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{{Short description|Invasion by the Russian SFSR}}
{{Infobox Military Conflict
{{use mdy dates|date=May 2017}}
|conflict=Target Vistula
{{Infobox military conflict
|image=]
| conflict = Soviet westward offensive of 1918–1919
|caption=Soviet propaganda poster featuring the destruction of ''White Poland''
| image = Polish-soviet propaganda poster 1920.jpg
|partof=], ], ] and ]
| image_size = 250
|date=], ] to March, ]
| caption = Soviet ] propaganda poster 1920
|place=], ], ], ],<br>], ], ]
| partof = the ], ], ], ], ], and ]
|result=Unconcluded
| date = November 18, 1918 – March, 1919
|combatant1={{EST}}<br>{{LAT}}<br>{{LIT}}<br>] ]
| place = ], ], ], ],<br>], ], ]
|combatant2=] ]
| result = *Soviet victory in ]
|commander1=] ] <br>] ]
**Start of the ]
|commander2=] ]
*Soviet defeat in the ]
|strength1=>100,000 troops
| combatant1 = {{flagdeco|Russia}} ]<br>{{flagdeco|Estonia}} ]<br>{{flag|Latvia}}<br>{{flagicon image|Flag of Lithuania (1918-1940).svg}} ]<br>{{flagdeco|Belarusian People's Republic|1918}} ]<br>{{flagicon|Second Polish Republic|1919}} ]<br>{{flagcountry|Kingdom of Romania}}<br>{{flagicon image|Flag of the Ukranian State.svg}} ]<br>{{flagcountry|French Third Republic}}<br>{{flagcountry|United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland}}<br>{{flagdeco|German Empire}} ] <br>], ], and ] volunteers<ref name="chakoten.dk">{{Cite web |last=Per Finsted |title=Boganmeldelse: For Dannebrogs Ære - Danske frivillige i Estlands og Letlands frihedskamp 1919 af Niels Jensen |url=http://www.chakoten.dk/cgi-bin/fm.cgi?n=911 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110928121525/http://www.chakoten.dk/cgi-bin/fm.cgi?n=911 |archive-date=2011-09-28 |access-date=2011-06-18 |website=chakoten.dk |language=da}}</ref>
|strength2=>100,000 troops
| combatant2 = {{flag|Russian SFSR|1918}}<br/>{{flagicon image|Flag of the Commune of the Working People of Estonia.svg|22px}} ]<br />{{flagicon image|Flag of Latvian SSR (1918-1920).svg|22px}} ]<br>{{flagicon image|Flag of the Lithuanian-Byelorussian SSR.svg|22px}} ]<br>{{flagicon image|Socialist red flag.svg}} ]<br />{{flagicon image|Flag of the Ukrainian Soviet Socialist Republic (1919–1929).svg}} ]<br>{{flagicon image|Socialist red flag.svg|22px}} ]{{sfnp|Thomas|Boltowsky|2019|p=23}}
|casualties1=?
| commander1 = {{flagicon|Latvia}} ]<br>{{flagicon|EST}} ]<br>{{flagicon|Second Polish Republic|1919}} ]<br>{{flagicon image|Flag of the German Empire.svg|22px|link=Ober Ost}} ]
|casualties2=?
| commander2 = {{flagicon|Russian SFSR|1918}} ]<br>{{flagicon|Russian SFSR|1918}} ]
|}}
| strength1 = '''Total''': Unknown, 70,000+<hr>'''Estonia''': 19,000<ref name="maideIV">{{Cite book |last=Maide |first=J. |url=http://www.ksk.edu.ee/file.php?ID=1206 |title=Ülevaade Eesti Vabadussõjast 1918–1920 |publisher=Kaitseliidu kirjastus |year=1933 |location=Tartu |chapter=IV |oclc=250435918 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20100822143141/http://www.ksk.edu.ee/file.php?ID=1206 |archive-date=2010-08-22 |url-status=dead}}</ref><br>'''Poland''': ~50,000
{{Campaignbox Polish-Bolshevik War}}
| strength2 = 285,000
| casualties1 =
| campaignbox = {{Campaignbox|title= ]
|battles=] – ] – ] – ] – ] – ] – ] – ] – ] - ] – ] – ] – ]
}}
{{Campaignbox Polish-Soviet War}}
| territory = Occupation of the Baltic states and most of Belarus by the Red Army, creation of the Soviet republics - ], ] and ]
}}


The '''] Westward offensive of ] &mdash; ]''' was part of general move of the ] into the areas abandoned by the ] garrisons, that were being withdrawn to Germany following that country's defeat in the ]. The offensive in the ] river direction by the newly-created ] had the aim of establishing ] governments in ], ] and ] and to drive as far west as possible and possibly join up with the ]. The '''Soviet westward offensive of 1918–1919''' was part of the campaign by ] into areas abandoned by the ] garrisons that were being withdrawn to Germany following that country's defeat in ]. The initially successful offensive against the ] ignited the ] which ended with the Soviet ] of Estonia. Similarly, the campaigns against the ] and ] ultimately failed, resulting in the ] and ] respectively. In Belarus, the ] was conquered and the ] proclaimed.


