Everything about Soviet-german Relations Before 1941 totally explained
Cooperation between Germany and Soviet Union dates to the aftermath of the
First World War. The
Treaty of Brest-Litovsk, ending
World War I hostilities between Russia and Germany, was signed on March 3, 1918. A few months later, the German ambassador to Moscow,
Wilhelm von Mirbach, was shot dead by Russian
Left Socialist-Revolutionaries in an attempt to incite a new war between
Russia and Germany. The entire Soviet embassy under
Adolph Joffe was deported from Germany on November 6, 1918, for their active support of the
German Revolution.
Karl Radek also illegally supported communist subversive activities in
Weimar Germany in 1919.
From the outset, both states sought to overthrow the system that was established by the victors of
World War I. Germany, laboring under onerous reparations and stung by the collective responsibility provisions of the
Treaty of Versailles, was a defeated nation in turmoil. This and the
Russian Civil War made both Germany and the Soviets into international outcasts, and their resulting
rapprochement during the
interbellum was a natural convergence. At the same time, the dynamics of their relationship was shaped by both a lack of trust and the respective governments' fears of its partner's breaking out of diplomatic isolation and turning towards the
French Third Republic (which at the time was thought to possess the greatest military strength in Europe) and the
Second Polish Republic,
its ally.
Cooperation ended in 1933, as
Hitler came to power and created
Nazi Germany, but some diplomatic initiatives continued through the 1930s, culminating with the
Molotov-Ribbentrop Pact of 1939 and various trade agreements. Few questions concerning the origins of the
Second World War are more controversial and ideologically loaded than the issue of the policies of the
Soviet Union under
Joseph Stalin towards
Nazi Germany between the
Nazi seizure of power and the
German invasion of the USSR on June 22, 1941.
A variety of competing and contradictory theses exist, including: that the Soviet leadership actively sought another great war in Europe to further weaken the capitalist nations; that the USSR pursued a purely defensive policy; or that the USSR tried to avoid becoming entangled in a war, both because Soviet leaders didn't feel that they'd the military capabilities to conduct strategic operations at that time, and to avoid, in paraphrasing Stalin's words to the 18th Party Congress on March 10, 1939, "pulling other nation's (the UK and France's) chestnuts out of the fire."
Soviet Russia and Weimar Germany
Initially, the Soviet leadership hoped for a successful socialist revolution in Germany as part of the "
world revolution". However, this was put down by the right-wing
freikorps. Subsequently, the Bolsheviks became embroiled in the
Soviet war with Poland of 1919-20. As Poland was a traditional enemy of Germany (see for example
Silesian Uprisings), and the Soviet state was also isolated internationally, the Soviet government started adopting a much less hostile attitude towards Germany, seeking closer relationships. This line was consistently pursued under
People's Commissar for Foreign Affairs Georgy Chicherin and Soviet Ambassador
Nikolay Krestinsky. Other Soviet representatives instrumental in the negotiations were
Karl Radek,
Leonid Krasin,
Christian Rakovsky,
Victor Kopp and
Adolph Joffe.
In the 1920s, many in the leadership of
Weimar Germany, humiliated by the conditions of the
Treaty of Versailles imposed after their defeat in the First World War (especially General
Hans von Seeckt, chief of the
Reichswehr), were interested in cooperation with the Soviet Union, both in order to avert any threat from the
Second Polish Republic,
backed by the
French Third Republic, and to prevent any possible Soviet-British alliance. The specific German aims were the full rearmament of the Reichswehr, which was explicitly prohibited by the Treaty of Versailles, and an alliance against Poland. It is unknown exactly when the first contacts between von Seeckt and the Soviets took place, but it could have been as early as 1919-1921, or possibly even before the signing of the Treaty of Versailles.
On April 15, 1920, Victor Kopp, the
RSFSR's special representative to
Berlin, asked at the German Foreign Office whether "there was any possibility of combining the German and the
Red Army for a joint war on
Poland". This was yet another event at the start of military cooperation between the two countries, which ended before the German invasion of the Soviet Union on June 22, 1941.
By early 1921, a special group in the Reichswehr Ministry devoted to Soviet affairs,
Sondergruppe R, had been set up.
Weimar Germany's army had been limited to 100,000 men by the
Treaty of Versailles, which also forbade the Germans to have aircraft, tanks, submarines, heavy artillery, poison gas, anti-tank weapons or many anti-aircraft guns. A team of inspectors from the
League of Nations patrolled many German factories and workshops to ensure that these weapons were not being manufactured.
