Everything about The Molotov-ribbentrop Pact totally explained
The
Molotov-Ribbentrop Pact,
colloquially named after
Soviet foreign minister
Vyacheslav Molotov and
German foreign minister
Joachim von Ribbentrop, was an agreement officially entitled the
Treaty of Non-aggression between Germany and the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics, signed in
Moscow in the early hours of
August 24,
1939, dated
August 25, that renounced warfare between the two countries and pledged neutrality by either party if the other were attacked by a third party. Each signatory promised not to join any grouping of powers that was “directly or indirectly aimed at the other party”. The Pact is known by a number of different titles. These include the
Nazi-Soviet Pact,
Hitler-Stalin Pact,
German-Soviet Non-aggression Pact and sometimes as the
Nazi-Soviet Alliance. It remained in effect until
Nazi Germany invaded the
Soviet Union on
June 22,
1941 in
Operation Barbarossa.
In addition to stipulations of non-aggression, the treaty included a secret protocol dividing the independent countries of
Finland,
Estonia,
Latvia,
Lithuania,
Poland, and
Romania into Nazi and Soviet
spheres of influence, anticipating
"territorial and political rearrangements" of these countries' territories. All were subsequently invaded, occupied, or forced to cede territory by Nazi Germany, the Soviet Union, or both.
Many on the political left were outraged that the Soviet Union would make such a treaty with Nazi Germany, the revolutionary system which most threatened communism. Many Communists in Western parties repudiated this action and resigned their party membership in protest. Likewise, a number of Nazis were outraged by this treaty, and some party members went so far as to throw their
party badges into the courtyard of the
Brown House.
Background
In 1918, by the
Treaty of Brest-Litovsk,
Bolshevist Russia accepted the loss of
sovereignty and influence over Finland, Estonia, Latvia, Lithuania, Poland,
Belarus,
Ukraine, and parts of
Armenia and
Georgia as a concession to the
Central Powers. In accordance with the
Mitteleuropa-policy, they were designated to become
satellite states to, or parts of, the
German Empire with
dukes and
kings related to the German
emperor. As a consequence of Germany's defeat in the autumn of 1918, and not without active support from the allied victors of
the World War, most of them became ostensible democratic
republics. With the exception of Belarus and Ukraine, all of these countries also became
independent and fully sovereign — however, in many cases, independence was followed by civil wars related to the Russian revolution. Poland, whose statehood had just been re-established by the Treaty of Versailles, sought to take control of Ukrainian and Belorussian territory which it had ceded at the time of various partitions. Poland invaded Soviet Ukraine in April 1920, leading to the
Russo-Polish War, which ended with the
Peace of Riga in 1921.
In the 1920s, fear of the Soviet Union and of
Communism motivated attempts to foster political cooperation and defense treaties between these so-called
buffer states.
The European balance of power established at the end of
World War I was eroded step by step, from the
Abyssinian crisis (1935) to the
Munich Agreement (1938). The dissolution of
Czechoslovakia signaled increasing instability, as
Nazi Germany, the
Soviet Union and other countries, such as
Hungary and
Bulgaria, aspired to regain territories lost in the aftermath of
World War I. In 1938, the Soviet Union blockaded the free navigation of ships from the Baltic Sea to Finnish ports on Lake Ladoga via the Neva river.
The western states,
United Kingdom and
France, notional guarantors of the territorial
status quo, stood by until the March 1939 destruction of Czechoslovakia, maintaining a policy of "non-intervention" while the Fascist governments of Germany and Italy supported the victorious
right-wing rebels in their destruction of the Soviet supported
Spanish Republic in the
Spanish Civil War of 1936-39.
For the Soviet Union, the Molotov-Ribbentrop Pact was a much-needed response to the deterioration of the European security situation in the latter half of the 1930s, as Nazi Germany, aligned with
Fascist Italy in the
Axis Powers, aimed to reverse the disadvantageous
Treaty of Versailles after
World War I. In addition, border incidents with Japan, culminating in the
Battle of Khalkhin Gol, may have been a significant consideration for the Soviets, for whom a two-front war was an
anathema. The Pact may, in fact, have influenced the Japanese to seek a cease-fire three weeks after its announcement.