The campaign eventually became bogged down, leading to the Estonian ], the White Russian ], the ], the ] and the continuation of the ].
This move westwards eventually led to the ].


==Soviet war aims==
The best known comprehensive historical analysis of this period was performed by ] in his book '']'' (1972). In this book he mentioned the codename for this offensive: '''Target Vistula'''<sup>]</sup>.
The newly formed ] was growing in personnel, and ] could gather enough strength to replace withdrawing Western ] ("Западная завеса") by solid military and re-take the lands lost by Russia in 1917 by simply following the withdrawing German army. Upon receiving the news about the ], on November 13, 1918, the Soviet government annulled the ] and issued orders to the ] to move in the direction of ], ] and the ] in order to establish Soviet governments there. The newly formed (on November 16) ] moved at night of November 17, 1918, into the operational vacuum created by the withdrawing ].


==Background==
== Before the battle ==
After signing the ], ] lost the ]an lands the ] had annexed in the 18th and 19th centuries. Most of today's ], ], ] and the ] were granted to the government of ], which in turn decided to grant these states limited independence as ]s. However, the German defeat on the Western Front and the internal dissolution of ] made the plans for the creation of ] obsolete.{{citation needed|date=May 2017}}


In November and December, the German army started a retreat westwards. Demoralised officers and mutinous soldiers abandoned their garrisons ''en masse'' and returned home. The areas abandoned by the ] became a field of conflict between local puppet governments created by Germany as part of its plans, local nationalist governments that sprung up after the withdrawal of the German forces, Poland, and the ]s wanting to incorporate these areas into ]. Belarusian, ]n, ]n, ]n, Ukrainian and even ] national governments were formed. Internal power struggles prevented any of the governments in ] from gaining lasting power. In ] the situation was even more complex, with an ongoing conflict between ]'s anarchists, ], the ], various governments of Ukraine and the reborn ]. The entire region abandoned by the German forces became a gigantic free-for-all theatre, where dozens of factions competed for power.{{citation needed|date=May 2017}}
After signing the ], ] lost the ]an lands it annexed in the ] and ]. Most of today's ], ], ] and the ] was passed to the government of ], which in turn decided to grant these states limited independence as ]s. However, the German defeat on the Western Front and internal dissolution of ], made the plans for creation of ] obsolete.


The Bolsheviks were also implementing a new strategy, "Revolution from abroad" (''Revolutsiya izvne''—literally, "revolution from the outside"), based on an assumption that revolutionary masses desire revolution but are unable to carry it out without help from more organized and advanced Bolsheviks. Hence, as ] remarked, the revolution should be "brought on the bayonets" (of the ]), as "through Kiev leads the straight route for uniting with the ] revolution, just as through Pskov and Vilnius goes the way for uniting with the German revolution. Offensive on all fronts! Offensive on the west front, offensive on the south front, offensive on the all revolutionary fronts!". The concept was developed in 1918 but officially published under that name first in 1920 (''Wojennaja Mysl i Riewolucija'', 3/1920, ].<ref name="Urb 293">{{Cite book |last=] |title=Józef Piłsudski: marzyciel i strateg |publisher=Wydawnictwo ALFA |year=1997 |isbn=83-7001-914-5 |location=Warsaw |page=293 |language=pl |trans-title=]: Dreamer and Strategist}}</ref>
The German army started a retreat westwards. Demoralised officers and revolting soldiers abandoned their garrisons ''en masse'' and returned home. The areas abandoned by the ] became a field of conflict between the local governments created by Germany as part of their plans, local governments that sprung up after the withdrawal of the Germans and the ]s that wanted those areas to be incorporated to the ]. Nor were Poland and the Bolshevik the only sides attempting to grab power. ]ian, ]n, ] and even ] governments were formed. Internal struggle for power prevented any of the governments in ] to gain enough power and the situation in ] was even more complex with an ongoing conflict between the ] anarchists, ], ], various governments of ] and the reborn ]. The entire region abandoned by the German forces became a gigantic free-for-all theatre, where dozens of factions competed for power.
<gallery>
File:Map Treaty of Brest-Litovsk-en.jpg |Territories occupied by Germany during 1918
File:Estonian War of Independence, map.JPG |Estonian and Soviet operations in Estonia and Latvia, 1918–19
File:PL-RU war 1919 phase I.svg |Soviet operations in Southeast Estonia, Latvia, Lithuania, and Belorussia in 1918–19
File:PL-RU war 1919 phase II.svg |Estonian, Latvian, Lithuanian and Polish counterattacks
File:Frontwschodni luty1919.png |Polish-Ukrainian front and Polish-Soviet front as forming in February 1919
</gallery>