The
Treaty of Rapallo between Weimar Germany and the Soviet Union was signed by
German Foreign Minister Walther Rathenau and his Soviet colleague
Georgy Chicherin on April 16, 1922, during the
Genoa Economic Conference, annulling all mutual claims, restoring full diplomatic relations, and establishing the beginnings of close trade relationships, which made Weimar Germany the main trade and diplomatic partner of the Soviet Union. Rumors of a secret military supplement to the treaty soon spread. However, for a long time the consensus was that those rumors were wrong, and that Soviet-German military negotiations were independent of Rapallo and kept secret from the
German Foreign Ministry for some time. This point of view was later challenged. On November 5, 1922, six other Soviet republics, which would soon become part of the Soviet Union, agreed to adhere to the Treaty of Rapallo as well.
The Soviets offered Weimar Germany facilities deep inside the USSR for building and testing arms and for military training, well away from Treaty inspectors' eyes. In return, the Soviets asked for access to German technical developments, and for assistance in creating a
Red Army General Staff.
The first German officers went to the Soviet state for these purposes in March, 1922. One month later,
Junkers began building aircraft at
Fili, outside
Moscow, in violation of Versailles. The great artillery manufacturer
Krupp was soon active in the south of the USSR, near
Rostov-on-Don. In 1925, a flying school was established at Vivupal, near
Lipetsk, to train the first pilots for the future
Luftwaffe.
In the late 1920s, Germany helped Soviet industry begin to modernize, and to assist in the establishment of tank production facilities at the Leningrad
Bolshevik Factory and the
Kharkov Locomotive Factory.
The Soviets offered submarine-building facilities at a port on the
Black Sea, but this wasn't taken up. The
German Navy did take up a later offer of a base near
Murmansk, where German vessels could hide from the British. One of the vessels that participated in the invasion of Norway came from this base. During the Cold War, this base at
Polyarnyy (which had been built especially for the Germans) became the largest weapons store in the world.
Most of the documents pertaining to secret German-Soviet military cooperation were systematically destroyed in Germany. The Polish and French intelligence communities of the 1920s were remarkably well-informed regarding the cooperation. This did not, however, have any immediate effect upon German relations with other European powers. After the World War II, the papers of General Hans von Seeckt and memoirs of other German officers became available, and after the
collapse of the Soviet Union, a handful of Soviet documents regarding this were published.
Alongside the Soviet Union's military and economic assistance, there was also political backing for Germany's aspirations. On July 19, 1920, Victor Kopp told the German Foreign Office that Soviet Russia wanted "a common frontier with Germany, south of Lithuania, approximately on a line with Bialystok". In other words, Poland was to be partitioned once again. These promptings were repeated over the years, with the Soviets always anxious to stress that ideological differences between the two governments were of no account; all that mattered was that the two countries were pursuing the same foreign policy objectives.
On December 4, 1924, Victor Kopp, worried that the expected admission of Germany to the
League of Nations (Germany was finally admitted to the League in 1926) was an anti-Soviet move, offered German Ambassador
Ulrich Graf von Brockdorff-Rantzau to cooperate against the Second Polish Republic, and secret negotiations were sanctioned.
Also in 1925, Germany broke their European diplomatic isolation and took part in the
Locarno Treaties with
France and
Belgium, undertaking not to attack them. The
Soviet Union saw western
détente as potentially deepening its own political isolation in Europe, in particular by diminishing Soviet-German relationships. As Germany became less dependent on the Soviet Union, it became more unwilling to tolerate subversive
Comintern interference.
On April 24, 1926, Weimar Germany and the Soviet Union concluded another treaty (
Treaty of Berlin (1926)), declaring the parties' adherence to the Treaty of Rapallo and neutrality for five years. The treaty was signed by German Foreign Minister
Gustav Stresemann and Soviet ambassador
Nikolay Krestinsky. The treaty was perceived as an imminent threat by Poland (which contributed to the success of the
May Coup in Warsaw), and with caution by other European states regarding its possible effect upon Germany's obligations as a party to the
Locarno Agreements. France also voiced concerns in this regard in the context of Germany's expected membership in the League of Nations.
In 1928, the 9th Plenum of the Executive Committee of the
Comintern (international communist organization) and its 6th Congress in Moscow favored
Stalin's program over the line pursued by Comintern Secretary General
Nikolay Bukharin. Unlike Bukharin, Stalin believed that a deep crisis in western capitalism was imminent, and he denounced the cooperation of international communist parties with
social democratic movements, labelling them as
social fascists, and insisted on a far stricter subordination of international communist parties to the Comintern, that is, to Soviet leadership. The policy of the
Communist Party of Germany (KPD) under
Ernst Thälmann was altered accordingly. The relatively independent KPD of the early 1920s underwent an almost complete subordination to the
Soviet Union.
Relying on the foreign affairs doctrine pursued by the Soviet leadership in the 1920s, in his report of the
Central Committee to the 16th
Congress of the
All-Union Communist Party (b) on June 27, 1930,
Joseph Stalin welcomed the international destabilization and rise of political extremism among the capitalist powers.