For its part, the Soviet Union wasn't interested in maintaining a
status quo, which it saw as disadvantageous to its interests, deriving as it did from the period of Soviet weakness immediately following the 1917
October Revolution and
Russian Civil War. Helping Germany grow strong had accordingly been Soviet policy from 1920 to 1933. A fourth partition of Poland was suggested at regular intervals, satisfying Lenin's imperative that Versailles be undermined by destroying Poland. Once Hitler renounced the
military cooperation between Nazi Germany and Soviet Russia that
Hans von Seeckt had arranged, Stalin adopted the Popular Front policy, trying to draw the Western powers into war with Germany.
Soviet leaders adopted the position that war between what they characterized as rival
imperialist countries wasn't only an inevitable consequence of
capitalism, but by weakening the participants would also enhance conditions for the spread of Communism. This strategy worked out well for the victorious Soviets, who spread Communism into eastern Europe after the countries were weakened during
World War II.
During 1938, the Soviet Union (as well as France) offered to abide by their defensive military alliance with Czechoslovakia in the event of German invasion, but the Czechoslovakian Agrarian Party was so strongly opposed to Soviet troops entering the country that they threatened a civil war might result if they did. The 1935 agreement between the Soviet Union, Czechoslovakia, and France stipulated that Soviet aid was conditional and would only come to Czechoslovakia if France came to their aid as well. In 1936, troubled by the failing five year plan, the Soviet Union started tacking closer to Germany again, returning to economic cooperation.
The
Moscow Trials seriously undermined Soviet prestige in the West, signifying that either (if the accused were guilty) the Soviet government was hopelessly infiltrated by fascist powers or (if the accused were innocent) that Stalin was mercilessly killing his opponents and subordinates. Either way, the Soviets were deemed to be worthless allies.
George Kennan stated that the "purges made some sense" only in the context of the search for an accommodation with the Third Reich. Soviet intervention in the Spanish Civil War, as well as the blatant attempts to undermine the governments of foreign countries, were also viewed with skepticism. Furthermore, the Western countries were still hoping to avoid war by a policy of appeasement.
In Moscow, the reluctance of the Western nations to go to war against Germany was seen as indicative of a lack of interest in opposing the growing Fascist movement, already exemplified by the events of the Spanish Civil War. The Soviets were not invited to the
Munich Conference of September 1938, when the French and British Prime Ministers,
Daladier and
Chamberlain, agreed to the dismemberment of
Czechoslovakia. As the French hadn't honored their 1924 treaty with the Czechs, the Soviets suspected that their 1935 alliance pact with France was worthless, and that the West was trying to divert Germany to the East.
In March 1939, Hitler's denunciation of the 1934
German-Polish Non-Aggression Pact was taken by the Soviets as a clear signal of Hitler's aggressive intentions. In April, Soviet foreign minister
Litvinov outlined a French-British-Soviet alliance, with military commitments against
Fascist powers, but Chamberlain's government procrastinated (partly because the Soviets demanded too much – impossible troop commitments, Soviet annexation of the
Baltic states, complete
reciprocity, and the right to send troops through Poland). Chamberlain, however, had already on
24 March, along with France, guaranteed the sovereignty of Poland, and subsequently on
25 April signed a
Common Defence Pact with Poland. Consequently,
Stalin no longer feared that the West would leave the Soviet Union to fight Hitler alone; indeed, if Germany and the West went to war, as seemed likely, the USSR could afford to remain neutral and wait for them to destroy each other.
