Free Republic
Browse · Search
News/Activism
Topics · Post Article

Skip to comments.

Communism’s First Defeat
Frontpagemagazine ^ | Aug 14, 2020 | John Radzilowski

Posted on 08/14/2020 7:25:30 AM PDT by SJackson

A century ago a citizen army stopped a Soviet takeover of Europe.

Communism arose in a time of pandemic and war. In 1918, the Bolshevik party led by V. I. Lenin seized control of Russia amid a world numbed by the slaughter of a world war and the seemingly unstoppable spread of influenza. Promising a utopia of equality, the communist message proved seductive to many in Europe and America. In the summer of 1920, having defeated his most serious internal foes, Lenin decided to launch a full-scale invasion of Europe to spread communism all across the continent.

Soviet communism proved anything but a utopian “worker’s paradise.” The Bolsheviks brutally eliminated their political opponents on both left and right, sparking a four-year civil war that killed several million people in Russia and neighboring lands. Tsarist autocracy had a justified reputation for cruelty and in the half century preceding the Revolution, it had executed almost 6000 people and exiled tens of thousands to Siberia. Yet in just four years, Lenin’s communist regime carried out at least thirty times as many death sentences, not counting hundreds of thousands murdered in extrajudicial killings. Despite this, support for the Soviets in the West grew as left-wing groups mobilized to help the Bolsheviks abroad and imitate their success at home.

By early 1920, White armies were in full retreat and Western resolve to oppose communism faded. To Russia’s west, Germany’s defeat and Austria-Hungary’s collapse allowed the emergence of newly independent nations from Finland to Hungary. As long as White armies had posed a threat to the Bolshevik regime, Lenin had been content to let these new countries alone. Now, with a reorganized and victorious Red Army numbering over 5 million he turned his eyes West. His main objective was Germany. The birthplace of Karl Marx had been disrupted by revolts and unrest and had one of Europe’s strongest communist movements. Germany appeared ripe for revolution that could be easily achieved with the help of the Red Army. In the spring of 1920, the Soviets issued orders for a massive western offensive.

To reach central Europe, however, the Red Army would first have to overrun newly independent Poland which recovered its independence in 1918 after 123 years of foreign subjugation. With its economy and infrastructure wrecked by four years of war and occupation, Poland was in rough shape and its situation was made even worse by widespread famine and epidemics of influenza and typhus. Its leader, socialist Józef Piłsudski, saw a resurgent Russia under Lenin as his country’s greatest threat and tried without success to create a confederation with the Baltic States and Ukraine to resist communist expansion. Despite this, the Poles were determined to resist Soviet invasion.

As the Red Army began to transfer forces west for its push into Europe, Piłsudski decided on a pre-emptive attack, sending the Polish Army into Ukraine. His plan was to drive out the Red Army and create an independent Ukraine under Symon Petliura that would be a bulwark against the Reds. At first the attack seemed to succeed, and the Reds abandoned Kiev in early May. But the Poles failed to destroy a significant portion of the Red Army which simply withdrew eastward. The majority of Ukrainians, exhausted and terrorized by years of war, proved just as apathetic toward the Polish-supported Petliura government as they had toward the Reds or Whites. The Soviets turned the incident into a propaganda victory, claiming to be the victims of Polish aggression.

In the summer of 1920, Lenin launched his offensive with two massive army groups. Gen. Mikhail Tukhachevsky, a violent nihilist but also the Red Army’s best general, led the Northern Front advancing from Belarus. The Southern Front, led by Alexander Yegorov, was spearheaded by a corps of 16,000 Red Cossacks commanded by Semyon Budyonny and his political commissar Josef Stalin. The Polish armies despite being outnumbered and ill-equipped had some key advantages. They were often more disciplined and had a better air force. Polish fliers were joined by a group of American volunteers, led by Cedric Fauntelroy and Merian Cooper. In addition, Polish cryptologists had broken Red Army radio codes.