==Offensives==
The Polish-Soviet war, like the majority of the other conflicts in ] of that time, was more of an accident then that of the planned design. In the chaos prevailing in the first months of 1919, it was unlikely that anyone in Bolshevik Russia or in the new Second Republic of Poland would have deliberately planned a major foreign war. It was only a matter of luck that Soviet begun organised advance to secure the chaotic territories left in the wake of the German retreat before the Polish forces were able to organise and start a move of their own.
{{see also|Ukrainian War of Independence|Lithuanian–Soviet War|Latvian War of Independence|Polish–Soviet War}}


== Offensive == ===Estonian direction===
{{Main|Estonian War of Independence}}
The ] and ] Detachments of the 7th Red Army attacked the ] ] defending the city of ] on 22 November 1918. The 6th Red Division captured the railway junction of ] from the freshly formed 4th and 5th Regiments of the ] on 24 December and advanced to {{convert|34|km|0|abbr=on}} from the capital ]. On 29 November in Narva, Estonian Bolsheviks led by ] proclaimed a ] — "]". In south Estonia, the 49th Red ] Regiment took the railway junction of ] on 17 December and the city of ] on 24 December. The Estonian Army stopped the 7th Red Army's advance along the entire front on 2–5 January 1919. Two days later Estonian forces began the counteroffensive to completely expel the Soviet forces from Estonia. A Finnish volunteer marine brigade landed in the rear of the 6th Red Division, and the 1st Estonian Division captured Narva on 18 January.{{sfn|Pilsudski|1972 | page = }}


Subsequently, the northeastern front stabilized along the ]. In south Estonia, the Estonian ]-type ] drove the Red ] on 31 January. The 7th Red Army was temporally forced out of the boundaries of Estonia. On 16 February the Red Army started a counteroffensive to recapture Estonia. The Soviet forces, including units of so-called ], captured the areas of ], ] and ] by 15 March. The Estonian 2nd Division counterattacked and recaptured ] by 28 March. Similar combat took place between the Estonian Army and the Northern Group of the Latvian Red Army along the ]–]–] front stabilised in north ]. In the positions along the Narva river, the Estonian 1st Division repelled 7th Red Army attacks.<ref name="Jyri Kork 1938">{{Cite book |title=Estonian War of Independence 1918–1920 |publisher=Esto |year=1988 |editor-last=Jyri Kork |location=Baltimore |quote=Reprint from Historical Committee for the War of Independence, Tallinn |orig-date=1938}}</ref>
Meanwhile the newly-formed ] was growing in personnel, and Lenin could gather enough strength to replace withdrawing Western barrier forces ("Западная завеса") by solid military and re-take the lands lost by Russia in ] by simply following the withdrawing German army. Upon the news about the ], on ], ] the Soviet government annulled the Treaty of Brest Litovsk and issued orders to the ] to move in the direction of ], ] and ] in order to establish Soviet governments there. The move of the newly-created (on ]) ] that started at night of ] ] in the operational vacuum created by the withdrawing German army, in the geneal direction of Belarus, Ukraine and Poland (the latter sometimes referred to as "By-Vistula Lands" (Привислянский край) in ]) was code-named ''Target-]''.


===Byelorussian direction===
On ], ], the Red Army entered ] almost unopposed, thus putting an end to the short-lived ]. At the same time the Polish and Belarusian self-defence units sprung up across Western ]. Ill-equipped and composed mostly of local recruits, they were determined to defend their homes from what the newspapers described as a ''Red menace''. Similar Bolshevik groups were operating in the sector and a series of skirmishes ensued. The Polish-Bolshevik struggle over ] in the first week of 1919 was a sign of the things to come, as Polish milita was forced to withdraw after first organised units of the Soviet Western Army entered the city. In response, the ] started sending the units eastwards to help the self-defence, while the Russians did the same, but in the opposite direction. The open conflict seemed inevitable.
The ] entered ] on 21 November, ] and ] on 22 November, ] on 24 November, ] on 28 November, ] on 3 December, ] on 8 December and ] on 9 December. On 10 December 1918, the Red Army entered ] almost unopposed, putting an end to the short-lived ]. On 1 January 1919, the ] (SSRB) was proclaimed in ]. On 8 January, the SSRB government relocated to Minsk. At the same time, Polish and Belarusian self-defence units sprung up across western ]. Ill-equipped and composed mostly of local recruits, they were determined to defend their homes from what the newspapers described as a "Red menace". Similar Bolshevik groups were operating in the sector and a series of skirmishes ensued. The Polish-Soviet struggle over ] in the first week of 1919 was a sign of things to come, as the Polish militia was forced to withdraw after the first organised units of the Soviet Western Army entered the city. In response, the ] started sending units eastwards to help the self-defence units, while the Soviets did the same but in the opposite direction. Open conflict seemed inevitable.{{citation needed|date=May 2017}}


