carried out by the Soviet Union, specifically the NKVD in April and May 1940. Though the killings took place at several places, the massacre is named after the Katyn Forest, where some of the mass graves were first discovered.
Throughout the Second World War, the Wehrmacht War Crimes Bureau collected and investigated reports of crimes against the Axis POWs. According to Cuban-American writer Alfred de Zayas, "For the entire duration of the Russian campaign, reports of torture and murder of German prisoners did not cease. The War Crimes Bureau had five major sources of information: (1) captured enemy papers, especially orders, reports of operations, and propaganda leaflets; (2) intercepted radio and wireless messages; (3) testimony of Soviet prisoners of war; (4) testimony of captured Germans who had escaped; and (5) testimony of Germans who saw the corpses or mutilated bodies of executed prisoners of war. From 1941 to 1945 the Bureau compiled several thousand depositions, reports, and captured papers which, if nothing else, indicate that the killing of German prisoners of war upon capture or shortly after their interrogation was not an isolated occurrence. Documents relating to the war in France, Italy, and North Africa contain some reports on the deliberate killing of German prisoners of war, but there can be no comparison with the events on the Eastern Front."
In a November 1941 report, the Wehrmacht War Crimes Bureau accused the Red Army of employing "a terror policy... against defenseless German soldiers that have fallen into its hands and against members of the German medical corps. At the same time... it has made use of the following means of camouflage: in a Red Army order that bears the approval of the Council of People's Commissars, dated 1 July 1941, the norms of international law are made public, which the Red Army in the spirit of the Hague Regulations on Land Warfare are supposed to follow... This... Russian order probably had very little distribution, and surely it has not been followed at all. Otherwise the unspeakable crimes would not have occurred."
According to the depositions, Soviet massacres of German, Italian, Spanish, and other Axis POWs were often incited by unit Commissars, who claimed to be acting under orders from Stalin and the Politburo. Other evidence cemented the War Crimes Bureau's belief that Stalin had given secret orders about the massacre of POWs.
During the winter of 1941–42, the Red Army captured approximately 10,000 German soldiers each month, but the death rate became so high that the absolute number of prisoners decreased (or was bureaucratically reduced).
Soviet sources list the deaths of 474,967 of the 2,652,672 German Armed Forces taken prisoner in the War. Dr. Rüdiger Overmans believes that it seems entirely plausible, while not provable, that additional German military personnel listed as missing actually died in Soviet custody as POWs, putting the estimates of the actual death toll of German POW in the USSR at about 1.0 million.
Massacre of Feodosia
Soviet soldiers rarely bothered to treat wounded German POWs. A particularly infamous example took place after the Crimean city of Feodosia was briefly recaptured by Soviet forces on December 29, 1942. 160 wounded soldiers had been left in military hospitals by the retreating Wehrmacht. After the Germans retook Feodosia, it was learned that every wounded soldier had been massacred by Red Army, Navy, and NKVD personnel. Some had been shot in their hospital beds, others repeatedly bludgeoned to death, still others were found to have been thrown from hospital windows before being repeatedly drenched with freezing water until they died of hypothermia.
Massacre of Grishchino
The Massacre of Grischino was committed by an armoured division of the Red Army in February 1943 in the eastern Ukrainian towns of Krasnoarmeyskoye, Postyschevo and Grischino. The Wehrmacht Untersuchungsstelle also known as WuSt (Wehrmacht criminal investigating authority), announced that among the victims were 406 soldiers of the Wehrmacht, 58 members of the Organisation Todt (including two Danish nationals), 89 Italian soldiers, 9 Romanian soldiers, 4 Hungarian soldiers, 15 German civil officials, 7 German civilian workers and 8 Ukrainian volunteers.
The places were overrun by the Soviet 4th Guards Tank Corps on the night of 10 and 11 February 1943. After the reconquest by the 5th SS Panzer Division Wiking with the support of 333 Infantry Division and the 7th Panzer Division on 18 February 1943 the Wehrmacht soldiers discovered numerous deaths. Many of the bodies were horribly mutilated, ears and noses cut off and genital organs amputated and stuffed into their mouths. Breasts of some of the nurses were cut off, the women being brutally raped. A German military judge who was at the scene stated in an interview during the 1970s that he saw a female body with her legs spread-eagled and a broomstick rammed into her genitals. In the cellar of the main train station around 120 Germans were herded into a large storage room and then mowed down with machine guns.