Franco-British negotiations with the Soviet Union
Negotiations between the Soviet Union,
France and the
United Kingdom for a military alliance against Germany stalled, mainly due to mutual suspicions. The Soviet Union sought guarantees for support against German aggression and recognition of the right of the Soviet Union to act against "a change of policy favorable to an aggressor" in the countries along the western Soviet border. Although none of the affected countries had formally asked for protection by the Soviet Union, it nevertheless announced "guarantees for the independence of
Finland,
Estonia,
Latvia,
Poland,
Romania,
Turkey, and
Greece", the so-called "cordon sanitaire" erected between Nazi Germany and the Soviet Union. The British and French feared that this would allow Soviet intervention in neighboring countries' internal affairs, even in the absence of an immediate external German threat.
However, with the Third Reich now demanding territorial concessions from Poland in the face of Polish opposition, the threat of war was increasing. Although telegrams were exchanged between the Western Powers and the Soviet Union as early as April 1939, the military missions sent by the Western Powers (on a slow transport vessel) didn't arrive in
Moscow until
August 11, and were given no authority to conduct talks resulting in binding agreements or to sign treaties.
During the first phase of the negotiations begun in April 1939, the Anglo-French side was unwilling to create a formal military alliance as suggested by the
USSR. However, the Western leaders soon gave up and suggested a military alliance in May. A couple of proposals were made by both sides. On June 2, 1939, the Soviet Union submitted its proposal, which suggested tripartite military action under three circumstances:
- in case a European Power (for example, Germany) attacked a contracting party;
- in case of German aggression against Belgium, Greece, Turkey, Romania, Poland, Latvia, Estonia, or Finland (all of whom the contracting parties had promised to defend);
- in case of the involvement of a participant in war due to rendering assistance to a European country which has pled for aid.
This proposal was discussed for the next two months, until the Western allies eventually accepted it almost completely.
Molotov suggested signing the (political) alliance treaty together with the military treaty, for which Western delegations were sent to Moscow.
The military negotiations lasted from August 12 to August 17. On August 14, the question of Poland was raised by
Voroshilov for the first time. The Polish government feared that the Soviet government sought to
annex disputed territories, the
Eastern Borderlands, received by Poland in 1920 after the
Treaty of Riga ending the
Polish-Soviet war. The population of the Eastern provinces of the
Second Polish Republic had a Ukrainian and Belorussian majority.
Therefore, the Polish government refused to allow the Soviet military to enter its territory and establish military bases in preparation for the now-inevitable war with Germany — a situation that allegedly left the
Red Army without any possibility of confronting the Germans before Poland was invaded. This position was retained even under pressure by the Western allies, who regarded alliance with the Soviet Union as necessary and feasible.
Three weeks into August the negotiations ground to a halt, with each side doubting the other's motives. It should also be noted that the Soviets had already had contacts with the Germans throughout the spring of 1939.
The Soviet Union pursued secret talks with Nazi Germany, while conducting public ones with
United Kingdom and
France. From the beginning of the negotiations with France and Britain it was clear that Soviet position required agreeing to their occupation of Latvia, Estonia and Lithuania . The public nature of talks with France and Britain increased the pressure on Hitler by Stalin to heighten his price in reward for alliance with the Soviets It must be noted, however, that other claims by Suvorov (whose real name is Vladimir Rezun, a low-level
GRU defector with no background in military history), such as the absurdity of Stalin's planning to invade Germany in 1941, have been thoroughly and completely debunked by reputable military historians.
Nazi–Soviet rapprochement
It should also be noted that the Soviets, as well as representatives of the Western nations, had contacts with the Germans throughout the spring of 1939. it shouldn't be overlooked that Stalin's adherence to the collective security line was purely conditional. This is completely in line with the politics of the times, given the Western nations' "conditional" adherence to their guarantees to Czechoslovakia.
According to Paul Flewers, Stalin’s
address
to the eighteenth congress of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union on 10 March 1939 discounted any idea of German designs on the Soviet Union. Stalin had intended: "To be cautious and not allow our country to be drawn into conflicts by warmongers who are accustomed to have others pull the chestnuts out of the fire for them." This was intended to warn the Western powers that they couldn't necessarily rely upon the support of the Soviet Union. As Flewers put it, “Stalin was publicly making the none-too-subtle implication that some form of deal between the Soviet Union and Germany couldn't be ruled out.”