On ] Soviet High Command declared the goal of its ] operation: deep scouting towards ]. On ] that goal was updated to the ] river.(Davies, p.12) On that day ] ordered the new Western Command to carry out a 'reconnaissance in depth' as far as ], ], ] and ]. He also ordered securing main railway junctions, including those in ], ], ] and ].(Davies, p.39) On January 12 Soviet High Command ordered deep scouting towards the ]. On February 12 that order was updated to include the ].{{sfn|Davies|2003 | page = 12}} On that day ] ordered the new Western Command to carry out a "reconnaissance in-depth" as far as ], ], ] and ]. He also ordered the securing of main railway junctions, including those in ], ], ] and ].{{sfn|Davies|2003 | page = 39}}


Among the aims of the Bolsheviks was to drive through the Eastern and Central Europe and support the ] and ].(Davies, p.29) The Bolshevik Russian forces did not anticipate any serious opposition on the way and saw the states of ], Belarus and ] as mere ephemerides, unable do defend their own ''temporary'' borders. However, it is unlikely that the Soviets really expected to reach the Vistula. The military orders were full of propaganda. The main goal of the operation was likely to see how much territory can be captured in the chaotic western areas before any serious opposition arises.{Davies, p.12 and p.13) It is speculated that among the aims of the Bolsheviks one goal was to drive through eastern and central Europe and support the ] and Austria-Hungary.{{sfn|Davies|2003 | page = 29}} However, it is unlikely that the Soviets really expected to reach the Vistula. The military orders were full of propaganda. The main goal of the operation was likely to see how much territory could be opportunistically grabbed in the chaotic governmental flux caused by the aftereffects of postwar Eastern Europe before any serious independent governing authorities arose. {{sfn|Davies|2003 | pages = 12-13}}


Finally the first Polish-Soviet clashes happened in the area of the towns of ] (]) and ], where both armies clashed in a series of skirmishes. The Bolshevik offensive came to a halt by late February and it became apparent that the ] will not break through the Polish lines by half-hearted attacks. Both the Russian offensive and the Polish counter-attack started at the same time, which resulted with an increasing number of troops being brought to the area. In April the Bolsheviks captured ] and Wilno, but were soon pushed out by the Polish counter-offensive. Finally, the first Polish-Soviet clashes happened in mid-February, in the area of the towns of ] and ], where both armies clashed in a series of skirmishes. {{sfn| Neiberg|Jordan |2008|page=215}} The Soviet offensive came to a halt by late February and it became apparent that a new line had estalished itself between the Polish and Soviet forces. Both the Soviet offensive and the Polish counterattack started at the same time, which resulted in an increasing number of troops being brought to the area.

===Romanian direction===
In early 1918, Bessarabia, a former Russian province, ] after two months of independence as the ].<ref>{{Cite book |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=EPP3ti4hysUC |title=Eastern Europe, Russia and Central Asia 2003 |publisher=Taylor & Francis |isbn=9781857431377 |series=Regional surveys of the world |date=September 2, 2023 |page=266}}</ref> The Soviet did not accept the union and tried to retake the region by force. However, it all amounted to several sporadic attacks along the ] River. The Russians also attacked to support ], which had ] with Romania. That was to no avail, as the region was successfully defended against Bolshevik attacks.{{citation needed|date=February 2016}}


==Aftermath== ==Aftermath==
The Baltic and Romanian Armies proved to be far more capable opponents than the Red Army had assumed. The Pskov Offensive of the Estonian Army's Petseri Battle Group captured Pskov on 25 May 1919, destroyed the Estonian Red Riflemen units in the process, and expelled all other Soviet forces from the territory between Estonia and the ]. The 7th and 15th Red Armies began a counteroffensive in ] and in the north of Pskov in July 1919, which regained most of the lost territories of Petrograd and Pskov regions. With weapons provided by Britain and France and operational support by the Estonian Army and the Royal Navy, the ] ] began Offensive White Sword on 28 September 1919 with the aim of capturing Petrograd. The Northwestern Army approached to within {{convert|16|km|0}} of the city, but the ] repulsed the White Russian troops, driving them back into Estonia.<ref name="Jyri Kork 1938" />