Postwar
Some German prisoners were released soon after the war. Many others, however, remained in the GULAG long after the surrender of Nazi Germany. Among the most famous German POWs to die in Soviet captivity was Captain Wilm Hosenfeld, who died of injuries, sustained possibly under torture, in a concentration camp near Stalingrad in 1952. In 2009, Captain Hosenfeld was posthumously honored by the State of Israel for his role in saving Jewish lives during The Holocaust. Similar was the fate of Swedish diplomat and OSS operative Raoul Wallenberg.
After World War II
Hungarian Revolution (1956)
Main article: Hungarian Revolution of 1956According to the United Nations Report of the Special Committee on the problem of Hungary (1957): "Soviet tanks fired indiscriminately at every building from which they believed themselves to be under fire." The UN commission received numerous reports of Soviet mortar and artillery fire into inhabited quarters in the Buda section of the city, despite no return fire, and of "haphazard shooting at defenseless passers-by."
Afghanistan (1979–1989)
Further information: Soviet–Afghan WarScholars Mohammad Kakar, W. Michael Reisman and Charles Norchi believe that the Soviet Union was guilty of committing a genocide in Afghanistan. The army of the Soviet Union killed large numbers of Afghans to suppress their resistance. Up to 2 million Afghans were killed during the war, many of them by Soviet forces and their Afghan allies. In one notable incident the Soviet Army committed mass killing of civilians in the summer of 1980. One notable war crime was the Laghman massacre in April 1985 in the villages of Kas-Aziz-Khan, Charbagh, Bala Bagh, Sabzabad, Mamdrawer, Haider Khan and Pul-i-Joghi in the Laghman Province. At least 500 civilians were killed. In the Kulchabat, Bala Karz and Mushkizi massacre on 12 October 1983, the Red Army gathered 360 people at the village square and shot them, including 20 girls and over a dozen older people. The Rauzdi massacre and Padkhwab-e Shana massacre were also documented.
In order to separate the mujahideen from the local populations and eliminate their support, the Soviet army killed and drove off civilians, and used scorched earth tactics to prevent their return. They used booby traps, mines, and chemical substances throughout the country. The Soviet army indiscriminately killed combatants and noncombatants to ensure submission by the local populations. The provinces of Nangarhar, Ghazni, Lagham, Kunar, Zabul, Qandahar, Badakhshan, Lowgar, Paktia and Paktika witnessed extensive depopulation programmes by the Soviet forces. The Soviet forces abducted Afghan women in helicopters while flying in the country in search of mujahideen. In November 1980, a number of such incidents had taken place in various parts of the country, including Laghman and Kama. Soviet soldiers as well as KhAD agents kidnapped young women from the city of Kabul and the areas of Darul Aman and Khair Khana, near the Soviet garrisons, to rape them. Women who were taken and raped by soldiers were considered 'dishonoured' by their families if they returned home. Deserters from the Soviet Army in 1984 claimed that they had heard of Afghan women being raped. The rape of Afghan women by Soviet troops was common and 11.8 percent of the Soviet war criminals in Afghanistan were convicted for the offence of rape. There was an outcry against the press in the Soviet Union for depicting the Soviet "war heroes" as "murderers", "aggressors", "rapists" and "junkies".
Pressure in Azerbaijan (1988–1991)
Main article: Black JanuaryBlack January (Azerbaijani: Qara Yanvar), also known as Black Saturday or the January Massacre, was a violent crackdown in Baku on 19–20 January 1990, pursuant to a state of emergency during the dissolution of the Soviet Union.
In a resolution of 22 January 1990, the Supreme Soviet of Azerbaijan SSR declared that the decree of the Presidium of the Supreme Soviet of the USSR of 19 January, used to impose emergency rule in Baku and military deployment, constituted an act of aggression. Black January is associated with the rebirth of the Azerbaijan Republic. It was one of the occasions during the glasnost and perestroika era in which the USSR used force against dissidents.
According to official estimates of Azerbaijan, 147 civilians were killed, 800 people were injured, and five people went missing.
War crimes trials and legal prosecution
In 1995, Latvian courts sentenced former KGB officer Alfons Noviks to life in prison for genocide due to forced deportations in the 1940s.
In 2003, August Kolk (born 1924), an Estonian national, and Petr Kislyiy (born 1921), a Russian national, were convicted of crimes against humanity by Estonian courts and each sentenced to eight years in prison. They were found guilty of deportations of Estonians in 1949. Kolk and Kislyiy lodged a complaint at the European Court of Human Rights, alleging that the Criminal Code of 1946 of the Russian Soviet Federative Socialist Republic (RSFSR) was valid at the time, applicable also in Estonia, and that the said Code had not provided for punishment of crimes against humanity. Their appeal was rejected since the court found that Resolution 95 of the United Nations General Assembly, adopted on 11 December 1946, confirmed deportations of civilians as a crime against humanity under international law.