The most intensive period of Soviet military collaboration with Weimar Germany was 1930-1932. On June 24, 1931, an extension of the 1926 Berlin Treaty was signed, though it wasn't until 1933 that it was ratified by the
Reichstag due to internal political struggles. Some Soviet mistrust arose during the
Lausanne Conference of 1932, when it was rumored that German Chancellor
Franz von Papen had offered French Prime Minister
Edouard Herriot a military alliance. The Soviets were also quick to develop their own relations with France and its main ally, Poland. This culminated in the conclusion of the
Soviet-Polish Non-Aggression Pact on July 25, 1932, and the Soviet-French non-aggression pact on November 29, 1932.
The conflict between the Communist Party of Germany and the
Social Democratic Party of Germany fundamentally contributed to the demise of the Weimar Republic. It is, however, disputed whether Hitler's seizure of power came as a surprise to the USSR. Some authors claim that Stalin deliberately aided Hitler's rise by directing the policy of the Communist Party of Germany on a suicidal course in order to foster an inter-imperialist war, a theory dismissed by many others.
The Soviet Union and Nazi Germany
Few questions concerning the origins of the
Second World War are as controversial as the issue of pre-war Soviet policy toward
Nazi Germany, especially due to the absence of a complete opening of the
Politburo,
Joseph Stalin's and
Vyacheslav Molotov's papers on foreign affairs. German documents pertaining to their relations were captured by the American and British armies in 1945, and published by the U.S.
Department of State shortly thereafter. In the Soviet Union and Russia, including in official speeches and historiography, Nazi Germany has generally been referred to as
Fascist Germany from 1933 until today.
Collective security and Soviets demands to occupy Baltic region
After
Adolf Hitler came to power on
January 301933, during the suppression of the
Communist Party of Germany, the Nazis at times took police measures against Soviet trade missions, companies, press representatives, and individual citizens in Germany. They also launched an anti-Soviet propaganda campaign coupled with a lack of good will in diplomatic relations, although the
German Foreign Ministry under
Konstantin von Neurath (foreign minister from 1932-1938) was vigorously opposed to the impending breakup. The second volume of Hitler's programmatic
Mein Kampf (which first appeared in 1926) called for
Lebensraum (living space for the German nation) in the east (mentioning Russia specifically), and out of his parochial prejudice, he presented the
Communists as Jews destroying a great nation (see also
Jewish Bolshevism). Such an imperialist quest, if implemented, would put a clear danger to the security of the Soviet Union.
Moscow's reaction to these steps of Berlin clearly aimed against the USSR was initially restrained with the exception of several tentative attacks on the National Socialist government in the Soviet press. However, as the heavy-handed anti-Soviet actions of the German government continued unabated, the Soviets unleashed their own propaganda campaign against the Nazis, but by May the possibility of conflict appeared to have receded. The 1931 extension to the Berlin Treaty was ratified in Germany on May 5. In August 1933, Molotov assured German ambassador
Herbert von Dirksen that Soviet-German relations would depend exclusively on the position of Germany towards the Soviet Union However, access to the three Reichswehr military training and testing sites (Lipetsk, Kama, and Tomka) was abruptly terminated by the Soviet Union in August-September 1933. Political understanding between the Soviet Union and Nazi Germany was finally broken by the
German-Polish Non-Aggression Pact of
January 261934 between Nazi Germany and the
Second Polish Republic.
Maxim Litvinov, who had been
People's Commissar for Foreign Affairs (Foreign Minister of the USSR) since 1930, perceived
Nazi Germany as the greatest threat. However, as the Red Army was perceived as not strong enough, and the USSR sought to avoid becoming embroiled in a general European war, he began pursuing a policy of
collective security, trying to contain Nazi Germany via cooperation with the
League of Nations and the Western Powers. The Soviet attitude to the
League of Nations and international peace had changed. In 1933-34 the Soviet Union was
diplomatically recognized for the first time by
Spain, the
United States,
Hungary,
Czechoslovakia,
Romania, and
Bulgaria, and ultimately joined the League of Nations in September 1934. It is often argued that the Soviet foreign policy change happened around 1933-34, and was triggered by Hitler's assumption of power. However, the Soviet turn towards the
French Third Republic in 1932, discussed above, could also have been a part of the policy change. On
May 21935, the five-year
Soviet-French Treaty of Mutual Assistance was signed. The ratification of the treaty by France was one reason why Hitler
remilitarized the Rhineland on
March 71936.
The 7th World Congress of the
Comintern in 1935 officially endorsed the
Popular Front strategy of forming broad alliances with parties willing to oppose the fascists, a policy pursued by the Communist parties since 1934.