In July, Tukhachevsky’s army broke through Polish lines and began its drive westward. In the south, Budyonny’s Cossacks forced the Poles back. Unlike most fighting in World War I, the Polish-Soviet war would be a war of rapid maneuver often using cavalry, but also armored trains and small units of motorized vehicles.

By the beginning of August 1920, hundreds of thousands of Red Army soldiers bore down on the gates of Warsaw while in the south Red Cossacks, swarmed toward the city of Lwow. The Soviet advance was accompanied by murder, rape, and destruction. The communists killed landowners, clergy, prisoners of war, business people, and anyone suspected of being a capitalist. Towns and villages were systematically wrecked. According to author Adam Zamoyski “the universal calling card of a visit by Red soldiers was shit—on furniture, on paintings, on beds, on carpets, in books, in drawers, on plates.”

Poland seemed doomed and with the fall of her capital the gates of Europe would be opened. In the West, communist sympathizers blocked both military and humanitarian aid for Poland, stopping trains and refusing to unload ships. The French sent a small group of military advisors who provided no useful advice. Unrest and exhaustion at home and communist agitation at home paralyzed most of Europe’s leaders.

Yet all was not lost. In Warsaw and throughout the country tens of thousands of civilians joined volunteer units. Groups of workers and Orthodox Jews mobilized to build a ring of defenses around the city. In the south, Polish and American pilots, flying mission after mission, harassed and disrupted advancing Red Forces. The Americans were singled out for their courage, one Polish report stating “The American aviators, although exhausted, fought like madmen.” The Americans were singled out the Soviets as well who put a price on their heads and a death sentence for their officers if captured alive. Meanwhile, Piłsudski conceived of a daring plan to save his country. As the Reds advanced on Warsaw, he placed one force to blunt the Soviet advance while he secretly shifted a strike force of his best divisions to the south of the city toward the exposed flank of Tukhachevsky’s onrushing army.

On August 12, the Red Army began its assault. Tukhachevsky declared “Over the corpse of White Poland lies the path to worldwide revolution!” Masses of Bolsheviks broke through the first line of Warsaw’s defense. Volunteer units made up of workers, peasants, boy scouts, and women joined the defense. Priests armed only with crucifixes led counterattacks. The town of Radzymin, just 20 km from Warsaw, changed hands five times in hand to hand fighting. For three days, the defenses barely held on, pinning down the bulk of Tukhachevsky’s men.

On August 16, with the Red Army just miles from Warsaw, Piłsudski ordered his strike force into action, hitting the lightly defended Soviet left flank. The surprise was complete. Polish forces advanced almost 30 miles in the first day, cutting off the Bolshevik spearheads. It took Tukhachevsky almost two days to realize what had happened as his army began to collapse. Some units surrendered enmasse, others fled across the border into Prussia, others turned into a panicked mob. In the south, the Poles counterattacked Budyonny and Stalin’s Red Cossacks and nearly annihilated them. (Stalin would never forget this loss to the Poles and would later take his revenge by ordering the mass killing of hundreds of thousands of Poles.) By October, any hope of a communist advance into central Europe had vanished and Lenin agreed to a ceasefire.

During the fighting, the American pilot Merian Cooper was shot down and captured by Red Cossacks. Despite the price on his head, he concealed his identity from his captors and survived a mock execution. With two Polish comrades, he escaped a POW camp and made his way through hundreds of miles of hostile territory to free Latvia. Awarded Poland’s highest military decoration, Cooper returned to the United States where he became a noted movie director, most famously directing King Kong. His experiences in the war made him one of Hollywood’s staunchest anti-communists.

As a result of the Battle of Warsaw, the communist “utopia” would be locked inside Russia for almost two decades, its leaders becoming ever more extreme, paranoid, and violent. A brief, wary interlude of peace settled over Europe, lasting until rise of Nazism in Germany which would once again set the world ablaze and allow the Soviets to revive their dream of worldwide conflagration. Temporary though it was, the Polish victory a century ago proved that the march of communism is not inevitable and that with determination and courage, free people can prevail even when the odds seem overwhelming and all hope seems lost.


