How The Poles Tried To Cheat Stalin And What Came Of It - Alternative View

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How The Poles Tried To Cheat Stalin And What Came Of It - Alternative View
How The Poles Tried To Cheat Stalin And What Came Of It - Alternative View

Video: How The Poles Tried To Cheat Stalin And What Came Of It - Alternative View

Video: How The Poles Tried To Cheat Stalin And What Came Of It - Alternative View
Video: Колыма - родина нашего страха / Kolyma - Birthplace of Our Fear 2024, May
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On August 1, 1944, the Warsaw Uprising, which lasted for two months, began, organized against the Germans and … the Russians by armed supporters of the Polish government in exile, hoping to create an anti-Russian regime in Poland with the help of the Red Army.

The Warsaw Uprising (August 1 - October 2, 1944), initiated by the Polish government in exile in London, is unique in the last war. Because militarily it was directed against the Germans, and politically - against the Russians. The adventure of the Home Army (AK), which sought to restore in Poland the regime that was there before World War II and, together with the Nazis, was preparing a failed attack on the USSR, ended naturally. Not coordinated with the Red Army, unable to force the Vistula on a wide front immediately after the completion of the epic offensive in Belarus, Eastern Poland and Western Ukraine, it led to the complete destruction of Warsaw during the fighting of the rebels with the Wehrmacht and SS troops, the death of tens of thousands of rebels and civilians.

What were they counting on?

The Polish government in exile in London, as is generally inherent in the Poles, stubbornly refused to come to terms with reality. And it was as follows. Back in 1943, in Tehran, the USSR, the United States and Great Britain agreed that Poland would be in the Soviet zone of influence and would be liberated from the Germans by the Red Army. The Western "democracies" made this deal with Moscow not out of a good life - they could not defeat Hitler without Stalin. Moreover, Poland for them was just a pawn on a large chessboard.

The creator of Poland within today's borders is Joseph Stalin
The creator of Poland within today's borders is Joseph Stalin

The creator of Poland within today's borders is Joseph Stalin.

There are indirect signs that US President Franklin Roosevelt deliberately assigned the Poles, without asking their consent, to the Soviet camp, knowing that they would be the weakest link there and would one day break it up. This is exactly what happened, and partly, by the way, is being repeated now with the European Union. Stalin did not foresee the future so clearly, but he was not going to allow any amateur performance in Poland, hoping to make her an ally of Moscow thanks to generous territorial donations at the expense of Germany. To this also exclude a future joint German-Polish campaign to the East.

Polish political prisoners in London and non-communist partisans operating in Poland, especially the Home Army, had their own small-town plans for the future. They wanted to independently liberate some part of Poland, preferably a large city like Vilna, Lvov or Warsaw, present their partisan formations as a regular army and become the new government, graciously allowing the "Soviets" to shed their blood in battles with the Germans on Polish soil. And in case of Moscow's disagreement with the emergence of a hostile government in Poland, it will turn its weapons against the Soviet soldiers. The latter, in fact, has already begun to occur in the eastern regions of Poland after the common enemy, the Germans, were expelled from there by the Red Army.

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Within the framework of this scheme, well known to Moscow, the Warsaw Uprising was conceived. What did not work out in Lvov and Vilna should have happened in the capital of Poland itself. The rebels also had plans to involve the Western allies of the USSR on anti-Soviet soil, especially the British, in this adventure by somehow landing the 1st Polish paratrooper brigade in Warsaw. The illusory nature of these plans, rejected by the British and Americans, was for some reason not obvious to the Pilsudski successors.

Operation Storm

The armed uprising in Warsaw, prepared by the Home Army, the exact date of which Polish politicians in London left to the discretion of its leadership, began when the Red Army appeared on the outskirts of Warsaw. It seemed to the Poles that the Germans were fleeing and they could no longer wait. Meanwhile, the Nazis considered Warsaw to be Berlin's "shield" and threw large forces towards the city, including tank forces. And the Soviet troops, thinned out in a month and a half of continuous offensive battles, firing ammunition, detached from the supply bases and mortally tired, like the allied Polish forces helping them, were completely unable to successfully form the Vistula on the move and capture the entire city.