Also in 1935, at the 7th
Congress of Soviets (in a study in contradiction), Molotov stressed the need for good relations with Berlin
On
November 251936,
Nazi Germany and
Imperial Japan concluded the
Anti-Comintern Pact, joined by
Fascist Italy in 1937.
In 1937, the last Soviet ambassador to Germany of Jewish origin, Yakov Surits, was replaced with an ethnic Russian.
Litvinov's strategy faced ideological and political obstacles. The Soviet Union continued to be perceived by the ruling class in
Great Britain as no less a threat than Nazi Germany (some felt that the USSR was the greater threat), not least for its policy of supporting the elected government in the
Spanish Civil War (1936-1939). At the same time, as the Soviet Union was blindly stumbling about in the midst of the
Great Purge, it wasn't perceived to be a valuable ally by the West.
Further complicating matters, the
purge of the People's Commissariat for Foreign Affairs, forced the Soviet Union to close down quite a number of embassies abroad.
Litvinov's policy of containing Germany via collective security failed utterly with the conclusion of the
Munich Agreement on
September 291938, when the Western democracies favored
self-determination of the
Sudetenland Germans over
Czechoslovakia's
territorial integrity, in defiance of the Soviet position. However, it's still disputed whether, even before Munich, the Soviet Union would actually have fulfilled its guarantees to Czechoslovakia, in the case of an actual German invasion resisted by France.
In April, 1938, Litvinov launched the triple alliance negotiations with the new British and French ambassadors, (
William Seeds, assisted by
William Strang, and
Paul-Emile Naggiar), in an attempt to contain Germany. However, for one reason or another, they were constantly dragged out and proceeded with major delays.
The Western powers believed that war could still be avoided and the USSR, much weakened by the purges, couldn't act as a main military participant. The USSR more or less disagreed with them on both issues, approaching the negotiations with caution because of the traditional hostility of the capitalist powers.The Soviet Union also engaged in secret talks with Nazi Germany, while conducting official ones with
United Kingdom and
France. From the beginning of the negotiations with France and Britain Soviet position demanded occupation of Latvia, Estonia and Lithuania . While Britain refused to allow Soviet Union to occupy countries demanded by Stalin seeing, Nazi German accepted the proposal All this could well have purely internal reasons, but it could also be a signal to Germany that the era of anti-German collective security was past, or a signal to the British and French that Moscow should be taken more seriously in the triple alliance negotiations and that it's ready for arrangements without the old baggage of collective security, or even both.
As evident from the German diplomatic correspondence, captured by the American and British armies in 1945 and later published, the reshuffle was warily perceived by Germany as a chance.
It is sometimes argued that Molotov continued the talks with Britain and France to stimulate the Germans into making an offer of a non-aggression treaty and that the triple alliance failed because of the Soviet determination to conclude a pact with Germany. Another existing point of view is that the strive for the triple alliance was sincere and that the Soviet government turned to Germany only when an alliance with the Western powers proved impossible.
Additional factors which drove the Soviet Union towards an understanding with Germany might be the signing of a non-aggression pact between Germany, Latvia and Estonia on
June 71939 and the threat from
Imperial Japan in the East with the
Battle of Khalkin Gol (May 11 – September 16, 1939). Molotov suggested that the Japanese attack might be inspired by Germany in order to hinder the conclusion of the Triple Alliance.
Molotov-Ribbentrop Pact
In July open Soviet-German trade negotiations were under way. On August 19, the
German-Soviet Trade Agreement was reached. On August 22 the secret political negotiations unearthed as well, as it was publicly announced in German newspapers that the Soviet Union and Nazi Germany were about to conclude a non-aggression pact, and the dragged Soviet Triple Alliance negotiations with France and Britain were suspended. The Soviets blamed on the Western powers their reluctance to take the Soviet Union's military assistance seriously and acknowledge the Soviet right to cross Poland and Romania if necessary against their will, as well as their failure to send representatives with more importance and clearly defined powers and the disagreement over the notion of
indirect aggression. On
August 231939, a German delegation headed by Foreign Minister
Joachim von Ribbentrop arrived to Moscow, and in the following night the
Molotov-Ribbentrop Pact was signed by him and his Soviet colleague
Vyacheslav Molotov, in the presence of Soviet leader
Joseph Stalin. The ten-year pact of
non-aggression declaring adherence to the
Treaty of Berlin (1926) was supplemented by a secret additional protocol, which divided Eastern Europe between the German and Soviet zones of influence:
1. In the event of a territorial and political rearrangement in the areas belonging to the Baltic States (Finland, Estonia, Latvia, Lithuania), the northern boundary of Lithuania shall represent the boundary of the spheres of influence of Germany and the U.S.S.R. In this connection the interest of Lithuania in the Vilna area is recognized by each party.
