The Soviet government was incapable
of establishing their power for a length of time, which gave rise
to the Russian Civil War. As early as December 1917, the Don Cossacks,
irritated by the Bolshevik land policy, resorted to arms supporting
the armies collected by the anti-revolutionists, the so-called
white generals, A.M. Kaledin and L. KornilovThe Entente Powers
too, found it necessary to protect their interests in the Russian
territory. They brought troops to different parts of the country
(intervention policy), and tried to interfere in the internal
affairs of Russia. The western navy arrived at the coast of Murmansk
in March 1918, and in June 1918 a British-French-American expedition
took possession of Murmansk, later in August of Arkangel. The
formal reason given, was to maintain the stocks of the western
powers in northern Russia, but the actual purpose was to support
the Russian whites with small but efficient troops in order to
give them a chance to unite their groups, dispersed in the north
and south, and to defeat the Bolshevik government. The Muurmann
Legion, assembled from former Finnish reds, and comparable Karelian
detachments joined in as well. In the south, Georgia, Armenia
and Azerbaidzan declared independence in April and May, 1918.
At the beginning of 1918, the
Soviet government abolished the old imperial army, dating back
to Tsardom, and formed the Red Army in its place, first from volunteers,
later on the basis of conscription. Some ex-officers were recruited
as trainers, but in reality the command was often in the hands
of the revolutionary commissars. Lev Trotski made his mark as
the organizer of the red army.
When the enemy was approaching
Moscow, which the Soviet government had made the capital instead
of the threatened St Petersburg, from all directions, Lenin ordered
the overthrown Tsar Nicholas and his family to be executed in
Jekaterinburg. The bolsheviks resorted to red terrorism, and their
adversaries to white terrorism. The Civil War was to be cruel
and fatal for many. Approximately one million men were killed
and six and a half million wounded in the battles of the Civil
War during the years 1918-1922.
At the beginning of the war in
1918, the influence of the German occupation army regulated the
events on the western border areas of the Russian Empire, but
when the Germans were forced to admit defeat in the World War
in November 1918, they withdrew their troops also from the territories
of the former Russian Empire. The Baltic countries struggling
for independence were liberated, but soon became targets of Soviet
attacks.
In Poland, Jozef Pilsudskis
government took power with the aim of reaching the old frontiers
of 1772. This plan met with success as regards areas under German
and Austrian control, but in the east, owing to the disputes between
Poland and Soviet Russia, an undeclared war broke out (January
- November 1919) after Russia had occupied Vilna, the bone of
contention between Poland and Lithuania. The Poles were advancing
towards the east.
In Ukraine, the socialist leader
Simon Petljura overthrew the government of general Pavel Skoropadski
after the departure of the Germans. The Ukrainian troops took
possession of Galicia and established the republic of West-Ukraine.
Only half a year later, in May 1919, they were, however, forced
to yield the area to Poland. The Bolsheviks in their turn occupied
Kiev on 3 February, 1919, and Odessa, which the French had kept
in their possession for half a year, on 8 April, 1919.
The major battles of the Civil
War were fought in southern Russia and Ukraine. In January 1919,
general Anton Denikin drove the Bolsheviks out of Caucasia. He
became Commander-in-Chief of the whites, after Kaledin had died
in February and Kornilov in April, 1919. Denikin was also backed
by P.N. Krasnov, the ataman of the cossacks. In May 1919, the
white Russian troops attacked in the north, in the Baltic area
in the north-west (general Nikolai Judenits), in the south-west
(Denikin), in Caucasia in the south (general Pjotr Wrangel) and
in the east.
In Siberia, the white Admiral
Aleksandr Koltshak had been the "highest Russian authority"
since November 1918, but his troops were forced to gradually retreat
as early as the beginning of 1919, despite English, French and
Japanese support. Since June 1918, a legion consisting of approximately
100,000 Czech war prisoners had been active in Siberia. Their
purpose was to secure a safe journey back home by way of Vladivostok.
The legion had seized the control of the Siberian railway, and
gave their support to Koltshak.
The governments of the border
powers (Finland, Estonia, Latvia, Lithuania, Poland, Ukraine etc.),
which had recently gained independence, would have been natural
allies of the white Russians. But as the white Russians were still
aiming at maintaining the frontiers of the old Russian Empire,
the governments of these countries did not want to get involved
in battles outside their own borders. Consequently, Judenitsh,
among others, could look for no support from Finland, and the
white generals were incapable of coordinating their offensives.
Their cooperation failed, whereas the Soviet troops could be rapidly
transferred from one front to another.
After Koltshak had been forced
to retreat from the Ural in early 1919, the reds attacked towards
the Black Sea in October. At that point, Judenitsh with his army
attacked from Estonia to the outskirts of St Petersburg, but Trotski
managed to drive the whites back to Estonia. At the same time,
the whites in the south withdrew to the coastal areas of the Black
Sea. In the direction of Siberia, Koltshak lost control of the
situation in late 1919.
In December 1919, the leaders
of the Western Allies defined the so-called Curzon line as the
eastern border of Poland, approximately at the level of the River
Bug. This did not satisfy Poland, and she commenced war to defend
her old areas. The troops of Pilsudski, supported by the Ukrainians
of Petljura, occupied Kiev in May 1920, but as early as June and
July they were forced to retreat as far as Warsaw under the pressure
of the Soviet troops commanded by M.N. Tuhatsevski. The maintenance
and supply system of the Soviet troops had, however, met with
difficulties during the large operations, and Pilsudski managed
to break their resistance in August 1920, and force them to retire
as far as the Grodnon-Brest Litovsk-Wlodawan line. In September
and October, the Poles staged a further offensive in front of
Minsk. The Armistice was concluded in October1920, and the Riga
Peace Treaty in March 1921. Russia consented to the territorial
claims of Poland. Ukraine joined the Soviet states late in 1920.
Hostilities began between Poland and Lithuania, when Poland took
possession of the disputed Vilna in October 1920. This war continued
inactively until December 1927.
As there seemed to be an imminent
danger that Japan would expand to eastern Siberia, the United
States sent troops to Vladivostok in August 1918, "to protect
the departure of the Czechs." The Czechs were now finally
able to leave after fighting against both red and white Russians.
The U.S. troops kept guard over the Siberian railway from Baikal
to Vladivostok, but did not participate in the battles against
the Bolsheviks.
From northern Russia, the western
troops departed during autumn 1919 (August through November).
The whites withdrew from southern Russia in March 1920, leaving
only a minor detachment under the command of Wrangel on the Crimea.
As the Soviet troops were engaged in battles against Poland, Wrangel
made one more attack towards the north in June 1920. At the close
of the Polish War, the Bolsheviks drove Wrangels troops
out of the Crimea in November 1920, and later out of Russia. The
U.S. troops left Vladivostok in April 1920 and the Japanese finally
in October 1922. The Soviet regime remained in Russia.