During the last two weeks of August 1939, the
Nomonhan Incident reached its peak, involving more than 100,000 men on both sides.
After contacting Molotov on August 15, 1939 regarding the possibility of "settling by negotiation all outstanding problems of Soviet-German relations", and stressing the urgency of such negotiations, the German Foreign Minister
Ribbentrop visited Moscow on
19 August 1939. A 7-year
German-Soviet trade agreement establishing economic ties between the two states was signed for a German credit to the Soviet Union of 200 million marks in exchange for raw materials - petrol, grain, cotton, phosphates, and timber.
Molotov then proposed an additional protocol "covering the points in which the High Contracting Parties are interested in the field of foreign policy." This was thought by some to have been precipitated by the
alleged Stalin's speech on August 19, 1939, where he supposedly asserted that a great war between the Western
powers was necessary for the spread of
World Revolution.
On
August 22 Moscow revealed that Ribbentrop would be visiting Stalin the next day. This happened while the Soviets were still ostensibly negotiating a military pact with the British and French missions in Moscow. With the Western nations unwilling to accede to Soviet demands, Stalin instead entered a secret Nazi-Soviet alliance: On
August 24, a 10-year
non-aggression pact was signed with provisions that included: consultation; arbitration if either party disagreed; neutrality if either went to war against a third power; no membership of a group "which is directly or indirectly aimed at the other."
Most notably, there was also a secret protocol to the pact, revealed only on Germany's defeat in 1945, according to which Hitler and Stalin divided the states of
Northern and
Eastern Europe into German and Soviet
spheres of influence. In the North,
Finland,
Estonia and
Latvia were apportioned to the Soviet sphere. Poland was to be partitioned in the event of its "political rearrangement"—the areas east of the rivers
Narev,
Vistula and
San going to the Soviet Union while the Germans would occupy the west.
Lithuania, adjacent to
East-Prussia, would be in the German sphere of influence. In the South, the Soviet Union's interest and German lack of interest in
Bessarabia, a part of
Romania, were acknowledged. A German diplomat
Hans von Herwarth informed his
U.S. colleague
Charles Bohlen of the secret protocol on
August 24, but the information stopped at the desk of President
Franklin Roosevelt.
Concerns over the possible existence of a secret protocol were first expressed by the intelligence organizations of the Baltic states scant days after the pact was signed, and speculation grew stronger when Soviet negotiators referred to its content during negotiations for military bases in those countries. The German original was presumably destroyed in the bombing of Germany, but a microfilmed copy was included in the documents archive of the German Foreign Office. Karl von Loesch, a civil servant in Foreign Office, gave this copy to British Lt. Col. R.C. Thomson in May, 1945. The Soviet Union denied the existence of the secret protocols until 1988, when
politburo member
Alexander Nikolaevich Yakovlev admitted the existence of the protocols, although the document itself was declassified only after the
dissolution of the Soviet Union in 1992. In December 1989, the first democratically elected
Congress of Soviets "passed the declaration admitting the existence of the secret protocols, condemning and denouncing them".
Stalin's motives
Stalin, who had feared that the Western nations were encouraging Hitler to attack the Soviet Union, must have been aware that the secret clause made a European war more likely, because it freed Hitler from the prospect of a war against the USSR while fighting France and the United Kingdom. For a long time, the primary motive of Stalin's sudden change of course was assumed to be the fear of German aggressive intentions.
The defenders of the Soviet position argued that it was necessary to enter into a non-aggression pact to buy time, since the Soviet Union wasn't in a position to fight a war in 1939, and needed at least three years to prepare.