2. In the event of a territorial and political rearrangement of the areas belonging to the Polish state the spheres of influence of Germany and the U.S.S.R. shall be bounded approximately by the line of the rivers Narew, Vistula, and San.
The question of whether the interests of both parties make desirable the maintenance of an independent Polish state and how such a state should be bounded can only be definitely determined in the course of further political developments.
In any event both Governments will resolve this question by means of a friendly agreement.
3. With regard to Southeastern Europe attention is called by the Soviet side to its interest in Bessarabia. The German side declares its complete political disinterestedness in these areas.
This protocol shall be treated by both parties as strictly secret.
The protocol was rumoured to exist from the very beginning and was actually found after the capture of the German Foreign Office archives by the
United States in 1945. The Soviet Union, however, had officially denied its existence until 1989 and it wasn't mentioned in the
Soviet historiography. In retrospect the Soviet leadership was clearly embarrassed by it. The Russian originals, together with almost all associated documents, were transferred out of the archives of the Soviet Ministry of Foreign Affairs to one of Molotov's aides in 1946 and have never been found ever since. A copy of the Russian protocol was finally published in the Soviet Union in 1990.
Thus, the collective security doctrine was eventually abandoned. Some scholars argue that for a long time it was a sincere and unanimous position of the Soviet leadership, pursuing a purely defensive line, while others contend that from the very beginning the Soviet Union was aimed at the cooperation with Nazi Germany, collective security being merely tactical counter to some unfriendly German moves. However, it might well be the case that Moscow sought to avoid a great war in Europe because it was no strong enough to fight an offensive, but there was much disagreement over the policy between Litvinov and Molotov as to how to attain the goal, and Stalin balanced between their positions, starting pursuing both contradictory lines simultaneously quite early and abandoned collective security only at some point in 1939.
Nazi Germany started its quest for a pact with the Soviet Union at some point in the spring of 1939 in order to prevent an Anglo-Soviet-French alliance and secure Soviet neutrality in a future Polish-German war.
There are, however, many conflicting points of view in historiography as to when the Soviet side began to seek rapprochement and when the secret political negotiations started.
The rapprochement could start as early as in 1935-1936, when Soviet trade representative in Berlin
David Kandelaki made attempts at political negotiations on behalf of Stalin and Molotov, behind Litvinov's back. Molotov's speech to the Central Executive Committee of the
Supreme Soviet in January 1936 is usually taken to mark this change of policy. Thus, Litvinov's anti-German line didn't enjoy unanimous support by the Soviet leadership long before his dismissal.
Walter Krivitsky, an
NKVD agent, who defected in the Netherlands in 1937, reported in his memories in 1938 that already then Stalin had sought better relations with Germany. According to other historians, these were merely responses to German overtures for détente.
It is also possible that the change of foreign policy occurred in 1938, after the Munich Agreement, which became the final defeat of Litvinov's anti-German policy of collective security, which was marked by the reported remark about an inevitable fourth
partition of Poland made by Litvinov's deputy
Vladimir Potemkin in a conversation with French ambassador
Robert Coulondre shortly thereafter.
The turn towards Germany could also be made in early 1939, marked by Stalin's speech to the 18th
Congress of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union in March 1939, shortly after the
German occupation of Czechoslovakia, when he warned that the Western democracies were trying to provoke a conflict between Germany and the Soviet Union and declared the Soviet non-involvement in inter-capitalist quarrels, which is sometimes considered signal to Berlin.
According to others, the first sign of a serious Soviet-German political
détente was the conversation between Soviet ambassador Aleksey Merekalov and
Ernst von Weizsäcker,
State Secretary in the
German Foreign Ministry, on
April 171939, when the former hinted at possible improvement of the relations. This was followed by a series of perceived German signals of goodwill and replacement of Litvinov with Molotov.
Yet another, "
revisionist" point of view is that it wasn't until the end of July 1939 – August 1939 that the policy change occurred and that it was a consequence rather than a cause of the breakdown of the Anglo-Soviet-French triple alliance negotiations.
The pact was ratified by the
Supreme Council of the Soviet Union on
August 311939.
World War II
Polish campaign
A week after having signed the Molotov-Ribbentrop pact, on
September 11939, Nazi Germany invaded its zone of influence in Poland (see
Invasion of Poland (1939)). On September 3, Great Britain,
Australia,
New Zealand and
France, fulfilling their obligations to the
Second Polish Republic, declared war on Germany. The
Second World War broke out in Europe.
On September 4, as Britain blockaded Germany at sea, the German cargo sea shipping heading towards the German ports was diverted to the Soviet Arctic port of
Murmansk. On September 8 the Soviet side agreed to pass it by railway to the Soviet Baltic port of
Leningrad. At the same time the Soviet Union refused to allow a Polish transit through its territory citing the threat of being drawn into war on September 5.