In 2004, Vassili Kononov, a Soviet partisan during World War II, was convicted by Supreme Court of Latvia as a war criminal for killing three women, one of whom was pregnant. He is the only former Soviet partisan convicted of crimes against humanity. The sentence was condemned by various high-ranking Russian officials.
On 27 March 2019, Lithuania convicted 67 former Soviet military and KGB officials who were given sentences of between four and 14 years for the crackdown against Lithuanian civilians in January 1991. Only two were present—Yuriy Mel, a former Soviet tank officer, and Gennady Ivanov, a former Soviet munitions officer—while the others were sentenced in absentia because they were residing in Russia.
In popular culture
Film
- A Woman in Berlin (2008) depicts the mass sexual assaults committed by Soviet soldiers in the Soviet zone of occupied Germany. It is based on the diary of Marta Hillers.
- Admiral (2008), a film set during the Russian Civil War, depicts Red soldiers and sailors committing numerous massacres of former members of the Imperial Russian Navy's officer corps.
- The Beast (1988), a film set during the Soviet–Afghan War, depicts Red Army war crimes against civilian noncombatants and a Pashtun clan's quest for revenge.
- Charlie Wilson's War (2007), set during the Soviet–Afghan War, accuses the Soviet state of systematic genocide against Afghan civilians. It is mentioned that Soviet forces are leaving no one alive and are even slaughtering livestock in order to starve the Afghan people into submission.
- Katyń (2007), depicts the Katyn massacre through the eyes of its victims and the decades long battle by their families to learn the truth.
Literature
- Prussian Nights (1974) a war poem by Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn. The narrator, a Red Army officer, approves of the troops' crimes as revenge for Nazi atrocities in Russia, and hopes to take part in the plundering himself. The poem describes the gang-rape of a Polish woman whom the Red Army soldiers had mistaken for a German. According to a review for The New York Times, Solzhenitsyn wrote the poem in trochaic tetrameter, "in imitation of, and argument with the most famous Russian war poem, Aleksandr Tvardovsky's Vasili Tyorkin."
- Apricot Jam and Other Stories (2010) by Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn. In a short story about Marshal Georgii Zhukov's futile attempts at writing his memoirs, the retired Marshal reminisces about serving against the peasant uprising in Tambov Province. He recalls Mikhail Tukhachevsky's arrival to take command of the campaign and his first address to his men. He announced that total war and scorched earth tactics are to be used against civilians who assist or even sympathize with the peasant rebels. Zhukov proudly recalls how Tukhachevsky's tactics were adopted and succeeded in breaking the uprising. In the process, however, they virtually depopulated the surrounding countryside.
- A Man without Breath (2013) by Philip Kerr. A 1993 Bernie Gunther thriller which delves into the Wehrmacht War Crimes Bureau's investigations of Soviet war crimes. Kerr noted in his Afterward that the Wehrmacht War Crimes Bureau continued to exist until 1945. It has been written about in the book of the same name by Alfred M. de Zayas, published by the University of Nebraska Press in 1989. ISBN 978-0-399-16079-0.
Art
- On 12 October 2013 a then 26-year-old Polish art student, Jerzy Bohdan Szumczyk, erected a movable statue next to the Soviet World War II memorial in the Polish city of Gdańsk. The statue depicted a Soviet soldier attempting to rape a pregnant woman; pulling her hair with one hand whilst pushing a pistol into her mouth. Authorities removed the artwork because it had been erected without an official permit, but there was widespread interest in many online publications. The act promoted an angry reaction from the Russian ambassador in Poland.