TOPICS: Foreign Affairs; News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: lenin; pilsudski; poland; polishsovietwar; sovietunion

1 posted on 08/14/2020 7:25:30 AM PDT by SJackson
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | View Replies]

To: SJackson

I can’t help but notice that the free people had to start killing commies in order to remain free. Will they except peaceful defeat at the ballot box? It would be a first.


2 posted on 08/14/2020 7:45:48 AM PDT by GoDuke
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: SJackson

I never knew about this. How different the world might look today had the Poles not crushed the Bolsheviks. We also now understand why Stalin so brutalized the Poles during WWII.


3 posted on 08/14/2020 7:49:35 AM PDT by Mase (Save me from the people who would save me from myself!)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: SJackson

The west coast Bolsheviks are hoping their “revolution” can spread.

Their problem is that there are millions of military veterans like myself and we easily outnumber them 10:1 if not more.

Veterans like myself who were in combat arms have more weapons training than these john brown gun club/antifa/blm/nfac/black panther p*ssies can ever dream of having.


4 posted on 08/14/2020 7:53:37 AM PDT by 2CAVTrooper (Political Science degrees, so easy Obama has one.)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: SJackson
Amazing irony.

One of Lenin's most effective propaganda themes in 1917 was the terrible loss of life and economic destruction on Russia's western front against the Germans and the Austrian Empire.

Less than three years later, Lenin was back on the same ground fighting a war of aggression against the Poles.

I had completely forgotten the details and the scale of Lenin's invasion in 1920.

Thanks for refreshing my memory, SJackson.

5 posted on 08/14/2020 8:16:52 AM PDT by zeestephen
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: SJackson

Much of what is said in this article is dramatized in this video: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=P9Jd0vvMLW8


6 posted on 08/14/2020 8:31:50 AM PDT by vladimir998 ( Apparently I'm still living in your head rent free. At least now it isn't empty.)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: zeestephen

“completely forgotten the details and the scale of Lenin’s invasion in 1920”

Hitler didn’t forget.

He knew what the Soviet Union had planned for the rest of Europe. Thus his ruthless hatred of the Bolshevik East.

So this invasion had one further consequence: it provided the motivation for German invasion of Poland and then Russia, and thus World War II.

Funny how that point is never made in our catechismic history. The Communists started it. The Nazi party was a reaction.


7 posted on 08/14/2020 8:35:05 AM PDT by Regulator
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 5 | View Replies]

To: Mase
I never knew about this. How different the world might look today had the Poles not crushed the Bolsheviks.

And Jan Sobieski crushing the Muslims at Vienna.

8 posted on 08/14/2020 8:35:22 AM PDT by SJackson (wondered...what 10 Commandments would have looked like if Moses had run them through..Congress, RR)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 3 | View Replies]

To: Mase
3 ... We also now understand why Stalin so brutalized the Poles during WWII.

The Katyn massacre was a series of mass executions of nearly 22,000 Polish military officers and intelligentsia carried out by the Soviet Union, specifically the NKVD ("People's Commissariat for Internal Affairs", the Soviet secret police) in April and May 1940. Though the killings also occurred in the Kalinin and Kharkiv prisons and elsewhere, the massacre is named after the Katyn Forest, where some of the mass graves were first discovered.

9 posted on 08/14/2020 8:36:12 AM PDT by MacNaughton
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 3 | View Replies]

To: SJackson

The Russian Communist revolution of 1917 followed in the footsteps of the French Revolution of 1789. That revolution was followed by the Reign of Terror and almost 20 years of war.


10 posted on 08/14/2020 8:41:14 AM PDT by captain_dave
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: SJackson

Thank you for this post.