Von der Schulenburg reported to Berlin that attacks on the conduct of Germany in the Soviet press had ceased completely and the portrayal of events in the field of foreign politics largely coincided with the German point of view, while anti-German literature had been removed from the trade.
On September 7 Stalin once again outlined a new line for the Comintern now based on the idea that the war was an inter-imperialist conflict and hence there was no reason for the working class to side with Britain, France or Poland against Germany, thus departing from the Comintern's anti-fascist
popular front policy of 1934-1939. He labeled Poland fascist state oppressing Belarusians and Ukrainians.
On September 8 Molotov prematurely congratulated the German government with the
entry of German troops into
Warsaw.
German diplomats had urged the Soviet Union to intervene against Poland from the east since the beginning of the war, but the Soviet Union was reluctant to intervene as Warsaw hadn't yet fallen. The Soviet decision to invade the eastern portions of Poland earlier agreed as the Soviet zone of influence was communicated to the German ambassador
Friedrich Werner von der Schulenburg on September 9, but the actual invasion was delayed for more than a week. The Polish intelligence became aware of the Soviet plans around September 12.
On September 17 the Soviet Union finally entered the Polish territories from the east (see
Soviet invasion of Poland (1939)), citing the collapse of the
Second Polish Republic and alleged help to the
Belorussian and
Ukrainian people as the pretext. It is usually considered direct result of the pact, although the revisionist school contends that this wasn't the case and that the Soviet decision was taken few weeks later. The Soviet move was denounced by Britain and France, but they didn't intervene. In an exchange of captured Polish territories in compliance with the terms of the protocol, already on September 17 the
Red Army and
Wehrmacht held a joint military parade in
Brest, transferred by Germany to the Soviet troops. In the following battles with the rest of the Second Polish Republic's army the Soviet Union occupied the territories roughly corresponding to its sphere of interests, as defined in the secret additional protocol to the Molotov-Ribbentrop Pact.
On September 25, when Hitler was still going to proceed to Lithuania, the Soviet Union proposed to renegotiate the spheres of interest. On
September 281939 in Moscow Molotov and Ribbentrop signed the German-Soviet Boundary and Friendship Treaty, determining the boundary of their respective national interests in the territory of the former Polish state. In a secret supplementary protocol to the treaty the spheres of interest outside Poland were renegotiated, and in exchange for some already captured portions of the Polish territory Germany acknowledged still independent Lithuania part of the Soviet zone.
The territory of Poland had been completely occupied by the two powers by October 6, and the Polish state was liquidated. In early November the
Supreme Council of the Soviet Union annexed the
occupied territories and the Soviet Union shared a common border with Nazi Germany, the Nazi-occupied Polish territories and Lithuania for the first time.
After the invasion, the cooperation was visible for example in the four
Gestapo-NKVD Conferences, where
the occupants discussed plans for dealing with the
Polish resistance movement and further destruction of Poland.
Further development
On
September 141939, the Polish submarine
ORP Orzeł reached
Tallinn,
Estonia. At the insistence of Germany, the Estonian authorities
interned the crew, yet the submarine managed to escape, creating the
'Orzeł incident' on September 18, the day after the Soviet Union invaded Poland. In response, on September 19 the Soviet Union questioned Estonia's neutrality, and Molotov declared that the submarine would be searched for by the Soviet navy all over the Baltic, including in Estonian waters.
The Soviets continued taking over their sphere of interest. Having concentrated troops along the borders and threatening the Baltic states with imminent military invasion, the Soviet Union issued ultimatums demanding that Estonia, Latvia, and Lithuania allow the stationing of Soviet troops and the installation of Soviet military bases in each nation on September 24, October 2 and October 3, 1939, respectively. Each was also to conclude mutual assistance pacts with the Soviet Union. Nazi Germany advised them to accept the conditions. The Baltic states acceded to the Soviet demands and signed mutual assistance treaties on September 28, October 5, and October 10, 1939, respectively (for ten years for Estonia and Latvia and fifteen years for Lithuania). In exchange, Lithuania got received the area of
Vilno annexed by Poland in 1920. On October 18, October 29, and November 3, 1939, the first Soviet troops entered Estonia, Latvia, and Lithuania.
The last negotiations with
Finland had been initiated by the Soviet side as part of its collective security policy in April 1938, and aimed to reach an understanding and to secure a favorable Finnish position in case of a German attack on the Soviet Union through Finnish territory, but this had proven futile due to the Finnish reluctance to break neutrality, and negotiations ended in April 1939, shortly before Litvinov's dismissal.