See also
- Allied war crimes during World War II
- Anti-communist mass killings
- Antisemitism in the Soviet Union
- Crimes against humanity under communist regimes
- Destruction battalions
- Evacuation of East Prussia
- Excess mortality in the Soviet Union under Joseph Stalin
- Forced labor of Germans in the Soviet Union
- German war crimes
- Human rights in the Soviet Union
- Italian war crimes
- Japanese POWs in the Soviet Union
- Japanese war crimes
- List of massacres in the Soviet Union
- List of Soviet Union perpetrated war crimes
- Mass graves in the Soviet Union
- Mass killings under communist regimes
- Mass operations of the NKVD
- Military history of the Soviet Union
- Military occupations by the Soviet Union
- Nemmersdorf massacre
- NKVD prisoner massacres
- Operation Frühlingserwachen
- Population transfer in the Soviet Union
- Racism in the Soviet Union
- Red Terror
- Russian war crimes
- United States war crimes
- War crimes and atrocities of the Waffen-SS
- War crimes of the Wehrmacht
References
Notes
- Including massacres at Katyn, Tver and Feodosia
- Including massacres at Kharkiv, Kyiv, Kherson and Grischino
- Including the Chervyen massacre
- Including mass deportations, NKVD prisoner massacres, massacres of Polish prisoners of war at Grodno, Husynne and Mokrany, rape and the Augustów roundup
- Including mass deportations and NKVD prisoner massacres
- Including rape
- Including the Gegenmiao massacre
Citations
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{{cite web}}
: CS1 maint: unfit URL (link) - Andrzej Kaczyński (02.10.04), "Wielkie polowanie: Prześladowania akowców w Polsce Ludowej". Archived from the original on 19 December 2007. Retrieved 6 November 2011.
{{cite web}}
: CS1 maint: bot: original URL status unknown (link) (Great hunt: The persecutions of AK soldiers in the People's Republic of Poland), Rzeczpospolita, Nr 232, last accessed 30 September 2013. (in Polish). - ^ Joanna Ostrowska; Marcin Zaremba (7 March 2009). ""Kobieca gehenna" (The women's ordeal)". No 10 (2695) (in Polish). Polityka. pp. 64–66. Archived from the original on 23 March 2019. Retrieved 21 April 2011.
Generally speaking, the attitude of Soviet servicemen toward women of Slavic background was better than toward those who spoke German. Whether the number of purely Polish victims could have reached or even exceeded 100,000 is only a matter of guessing.
Dr. Marcin Zaremba Archived 2011-10-07 at the Wayback Machine of Polish Academy of Sciences, the co-author of the article cited above – is a historian from Warsaw University Department of History Institute of 20th Century History (cited 196 times in Google scholar). Zaremba published a number of scholarly monographs, among them: Komunizm, legitymizacja, nacjonalizm (426 pages), Marzec 1968 (274 pages), Dzień po dniu w raportach SB (274 pages), Immobilienwirtschaft (German, 359 pages), see inauthor:"Marcin Zaremba" in Google Books.
Joanna Ostrowska Archived 14 March 2016 at the Wayback Machine of Warsaw, Poland, is a lecturer at Departments of Gender Studies at two universities: the Jagiellonian University of Kraków, the University of Warsaw as well as, at the Polish Academy of Sciences. She is the author of scholarly works on the subject of mass rape and forced prostitution in Poland in the Second World War (i.e. "Prostytucja jako praca przymusowa w czasie II Wojny Światowej. Próba odtabuizowania zjawiska," "Wielkie przemilczanie. Prostytucja w obozach koncentracyjnych," etc.), a recipient of Socrates-Erasmus research grant from Humboldt Universitat zu Berlin, and a historian associated with Krytyka Polityczna. - ^ Rita Pagacz-Moczarska (2004). "Okupowany Kraków - z prorektorem Andrzejem Chwalbą rozmawia Rita Pagacz-Moczarska" [Prof. Andrzej Chwalba talks about the Soviet-occupied Kraków]. Alma Mater (in Polish) (4). Jagiellonian University. Archived from the original on 24 May 2008. Retrieved 5 January 2014.
An interview with Andrzej Chwalba, Professor of history at the Jagiellonian University (and its prorector), conducted in Kraków by Rita Pagacz-Moczarska, and published by an online version of the Jagiellonian University's bulletin Alma Mater.
The article concerning World War II history of the city ("Occupied Krakow"), makes references to the fifth volume of History of Krakow entitled "Kraków in the years 1939-1945," see bibliogroup:"Dzieje Krakowa: Kraków w latach 1945-1989" in Google Books (ISBN 83-08-03289-3) written by Chwalba from a historical perspective, also cited in Google scholar. |url-status=bot: unknown |title=OKUPOWANY KRAKÓW - z prorektorem Andrzejem Chwalbą rozmawia Rita Pagacz-Moczarska|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20080524235517/http://www3.uj.edu.pl/alma/alma/64/01/02.html |archive-date=May 24, 2008 }} - Nykänen, Anna-Stina (19 November 2006). "Too awful an image of war: Sixty years on, there are no grounds to withhold images kept in a Finnish Defence Forces' safe". Helsingin Sanomat. Archived from the original on 16 December 2006.
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The Afghans are among the latest victims of genocide by a superpower. Large numbers of Afghans were killed to suppress resistance to the army of the Soviet Union, which wished to vindicate its client regime and realize its goal in Afghanistan.