Edward Hallett Carr claimed: "In return for non-intervention Stalin secured a breathing space of immunity from German attack." According to Carr, the "bastion" created by means of the Pact, "was and could only be, a line of defense against potential German attack." An important advantage (projected by Carr) was that "if Soviet Russia had eventually to fight Hitler, the Western Powers would already be involved." However, during the last decades, this view has been disputed. According to Werner Maser, the claim that "the Soviet Union was at the time threatened by
Hitler, as Stalin supposed,...is a legend, to whose creators Stalin himself belonged." (Maser 1994: 64). In Maser's view (1994: 42), the fact that, at the time "neither Germany nor Japan were in a situation [of] invading the USSR even with the least perspective [sic] of success", couldn't have been unknown for Stalin.
Stalin also received espionage reports from
Tokyo.
Richard Sorge, the now-legendary Soviet spy, reported on crucial German-Japanese negotiations. As a member of the
Anti-Comintern Pact directed against the Soviet Union, which Japan signed with Nazi Germany on 25 November, 1936, Japan was eager for an offensive against the Soviet Union. Germany's reaction to this was telling: its diplomats tried to persuade Japan to enter into an alliance against the Western nations (France and Britain). Stalin decided that this information, combined with the announcement of Germany's "
Pact of Steel" with
Italy, indicated that Hitler was more interested in western aggression at the time.
The extent to which the Soviet Union's post-Pact territorial acquisitions may have contributed to preventing its fall (and thus a Nazi victory in the war) remains a factor in evaluating the Pact. Soviet sources point out that the German advance eventually stopped just a few kilometers away from Moscow, so the role of the extra territory might have been crucial in such a close call. Others postulate that Poland and the Baltic countries played the important role of
buffer states between the Soviet Union and Nazi Germany, and that the Molotov-Ribbentrop Pact was a precondition not only for Germany's invasion of Western Europe, but also for the Third Reich's invasion of the Soviet Union. The military aspect of moving from established fortified positions on the
Stalin Line into undefended Polish territory could also be seen as one of the causes of rapid disintegration of Soviet armed forces in the border area during the German 1941 campaign, as the newly constructed
Molotov Line was unfinished and unable to provide Soviet troops with the necessary defense capabilities.
Deterioration of the Pact
Soviet propaganda and representatives went to great lengths to minimize the importance of the fact that they'd opposed and fought against the Nazis in various ways for a decade prior to signing the Pact. However, the Party line never went as far as to take a
pro-German stance; officially, the Molotov-Ribbentrop Pact was worded as a non-aggression treaty, not a pact of alliance. Still, it's said that upon signing the pact, Molotov tried to reassure the Germans of his good intentions by commenting to journalists that "fascism is a matter of taste".
The Pact had only defined spheres of influence with no mention of changes in the status of sovereignty of the nations affected. It began to deteriorate with the Soviet invasions of Finland and then the Baltic States, prompted in part by Stalin's fears of a powerful Germany turning East after its successes in the West.. Stalin's invasions were, however (as the intent to accomplish these wasn't communicated to the Nazis beforehand), a severe irritant to Berlin and prompted concern that Stalin was seeking to form an anti-Nazi bloc. Molotov's reassurances to the Nazis, and the Nazis mistrust, intensified. On June 16, 1940, as the Soviets invaded Lithuania, but before they'd invaded Latvia and Lithuania, Ribbentrop instructed his staff "to submit a report as soon as possible as to whether in the Baltic States a tendency to seek support from the Reich can be observed or whether an attempt was made to form a bloc."
Stalin's strike in Finland and the Baltics was one factor in prompting Hitler to turn East when he did. Only two weeks after the Soviet invasion of the Baltics, Berlin requested Finland to permit the transit of Nazi troops. Five weeks after, Hitler had already issued a secret directive "to take up the Russian problem, to think about war preparations," a war whose objective would include establishment of a Baltic confederation. According to historian
E. H. Carr, Stalin was convinced that no German leader would be so foolish as to engage in hostilities on two fronts. He therefore considered it to be a foregone conclusion that, if Germany was at war with the West, it would have to be friendly with, or at least neutral towards, the Soviet Union. If so, then Stalin's invasion of Finland and the Baltics was a fatal misstep: the Pact was only useful to Germany as long as it was a simply definition of spheres of influence and kept Soviet forces away from the borders of the Reich.