On October 13, 1939 new negotiations started in Moscow, and the Soviet Union (represented by Stalin, Molotov, and Vladimir Potyomkin) presented Finland with proposals including a mutual assistance pact, the lease of the military base of
Hanko, and the secession of a 70km-deep area on the
Karelian Isthmus located immediately to the north of the city of
Leningrad to the Soviet Union, in exchange for border lands further to the north. Finland, however, refused to accept the offer, withdrew from negotiations on November 7, 1939, and continued preparations for a possible Soviet invasion. On November 26, the Soviet Union staged the
shelling of Mainila near the border, accused Finnish troops of the provocation and requesting their withdrawal. In turn, on November 27 Finland requested a withdrawal of troops of both nations from the border area. On November 28, the Soviet Union denounced the 1932
Soviet-Finnish Non-Aggression Pact, and on November 29 broke off diplomatic relations with Finland. On
November 30,
1939, forces of the USSR under the command of
Kliment Voroshilov attacked Finland in what became known as the
Winter War, starting with the invasion of
Finnish Karelia and
bombing civilian boroughs of
Helsinki. On December 1, 1939, the puppet socialist government of the
Finnish Democratic Republic was established under the auspices of the Soviet Union in the border town of
Terijoki. On December 14 the Soviet Union was expelled from the
League of Nations for waging a
war of aggression. After presiding over the disastrous start of the campaign, and a disproportionally heavy death toll of Red Army soldiers, Voroshilov was replaced by
Semyon Timoshenko as the commander of the front on
January 71940 (and four months later as People's Commissar for Defense). In mid-February, 1940, Soviet troops finally managed to broke through the
Mannerheim Line, and Finland sought an armistice.
The
Moscow Peace Treaty was signed on March 12, 1940, and at noon the following day the fighting ended. Finland ceded the
Karelian Isthmus and
Ladoga Karelia, part of
Salla and
Kalastajasaarento, and leased the
Hanko naval base to the USSR, but remained a neutral state, albeit increasingly leaning toward Germany (see
Interim Peace).
The consequences of the conflict were multiplex. While the invasion revealed the striking military weaknesses of the Red Army and prompted the Soviet Union to reorganize its military forces, and it gained new territories, it pushed neutral Finland towards an accommodation with Nazi Germany, and it dealt yet another blow to the international prestige of the USSR.
Suffering disproportionally high losses compared to the Finnish troops, despite a fourfold Soviet superiority in troops and nearly absolute superiority in heavy weapons and aircraft, the Red Army appeared an easy target, which contributed to Hitler's decision to plan an attack against the Soviet Union.
However, Nazi Germany was engaged in their conflict with the West in 1940. On April 9, 1940, Germany invaded
Denmark and
Norway. On May 15, the
Netherlands capitulated. By June 2, Germany had occupied
Belgium. On June 14, Wehrmacht entered
Paris. On June 22, France surrendered.
At the same time, the Soviet Union was discontented with the Baltic states leaning toward Britain and France, the so-called
Baltic Entente dating back to 1934, which could potentially be reoriented toward Germany, and considered it a violation of the mutual-assistance treaties of the autumn of 1939. On May 25, 1940, after several Soviet soldiers had disappeared from Soviet garrisons in Lithuania, Molotov accused
Kaunas of provocations. On June 14, People's Commissar of Defence Timoshenko ordered a complete blockade of Estonia, Latvia, and Lithuania. The Soviet air force shot down a Finnish passenger plane
Kaleva heading from
Tallinn towards
Helsinki. Shortly before midnight, Molotov presented Lithuania with a ten-hour ultimatum, demanding the replacement of the Lithuanian government with a pro-Soviet one and free access for additional Soviet troops, threatening the country with immediate occupation otherwise.
Lithuanian President
Antanas Smetona insisted on armed resistance, but wasn't supported by the military leadership, so Lithuania acceded to the ultimatum. The government was reshuffled and additional Soviet troops entered Lithuania.
Vladimir Dekanozov was sent to Kaunas as the Soviet special envoy. The following night, Smetona fled to Germany (and later to Switzerland, and then to the United States). On June 16, Molotov presented similar ultimatums to Latvia and Estonia, citing Soviet concerns over the Baltic Entente, and they acceded as well. At the same time, the Wehrmacht started concentrating along the Lithuanian border. On June 17, additional Soviet troops
occupied Estonia and Latvia. Soviet envoys
Andrey Vyshinsky and
Andrey Zhdanov arrived in Latvia and Estonia to supervise the process on June 18 and June 19. New pro-Soviet governments were formed in Latvia and Estonia under
Augusts Kirhenšteins and
Johannes Vares on June 20 and 21st. By June 21 relocation of Soviet troops to all three countries had been completed.