In the wake of the Soviet drive west as well as the Polish advance east through Byelorussia, a new line had formed between the newly created Soviet Socialist Republic of Byelorussia and the Republic of Poland. Armies from both sides regularly engaged in local clashes despite the yet peaceful relations between Poland and the Soviets. Such clashes marked a prelude to the Polish-Soviet War which began
in April of the same year with the Polish Vilna Offensive.{{sfn|Davies|2003 | page = 48 – 54}}


==Historiography==
The ] proved to be a far more difficult opponent than the Russians had assumed. Although the orders for the ''Target-Vistula'' operation were never withdrawn, the Russian plans were soon made obsolete by growing Polish resistance and eventually by Polish counter-offensive in April. Unable to accomplish their objectives, the Red Army withdrew from their positions and started a reorganisation, after which the ] started.
A comprehensive historical analysis of the campaign against Poland was performed by ] in his book '']'' (1972). Davies mentioned the ] for this offensive: "Target Vistula"; however, it is not commonly used in historiography.


Norman Davies in his book claims that "Target Vistula" ("Цель – Висла" or similar) was the Soviet codename of the offensive. This term, however, is mostly absent in Polish and ] of the period.<!--at least, none of us Wikipedians who worked on this article were able to find any other sources, and we looked fairly deeply into Polish and Russian archives. Feel free to update this if you have one--> In that association, one may notice the title "An Expedition beyond Vistula" (''Pokhod za Vislu'') of ]'s memoirs about his Polish campaign. Other translations of the offensive include ''Operation Vistula'' (from Polish ''Operacja Wisła'').<ref>That name is used, for example, in {{Cite book |url=http://portalwiedzy.onet.pl/60350,,,,operacja_wisla,haslo.html |title=Operacja Wisła |work=] |publisher=Fogra |isbn=83-85719-68-7 |editor-last=Jan Pieszczachowicz |volume=VIII |location=Kraków |language=pl |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20060628175849/http://portalwiedzy.onet.pl/60350,,,,operacja_wisla,haslo.html |archive-date=2006-06-28}} or {{Cite web |last=Andrzej Leszek Szczesniak |title=Wojna polsko-bolszewicka 1918–1920 |url=http://users.rcn.com/salski/No28Folder/Wojna_Polsko-bol.htm |website=THE SUMMIT TIMES |language=pl |volume=9 |issue=28/2002}}.</ref> Please notice that the term "]" commonly refers to a totally different event.
==Note==


==References==
Norman Davies in his book claims that "Target Vistula" ("Цель - Висла" or something similar) was the Soviet codename of the offensive. This term, however, is absent in the sources he quotes and in Polish and Soviet ] of the period.<!--at least, none of us Wikipedians who worked on this article were able to find any other sources, and we looked fairly deep into Polish and Russian archives. Feel free to update this if you have one-->
{{reflist}}


== Reference == ==Bibliography==
* ], ''White Eagle, Red Star: the Polish-Soviet War, 1919-20'', Pimlico, 2003, ISBN 0-7126-0694-7. (First edition: St. Martin's Press, Inc., New York, 1972) * {{Cite book |last=Davies |first=Norman |title=White Eagle, Red Star: the Polish-Soviet War, 1919–20 |publisher=], Inc. |year=2003 |isbn=0-7126-0694-7 |edition=First |location=New York |author-link=Norman Davies |orig-date=1972}}
* {{Cite book |last=Pilsudski |first=Jozef |title=Year 1920 and its climax Battle of Warsaw during the Polish Soviet war 1919-1920 |year=1972}}
* {{Cite book |last1=Neiberg |first1=M.S. |title=The Eastern Front 1914-1920 |last2=Jordan |first2=D. |year=2008 |isbn=978-1-906626-00-6}}
* {{Cite book |last1=Thomas |first1=Nigel |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=HnmGDwAAQBAJ |title=Armies of the Baltic Independence Wars 1918–20 |last2=Boltowsky |first2=Toomas |publisher=Bloomsbury Publishing |year=2019|isbn=9781472830791 }}


{{Russian Conflicts}}
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{{DEFAULTSORT:Soviet Westward Offensive Of 1918-1919}}
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Latest revision as of 22:35, 21 December 2024

Invasion by the Russian SFSR

Soviet westward offensive of 1918–1919
Part of the Russian Civil War, Polish–Soviet War, Estonian War of Independence, Latvian War of Independence, Lithuanian Wars of Independence, and Ukrainian War of Independence