THERE IS A MOVIE ON YOUTUBE-”BATTLE OF WARSAW 1920.”
It is in Polish with English subtitles. There is a short segment about the American pilots who were part of the Polish airforce and helped turn the tide. It is an excellent movie.

Tomorrow is the 100th anniversary of the battle.


11 posted on 08/14/2020 8:41:36 AM PDT by Maine Mariner
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: Maine Mariner; All

>THERE IS A MOVIE ON YOUTUBE-”BATTLE OF WARSAW 1920.”

There have been a number of different versions of this film on utube over the years since I first learned about it from a fellow Freeper.

Many versions, including the English subtitled ones as well as the edited ones have shown up in glorious 320i but in searching for the link I found an HD version, although with no English subtitles, but, I have found that the film is entirely watchable as the visuals and vocal inflection of the actors make the plot entirely understandable.

An EXCELLENT film, well worth viewing.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ksf7fmTGuUc


12 posted on 08/14/2020 9:22:30 AM PDT by ADemocratNoMore (The Fourth Estate is now the Fifth Column)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 11 | View Replies]

To: GoDuke
I can’t help but notice that the free people had to start killing commies in order to remain free.

You ALWAYS have to start killing them, or have them rule and ruin you.

Pick one.

13 posted on 08/14/2020 9:33:48 AM PDT by AAABEST (NY/DC/LA media/political/military industrial complex DELENDA EST)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 2 | View Replies]

To: SJackson

These events are glossed over and largely forgotten today in the West. When told, it is nearly always portrayed as an invasion of Poland (because that’s as far as it got). But this article makes the crucial point - Lenin saw Poland as simply an obstacle on the way to his real objective: Germany. He believed Germany was ripe for revolution at that moment (and he may have been correct). And once Germany fell then he believed a western europe exhausted by war would be his too.


14 posted on 08/14/2020 10:05:13 AM PDT by Mr Radical (In times of universal deceit, telling the truth is a revolutionary act)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: SJackson

Thank you!


15 posted on 08/14/2020 10:14:14 AM PDT by little jeremiah (Courage is not simply one of the virtues, but the form of every virtue at the testing point.)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: ADemocratNoMore

Thank you for the link!


16 posted on 08/14/2020 10:30:42 AM PDT by Maine Mariner
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 12 | View Replies]

To: SJackson
well, not so fast...
in 1917 there were Czechoslovak legions fighting the bolsheviks deep in Russia waiting for the US and GB soldiers, stationed in Vladivostok, to help them out. Never happened, but they did get them out of Russia after 3 years of fighting.

RUSSIA’S CZECHOSLOVAK LEGION of World War One was an army without a country.

The 60,000-man unit, raised between 1915 and 1917, was made up of Czech and Slovak patriots keen to free their ancestral homeland from Austrian rule. By taking up arms in the name of the Russian Tsar, the volunteers hoped that after the war the great powers would reward them with statehood. But when in 1917, the Bolsheviks rose to power following the collapse of Russia’s Romanov dynasty and then made a separate peace with the Central Powers, the Czechoslovak Legion suddenly found itself trapped deep inside an unwelcoming country. With nowhere to run, the small army fought its way across 9,000 kilometres of Siberian wilderness towards the Pacific port city of Vladivostok… and hopefully freedom. Along the way, the legion would challenge the authority of Russia’s communist regime, take control of a land corridor thousands of miles long, come within mere hours of rescuing the Czar and the royal family from murder at the hands of the Bolsheviks, and literally make off with a king’s ransom. The determination of the Czechoslovak Legion captured the imagination of the world. The Allies even landed a massive multinational force in the Far East to help cover their escape.

Read more @:
A long way from home.


17 posted on 08/14/2020 10:58:45 PM PDT by NachOsten
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 8 | View Replies]

Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.

Free Republic
Browse · Search
News/Activism
Topics · Post Article

FreeRepublic, LLC, PO BOX 9771, FRESNO, CA 93794
FreeRepublic.com is powered by software copyright 2000-2008 John Robinson