The British historians Alan S. Milward and W. Medicott show that Nazi Germany--unlike Imperial Germany--was prepared only for a short war (
Blitzkrieg). According to Andreas Hillgruber, without the necessary supplies from the USSR and strategic security in the East, Germany couldn't have succeeded in the West. Had the Soviet Union joined the Anglo-French blockade, the German war economy would have soon collapsed. With its own raw materials as of September 1939, Germany could have only been supplied for mere 9 to 12 months.
From the start of the war until Germany invaded the Soviet Union less than two years later, Stalin supplied Hitler with 1.5 million tons of oil, the same quantity of grain, and many thousands of tons of rubber, timber, phosphates, iron, and other valuable metal ores, particularly chromium, manganese, and platinum. At the time of the invasion, Nazi Germany was heavily in debt to the Soviet Union. Russian historians dispute the importance of the Soviet Union's trade with Germany. They point out that in mid-1941 Germany's oil resources totalled 10 million tons: of these 500,000 were produced in Germany proper, 800,000 by the countries occupied by Germany, and 8,700,000 tons by Germany's European allies, with Romania accounting for the bulk of this amount.
According to Mr. Rapoport, "one of Stalin's first gifts to the Nazis was to turn over some 600 German Communists, most of them Jews, to the Gestapo at Brest-Litovsk in German-occupied Poland.”. The Soviets also offered support to the Nazis in official statements,
Stalin himself emphasized that it was the Anglo-French alliance that had attacked Germany, not the other way around, and Molotov affirmed that Germany had made peace efforts, which had been turned down by 'Anglo-French imperialists'.
By annexing Poland and the Baltic States, Nazi Germany and the Soviet Union eliminated the
buffer states between them and magnified the threat of war
Volksdeutsche in the Soviet Union
Ethnic Germans in Soviet Russia of the 1920s enjoyed a certain degree of cultural autonomy, had their own national districts and
Volga German Autonomous Soviet Socialist Republic (Volga German ASSR), schools and newspapers, in compliance with the policy of
national delimitation in the Soviet Union.
In September 1929, discontented with the reintroduction of
coercive grain requisitions and
collectivization of agriculture, several thousand of Soviet peasants of German descent (mostly
Mennonites) convened in
Moscow, demanding
exit visas to emigrate to
Canada, provoking a significant political scandal in Germany, which soured Soviet-German relations. The charity "Brothers in Need" was established in Germany to raise money for the Soviet Germans, President
Paul von Hindenburg himself donated 200 thousand
Reichsmarks of his money for that purpose. The Soviet government first permitted 5,461 Germans to emigrate, but then deported the remaining 9,730 back to their original places of residence. However, throughout 1930, efforts were still being put
by the Soviet government into increasing the number and quality of German national institutions in the Soviet Union.
The first mass arrests and show trials specifically targeting Soviet Germans (those who were considered
counter-revolutionaries) occurred in the Soviet Union during the 1933
Ukrainian terror. However, with the
Central Committee of the All-Union Communist Party (b)'s decree of
November 51934, the domestic anti-German campaign took on all-union dimensions.
In 1933-1934, a campaign was launched in Germany to help Soviet
Volksdeutsche during the
famine by sending food packets and money
Deeply concerned over cross-border ethnic ties of national minorities (such as Germans, Poles, Finns), in 1934 the Soviet Union decided to create new
border security zone along its western border, and in 1935-1937 potentially disloyal nationalities (including German) were mostly (albeit not completely) deported from this strip of land to the inner parts of the Soviet Union by
NKVD. German national institutions were gradually abolished
In 1937-1938
NKVD conducted mass operations "for the destruction of espionage and sabotage contingents" (known as
National operations of NKVD) among
diaspora nationalities against both Soviet and foreign citizens (resulting in arrest and usually execution), including
German operation of the NKVD against Germans, in fact indiscriminately targeting national minorities in that important campaign of the
Great Terror. Concurrently all German and other diaspora national districts and schools in the Soviet Union except the
Volga German ASSR and German schools within that republic were abolished.
The Soviet government had made a prior decision to evacuate the entire population of German origin in case of German invasion, which was immediately implemented after the actual invasion by
forcibly transferring 1.2 million citizens of German origin from
European Russia to
Siberia and Soviet Central Asia
Soviet ambassadors (chargés) to Berlin
German ambassadors to Moscow
Wilhelm Mirbach (1918)
Karl Helfferich
Kurt Wiedenfeld
Ulrich Graf von Brockdorff-Rantzau (1922-1928)
Herbert von Dirksen (1928-1933)
Rudolf Nadolny (1933-1934)
Friedrich Werner von der Schulenburg (1934-1941)Further Information
Get more info on 'Soviet-german Relations Before 1941'.
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