Soviet anti-Polish propaganda poster 1920
DateNovember 18, 1918 – March, 1919
LocationBelarus, Estonia, Latvia, Lithuania,
Poland, Russia, Ukraine
Result
Territorial
changes
Occupation of the Baltic states and most of Belarus by the Red Army, creation of the Soviet republics - Latvian SSR, Lithuanian SSR and Belorussian SSR
Belligerents
White Movement
Estonia
 Latvia
Lithuania
Belarus
Second Polish Republic Poland
 Romania
Ukraine
 France
 United Kingdom
Ober Ost
Finnish, Danish, and Swedish volunteers
 Russian SFSR
Soviet Estonia
Soviet Latvia
Lithuanian-Byelorussian SSR
Provisional Polish Revolutionary Committee
Ukrainian SSR
Finnish Red Guards
Commanders and leaders
Latvia Jānis Puriņš
Estonia Johan Laidoner
Second Polish Republic Józef Piłsudski
Max Hoffmann
Russian Soviet Federative Socialist Republic Jukums Vācietis
Russian Soviet Federative Socialist Republic Dmitry Nadyozhny
Strength
Total: Unknown, 70,000+
Estonia: 19,000
Poland: ~50,000
285,000
Russian Civil War
October RevolutionSouthern FrontFinnic peoplesNorthern FrontEastern FrontEstoniaLatviaLithuaniaUkrainian–Soviet War - PolandLeft-wing uprisings against the BolsheviksBasmachiYakutia
Polish–Soviet War
List of battles
1919
1920

The Soviet westward offensive of 1918–1919 was part of the campaign by Soviet Russia into areas abandoned by the Ober Ost garrisons that were being withdrawn to Germany following that country's defeat in World War I. The initially successful offensive against the Republic of Estonia ignited the Estonian War of Independence which ended with the Soviet recognition of Estonia. Similarly, the campaigns against the Republic of Latvia and Republic of Lithuania ultimately failed, resulting in the Latvian–Soviet Peace Treaty and Soviet–Lithuanian Peace Treaty respectively. In Belarus, the Belarusian People's Republic was conquered and the Socialist Soviet Republic of Byelorussia proclaimed.

The campaign eventually became bogged down, leading to the Estonian Pskov Offensive, the White Russian Petrograd Offensives, the Lithuanian–Soviet War, the Latvian War of Independence and the continuation of the Ukrainian–Soviet War.

Soviet war aims

The newly formed Red Army was growing in personnel, and Vladimir Lenin could gather enough strength to replace withdrawing Western curtain forces ("Западная завеса") by solid military and re-take the lands lost by Russia in 1917 by simply following the withdrawing German army. Upon receiving the news about the German Revolution, on November 13, 1918, the Soviet government annulled the Treaty of Brest-Litovsk and issued orders to the Red Army to move in the direction of Belarus, Ukraine and the Baltic States in order to establish Soviet governments there. The newly formed (on November 16) Western Army moved at night of November 17, 1918, into the operational vacuum created by the withdrawing Imperial German Army.

Background

After signing the Treaty of Brest-Litovsk, Bolshevik Russia lost the European lands the Russian Empire had annexed in the 18th and 19th centuries. Most of today's Poland, Belarus, Ukraine and the Baltic states were granted to the government of Germany, which in turn decided to grant these states limited independence as buffer states. However, the German defeat on the Western Front and the internal dissolution of Austria-Hungary made the plans for the creation of Mitteleuropa obsolete.

In November and December, the German army started a retreat westwards. Demoralised officers and mutinous soldiers abandoned their garrisons en masse and returned home. The areas abandoned by the Central Powers became a field of conflict between local puppet governments created by Germany as part of its plans, local nationalist governments that sprung up after the withdrawal of the German forces, Poland, and the Bolsheviks wanting to incorporate these areas into Soviet Russia. Belarusian, Estonian, Latvian, Lithuanian, Ukrainian and even Cossack national governments were formed. Internal power struggles prevented any of the governments in Belarus from gaining lasting power. In Ukraine the situation was even more complex, with an ongoing conflict between Nestor Makhno's anarchists, communists, the White Movement, various governments of Ukraine and the reborn Polish Army. The entire region abandoned by the German forces became a gigantic free-for-all theatre, where dozens of factions competed for power.

The Bolsheviks were also implementing a new strategy, "Revolution from abroad" (Revolutsiya izvne—literally, "revolution from the outside"), based on an assumption that revolutionary masses desire revolution but are unable to carry it out without help from more organized and advanced Bolsheviks. Hence, as Leon Trotsky remarked, the revolution should be "brought on the bayonets" (of the Red Army), as "through Kiev leads the straight route for uniting with the Austro-Hungarian revolution, just as through Pskov and Vilnius goes the way for uniting with the German revolution. Offensive on all fronts! Offensive on the west front, offensive on the south front, offensive on the all revolutionary fronts!". The concept was developed in 1918 but officially published under that name first in 1920 (Wojennaja Mysl i Riewolucija, 3/1920, Mikhail Tukhachevsky.

