Polish-Soviet War

Polish-Soviet War

Polish–Soviet War

1919

  • Target Vistula
  • Bereza Kartuska
  • Pińsk
  • Lida
  • Vilna
  • Minsk
  • 1st Berezina
  • Daugavpils

1920

  • Latyczów
  • Mozyr
  • Korosteń
  • Koziatyn
  • 2nd Berezina
  • Kiev
  • Wołodarka
  • Głębokie
  • Mironówka
  • Olszanica
  • Żywotów
  • Miedwiedówka
  • Dziunków
  • Wasylkowce
  • Bystrzyk
  • 1st Brześć
  • 1st Grodno
  • 1st Niemen
  • Boryspol
  • Auta
  • Dubno
  • Kobryn
  • Łomża
  • Brody
  • Dęblin
  • Nasielsk
  • Serock
  • Radzymin
  • Ossów
  • Warsaw
  • Płock
  • Wkra
  • Cyców
  • Ciechanów
  • Lwów
  • Zadwórze
  • Mława
  • Białystok
  • Komarów
  • Dytiatyn
  • 2nd Niemen
  • 2nd Grodno
  • 2nd Brześć
  • Mołodeczno
  • 2nd Minsk
Polish–Russian Wars
  • Muscovite/Lithuanian
  • Livonian
  • 1605–18 (Dymitriads)
  • Smolensk
  • 1654–67
  • War of the Polish Succession
  • War of the Bar Confederation
  • 1792
  • Napoleon's Invasion of Russia
  • Kościuszko Uprising
  • November Uprising
  • January Uprising
  • Polish/Soviet
  • 1939
Establishment of Second Polish Republic
Greater Poland (1918–19) – Ukraine (1918–19) – Against Soviets (1919–21) – Czechoslovakia (1919) – Sejny (1919) – Upper Silesia (1919–1921) – Lithuania (1920)
Russian Civil War
  • October Revolution
  • Southern Front
  • Eastern Front
  • Northern Front
  • Siberia
  • Ukraine
  • Finland
  • Finnic peoples
  • Estonia
  • Latvia
  • Lithuania
  • Ukraine
  • Poland
  • Ossetia
  • Georgia
  • Armenia and Azerbaijan
  • Left-wing uprisings against the Bolsheviks
  • Tambov
  • Yakutia
  • Basmachi

The Polish–Soviet War (February 1919 – March 1921) was an armed conflict between Soviet Russia and Soviet Ukraine against the Second Polish Republic and the Ukrainian People's Republic over the control of what is present day Ukraine and parts of present day Belarus and at some point also for the existence of Poland as an independent state.

Poland's Chief of State, Józef Piłsudski, felt the time was right to expand Polish borders as far east as feasible, to be followed by a Polish-led Intermarum federation of East-Central-European states as a bulwark against the re-emergence of German and Russian imperialisms. Lenin, meanwhile, saw Poland as the bridge the Red Army had to cross to assist other communist movements and bring about other European revolutions. By 1919, Polish forces had taken control of much of Western Ukraine, emerging victorious from the Polish–Ukrainian War. The West Ukrainian People's Republic, led by Yevhen Petrushevych, had tried unsuccessfully to create a Ukrainian state on territories to which both Poles and Ukrainians laid claim. At the same time in the Russian part of Ukraine Symon Petliura tried to defend and strengthen the Ukrainian People's Republic, but as the Bolsheviks began to gain the upper hand in the Russian Civil War, they started to advance westward towards the disputed Ukrainian territories causing Petliura's forces to retreat to Podolia. By the end of 1919 a clear front had formed as Petliura decided to ally with Piłsudski. Border skirmishes escalated into open warfare following Piłsudski's major incursion further east into Ukraine in April 1920. The Polish offensive was met by an initially successful Red Army counterattack. The Soviet operation threw the Polish forces back westward all the way to the Polish capital, Warsaw, while the Directorate of Ukraine fled to Western Europe. Meanwhile, Western fears of Soviet troops arriving at the German frontiers increased the interest of Western powers in the war. In midsummer, the fall of Warsaw seemed certain but in mid-August the tide had turned again as the Polish forces achieved an unexpected and decisive victory at the Battle of Warsaw. In the wake of the Polish advance eastward, the Soviets sued for peace and the war ended with a ceasefire in October 1920.

A formal peace treaty, the Peace of Riga, was signed on 18 March 1921, dividing the disputed territories between Poland and Soviet Russia. The war largely determined the Soviet–Polish border for the period between the World Wars. Much of the territory ceded to Poland in the Treaty of Riga became part of the Soviet Union after World War II, when Poland's eastern borders were redefined by the Allies in close accordance with the British-drawn Curzon Line of 1920.

Read more about Polish-Soviet War:  Names and Dates, Prelude, Historical Assessment

Famous quotes containing the word war:

    Today we know that World War II began not in 1939 or 1941 but in the 1920’s and 1930’s when those who should have known better persuaded themselves that they were not their brother’s keeper.
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