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According to widely reported accounts, substantial programmes of depopulation have been conducted in these Afghan provinces: Ghazni, Nagarhar, Lagham, Qandahar, Zabul, Badakhshan, Lowgar, Paktia, Paktika and Kunar...There is considerable evidence that genocide has been committed against the Afghan people by the combined forces of the Democratic Republic of Afghanistan and the Soviet Union.
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During the intervening fourteen years of Communist rule, an estimated 1.5 to 2 million Afghan civilians were killed in the war, many by Soviet forces and their Afghan allies.- the four Communist regimes in Kabul, and the East Germans, Bulgarians, Czechs, Cubans, Palestinians, Indians and others who assisted them. These were not battle casualties or the unavoidable civilian victims of warfare. Soviet and local Communist forces seldom attacked the scattered guerrilla bands of the Afghan Resistance except, in a few strategic locales like the Panjsher valley. Instead they deliberately targeted the civilian population, primarily in the rural areas.
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Incidents of the mass killing of noncombatant civilians were observed in the summer of 1980...the Soviets felt it necessary to suppress defenseless civilians by killing them indiscriminately, by compelling them to flee abroad, and by destroying their crops and means of irrigation, the basis of their livelihood. The dropping of booby traps from the air, the planting of mines, and the use of chemical substances, though not on a wide scale, were also meant to serve the same purpose...they undertook military operations in an effort to ensure speedy submission: hence the wide use of aerial weapons, in particular helicopter gunships or the kind of inaccurate weapons that cannot discriminate between combatants and noncombatants.
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While military operations in the country were going on, women were abducted. While flying in the country in search of mujahideen, helicopters would land in fields where women were spotted. While Afghan women do mainly domestic chores, they also work in fields assisting their husbands or performing tasks by themselves. The women were now exposed to the Soviet, who kidnapped them with helicopters. By November 1980 a number of such incidents had taken place in various parts of the country, including Laghman and Kama. In the city of Kabul, too, the Soviets kidnapped women, taking them away in tanks and other vehicles, especially after dark. Such incidents happened mainly in the areas of Darul Aman and Khair Khana, near the Soviet garrisons. At times such acts were committed even during the day. KhAD agents also did the same. Small groups of them would pick up young women in the streets, apparently to question them but in reality to satisfy their lust: in the name of security, they had the power to commit excesses.
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'I can't hide the fact that women and children have been killed,' Nikolay Movchan, 20, a Ukrainian who was a sergeant and headed a grenade-launching team, said in an interview later. 'And I've heard of Afghan women being raped.'
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External links
Media related to War crimes committed by the Soviet Union at Wikimedia Commons
- The forgotten victims of WWII: Masculinities and rape in Berlin, 1945, James W. Messerschmidt, University of Southern Maine
- Book Review: A Woman in Berlin: Eight Weeks in the Conquered City, ISBN 0-8050-7540-2
- Laws of War: Laws and Customs of War on Land (Hague IV); October 18, 1907
- Swiss legation report of the Russian invasion of Hungary in the spring of 1945
- German rape victims find a voice at last, Kate Connolly, The Observer, June 23, 2002
- "They raped every German female from eight to 80", Antony Beevor, The Guardian, 1 May 2002
- Excerpt, Chapter one Archived 13 March 2007 at the Wayback Machine The Struggle for Europe: The Turbulent History of a Divided Continent 1945–2002 – William I. Hitchcock – 2003 – ISBN 0-385-49798-9 ( The occupation of East Prussia)
- Description of the atrocities of the Red Army in East Prussia, quotations from Ilya Ehrenburg, poems by anti-cruelty Red Army officers and details of suicides and rapings of German women and children in East Prussia.
- Book Review: The Siege of Budapest: 100 Days in World War II
- HNet review of The Russians in Germany: A History of the Soviet Zone of Occupation, 1945–1949.
- Mark Ealey: As World War II entered its final stages the belligerent powers committed one heinous act after another History News Network (Focus on the Asian front)
- 27 Jan 2002 on-line article regarding author Antony Beevor's references to Soviet rapes in Germany
- Report of an eyewitness: Erika Morgenstern, who survived Königsberg 1945 as a child (in German): part 1 on YouTube, part 2 on YouTube, part 3 on YouTube
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Joseph Stalin | |||||
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History and politics |
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Concepts |
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Crimes, repressions, and controversies |
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Works |
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De-Stalinization | |||||
Criticism and opposition | |||||
Remembrance |
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Cultural depictions | |||||
Family |
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Stalin's residences | |||||