  • Territories occupied by Germany during 1918 Territories occupied by Germany during 1918
  • Estonian and Soviet operations in Estonia and Latvia, 1918–19 Estonian and Soviet operations in Estonia and Latvia, 1918–19
  • Soviet operations in Southeast Estonia, Latvia, Lithuania, and Belorussia in 1918–19 Soviet operations in Southeast Estonia, Latvia, Lithuania, and Belorussia in 1918–19
  • Estonian, Latvian, Lithuanian and Polish counterattacks Estonian, Latvian, Lithuanian and Polish counterattacks
  • Polish-Ukrainian front and Polish-Soviet front as forming in February 1919 Polish-Ukrainian front and Polish-Soviet front as forming in February 1919

Offensives

See also: Ukrainian War of Independence, Lithuanian–Soviet War, Latvian War of Independence, and Polish–Soviet War

Estonian direction

Main article: Estonian War of Independence

The Gdov and Yamburg Detachments of the 7th Red Army attacked the German Infanterie-Regiment Nr. 405 defending the city of Narva on 22 November 1918. The 6th Red Division captured the railway junction of Tapa from the freshly formed 4th and 5th Regiments of the Estonian Land Forces on 24 December and advanced to 34 km (21 mi) from the capital Tallinn. On 29 November in Narva, Estonian Bolsheviks led by Jaan Anvelt proclaimed a Soviet republic — "Commune of the Working People of Estonia". In south Estonia, the 49th Red Latvian Rifle Regiment took the railway junction of Valga on 17 December and the city of Tartu on 24 December. The Estonian Army stopped the 7th Red Army's advance along the entire front on 2–5 January 1919. Two days later Estonian forces began the counteroffensive to completely expel the Soviet forces from Estonia. A Finnish volunteer marine brigade landed in the rear of the 6th Red Division, and the 1st Estonian Division captured Narva on 18 January.

Subsequently, the northeastern front stabilized along the Narva river. In south Estonia, the Estonian commando-type Tartumaa Partisan Battalion drove the Red Latvian rifle regiments out of Valga on 31 January. The 7th Red Army was temporally forced out of the boundaries of Estonia. On 16 February the Red Army started a counteroffensive to recapture Estonia. The Soviet forces, including units of so-called Estonian Red Riflemen, captured the areas of Setomaa, Vastseliina and Räpina by 15 March. The Estonian 2nd Division counterattacked and recaptured Petseri by 28 March. Similar combat took place between the Estonian Army and the Northern Group of the Latvian Red Army along the AinažiStrenčiAlūksne front stabilised in north Latvia. In the positions along the Narva river, the Estonian 1st Division repelled 7th Red Army attacks.

Byelorussian direction

The Red Army entered Polotsk on 21 November, Drissa and Rahachow on 22 November, Zhlobin on 24 November, Babruysk on 28 November, Barysaw on 3 December, Slutsk on 8 December and Igumen on 9 December. On 10 December 1918, the Red Army entered Minsk almost unopposed, putting an end to the short-lived Belarusian People's Republic. On 1 January 1919, the Socialist Soviet Republic of Byelorussia (SSRB) was proclaimed in Smolensk. On 8 January, the SSRB government relocated to Minsk. At the same time, Polish and Belarusian self-defence units sprung up across western Belarus. Ill-equipped and composed mostly of local recruits, they were determined to defend their homes from what the newspapers described as a "Red menace". Similar Bolshevik groups were operating in the sector and a series of skirmishes ensued. The Polish-Soviet struggle over Vilna in the first week of 1919 was a sign of things to come, as the Polish militia was forced to withdraw after the first organised units of the Soviet Western Army entered the city. In response, the Polish Army started sending units eastwards to help the self-defence units, while the Soviets did the same but in the opposite direction. Open conflict seemed inevitable.

On January 12 Soviet High Command ordered deep scouting towards the Neman River. On February 12 that order was updated to include the Bug river. On that day Jukums Vācietis ordered the new Western Command to carry out a "reconnaissance in-depth" as far as Tilsit, Brest-Litovsk, Kowel and Rivne. He also ordered the securing of main railway junctions, including those in Vilna, Lida, Baranowicze and Luninets.

It is speculated that among the aims of the Bolsheviks one goal was to drive through eastern and central Europe and support the Revolutions in Germany and Austria-Hungary. However, it is unlikely that the Soviets really expected to reach the Vistula. The military orders were full of propaganda. The main goal of the operation was likely to see how much territory could be opportunistically grabbed in the chaotic governmental flux caused by the aftereffects of postwar Eastern Europe before any serious independent governing authorities arose.