During the Warsaw Uprising, the rebels managed to capture only parts of the city that were not heavily guarded by the Germans
During the Warsaw Uprising, the rebels managed to capture only parts of the city that were not heavily guarded by the Germans

During the Warsaw Uprising, the rebels managed to capture only parts of the city that were not heavily guarded by the Germans.

The Red Army had several bridgeheads on the "German" bank of the great Polish river in other places, around which fierce fighting broke out, because the Nazis were determined to throw them into the water. The "Home Army", in fact, was not going to help the Soviet troops to force the Vistula in the Warsaw region. As partisans armed mostly with light weapons, her fighters were not capable of this. Their task was to gain a foothold in urban areas, where the Wehrmacht and SS punishers, among whom were also Soviet traitors, found it difficult to use tanks. They assumed three or four days to fight with the Germans, who, as the insurgents assumed, had to retreat. And then - to prepare for the arrival of representatives of the émigré government (recognized by the USSR, the Polish Committee for National Liberation, London leaders and the "Home Army" did not recognize) and become the new government.

Why did they lose?

Problems for the insurgents, who numbered about 40 thousand people, began when the Germans promptly pulled up troops and began to suppress the uprising, and the Soviets did not have the opportunity to effectively attack on this sector of the front, despite the demands of the uprising leadership to help with an “immediate attack from outside”. Western allies planted weapons, ammunition and foodstuffs to the rebels, which were dropped by parachutes. The Red Army helped with artillery fire from the opposite bank of the Vistula. Attempts by the Soviet and Polish units from the 1st Army of the Polish Army to gain a foothold on the other bank of a wide river within the boundaries of Warsaw were naturally unsuccessful.

It is difficult to shake off the impression, however, that Stalin, mindful of the "miracle on the Vistula" in 1920, was cautious and did not want to run errands for the London and Warsaw adventurers. But even so, it was really impossible to carry out an objectively serious offensive operation in those conditions.

After the honorary surrender, the participants in the Warsaw Uprising became prisoners of war who were spared
After the honorary surrender, the participants in the Warsaw Uprising became prisoners of war who were spared

After the honorary surrender, the participants in the Warsaw Uprising became prisoners of war who were spared.

After two months of stubborn battles, the "Home Army", which had occupied some areas of the city, having not achieved either military or political goals, surrendered. 17 thousand rebels were killed and the same number surrendered, about 10 thousand were injured. The civilian population died many times more during the fighting. The Nazis did not suffer serious losses.

Old friends

The leader of the uprising, General Tadeusz Komarovsky, a former Austrian officer who fought on the Russian front in World War I, achieved good conditions for his people. The Germans treated the soldiers of the Home Army as prisoners of war, and not as "bandits" to be shot on the spot. On the German side, negotiations for surrender were conducted by an old friend of Komarovsky - SS Obergruppenführer (General) Erich von dem Bach, whose real name was Zelevsky. This Pole, or rather a Kashubian, knew Komarovsky well before the war, including on the basis of equestrian sports. After all, Poland and Germany were then the closest allies, warmly sympathized with each other, adopting each other's punitive experience, participated in the partition of Czechoslovakia and were preparing for a joint campaign to the East. Figures like Komarovsky and hoped to gain power in Poland after the war,for the liberation from the Germans in which a total of 600 thousand Soviet soldiers and officers will die. And it would be really stupid to help them a lot in this.

Summing up

Thus, the Warsaw Uprising of 1944 was not only a military defeat, but also a huge political catastrophe for the Polish émigré government in London, as well as the “Home Army” targeting power. It greatly weakened their positions, as a result of which the emigrant government remained in emigration, and a regime friendly to Russia appeared in Poland for almost half a century.

It is not surprising that from the first days of the Warsaw Uprising, Moscow was accused of not helping him, and then of the fact that it failed. This was done by its organizers in order to evade responsibility for the complete destruction of Warsaw, to get away from guilt for the senseless death of tens of thousands of people. Then another propaganda front was opened against the USSR, on which the current Polish authorities are displaying hyperactivity today. They recoup the victors of Nazism and the saviors of the Poles from national destruction by demolishing Soviet war memorials and falsifying history, which, which no one should forget, tends to repeat itself if the correct conclusions are not drawn from it.

Latyshev Sergey

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