Finally, the first Polish-Soviet clashes happened in mid-February, in the area of the towns of Bereza Kartuska and Mosty, where both armies clashed in a series of skirmishes. The Soviet offensive came to a halt by late February and it became apparent that a new line had estalished itself between the Polish and Soviet forces. Both the Soviet offensive and the Polish counterattack started at the same time, which resulted in an increasing number of troops being brought to the area.

Romanian direction

In early 1918, Bessarabia, a former Russian province, united with Romania after two months of independence as the Moldavian Democratic Republic. The Soviet did not accept the union and tried to retake the region by force. However, it all amounted to several sporadic attacks along the Dniester River. The Russians also attacked to support Communist Hungary, which had its own war with Romania. That was to no avail, as the region was successfully defended against Bolshevik attacks.

Aftermath

The Baltic and Romanian Armies proved to be far more capable opponents than the Red Army had assumed. The Pskov Offensive of the Estonian Army's Petseri Battle Group captured Pskov on 25 May 1919, destroyed the Estonian Red Riflemen units in the process, and expelled all other Soviet forces from the territory between Estonia and the Velikaya River. The 7th and 15th Red Armies began a counteroffensive in Ingria and in the north of Pskov in July 1919, which regained most of the lost territories of Petrograd and Pskov regions. With weapons provided by Britain and France and operational support by the Estonian Army and the Royal Navy, the White Russian Northwestern Army began Offensive White Sword on 28 September 1919 with the aim of capturing Petrograd. The Northwestern Army approached to within 16 kilometres (10 mi) of the city, but the 7th Red Army repulsed the White Russian troops, driving them back into Estonia.

In the wake of the Soviet drive west as well as the Polish advance east through Byelorussia, a new line had formed between the newly created Soviet Socialist Republic of Byelorussia and the Republic of Poland. Armies from both sides regularly engaged in local clashes despite the yet peaceful relations between Poland and the Soviets. Such clashes marked a prelude to the Polish-Soviet War which began in April of the same year with the Polish Vilna Offensive.

Historiography

A comprehensive historical analysis of the campaign against Poland was performed by Norman Davies in his book White Eagle, Red Star (1972). Davies mentioned the codename for this offensive: "Target Vistula"; however, it is not commonly used in historiography.

Norman Davies in his book claims that "Target Vistula" ("Цель – Висла" or similar) was the Soviet codename of the offensive. This term, however, is mostly absent in Polish and Soviet historiography of the period. In that association, one may notice the title "An Expedition beyond Vistula" (Pokhod za Vislu) of Tukhachevsky's memoirs about his Polish campaign. Other translations of the offensive include Operation Vistula (from Polish Operacja Wisła). Please notice that the term "Operation Vistula" commonly refers to a totally different event.

References

  1. Per Finsted. "Boganmeldelse: For Dannebrogs Ære - Danske frivillige i Estlands og Letlands frihedskamp 1919 af Niels Jensen". chakoten.dk (in Danish). Archived from the original on September 28, 2011. Retrieved June 18, 2011.
  2. Thomas & Boltowsky (2019), p. 23.
  3. Maide, J. (1933). "IV". Ülevaade Eesti Vabadussõjast 1918–1920. Tartu: Kaitseliidu kirjastus. OCLC 250435918. Archived from the original on August 22, 2010.
  4. Bohdan Urbankowski (1997). Józef Piłsudski: marzyciel i strateg [Józef Piłsudski: Dreamer and Strategist] (in Polish). Warsaw: Wydawnictwo ALFA. p. 293. ISBN 83-7001-914-5.
  5. Pilsudski 1972.
  6. ^ Jyri Kork, ed. (1988) . Estonian War of Independence 1918–1920. Baltimore: Esto. Reprint from Historical Committee for the War of Independence, Tallinn
  7. Davies 2003, p. 12.
  8. Davies 2003, p. 39.
  9. Davies 2003, p. 29.
  10. Davies 2003, pp. 12–13.
  11. Neiberg & Jordan 2008, p. 215.
  12. Eastern Europe, Russia and Central Asia 2003. Regional surveys of the world. Taylor & Francis. September 2, 2023. p. 266. ISBN 9781857431377.
  13. Davies 2003, p. 48 – 54.
  14. That name is used, for example, in Jan Pieszczachowicz (ed.). Operacja Wisła (in Polish). Vol. VIII. Kraków: Fogra. ISBN 83-85719-68-7. Archived from the original on June 28, 2006. {{cite book}}: |work= ignored (help) or Andrzej Leszek Szczesniak. "Wojna polsko-bolszewicka 1918–1920". THE SUMMIT TIMES (in Polish)..

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