Effects - the war
On
September 1, barely a week after the pact had been signed, the partition of Poland commenced with
the German invasion. The Soviet Union on
September 17, practically concluding a fourth
partition of Poland and violating the
Soviet-Polish Non-Aggression Pact signed in 1932. Polish troops were already fighting much stronger German forces on the Western front, desperately trying to delay the capture of Warsaw in the hope that France and Britain would stand by their agreements and start military activity against Nazi Germany, and consequently were not able to significantly resist the Soviets. The Soviet Union marshalled 466,516 soldiers, 3739 tanks, 380 armored cars, and approximately 1,200 fighters, 600 bombers, and 200 other aircraft against Poland. The Polish armed forces in the East consisted mostly of lightly-armed border guard units of the Korpus Ochrony Pogranicza (KOP), the 'border protection corps'. In the Northeast of Poland, only the cities of Postawy,
Wilno,
Lida,
Baranowicze,
Wolkowysk, and
Grodno were defended. After a heavy but short struggle in the Northeast of Poland, Polish forces withdrew to
Lithuania where they were interned. Some of the Polish forces which were fighting the Soviets in the far South of the nation withdrew to
Romania. By the end of fighting on 2 October, 1939, the Red Army had taken 99,149 Polish prisoners of war. While most of the soldiers were released after a time, all officers were kept in camps and many were later executed. It is estimated that between 15,000 and 21,000 Poles, both military personnel and civilians, were executed by the Soviet Union in the aftermath to the invasion. Approximately 6,000 of them were murdered in one massacre at
Katyn.
The active military collaboration between Nazi Germany and Soviet Russia caused great shock in the
Western world among those governments that had feared such an outcome, and even more so among the communists themselves, many of whom found Soviet dealings with their Nazi enemy incomprehensible. However,
Winston Churchill declared on October 1 1939:
That the Russian armies should stand on this line was clearly necessary for the safety of Russia against the Nazi menace. At any rate, the line is there, and an Eastern Front has been created which Nazi Germany doesn't dare assail.
A famous cartoon by
David Low from the
London Evening Standard of
20 September 1939 has Hitler and Stalin bowing to each other over the corpse of Poland, with Hitler saying "The scum of the Earth, I believe?" and Stalin replying "The bloody assassin of the workers, I presume?". At
Brest-Litovsk, Soviet and German commanders held a joint victory parade before German forces withdrew westward behind the demarcation line. On September 28, 1939 the Soviet Union and German Reich issued a joint declaration in which they declared:
They mutually express their conviction that it would serve the true interest of all peoples to put an end to the state of war existing at present between Germany on the one side and England and France on the other. Both Governments will therefore direct their common efforts, jointly with other friendly powers if occasion arises, toward attaining this goal as soon as possible.
Should, however, the efforts of the two Governments remain fruitless, this would demonstrate the fact that England and France are responsible for the continuation of the war, whereupon, in case of the continuation of the war, the Governments of Germany and of the U.S.S.R. shall engage in mutual consultations with regard to necessary measures.
The pact also affected Comintern policies: despite an unwillingness by some Western Communists to accept Nazi Germany as a 'friend' (on December 3,
CPGB declared the war against Germany 'just'), Moscow soon forced the Communist Parties of France and Great Britain to adopt an anti-war position. On September 7, Stalin called
Georgi Dimitrov, and the latter sketched a new Comintern line on the war. The new line -- which stated that the war was unjust and imperialist -- was approved by the secretariat of the Communist International on September 9. Thus, the various western Communist parties now had to oppose the war, and to vote against war credits. A number of French communists (including
Maurice Thorez, who fled to Moscow), deserted from the French Army, owing to a 'revolutionary defeatist' attitude taken by Western Communist leaders. This anti-war line was in effect for the duration of the Molotov-Ribbentrop Pact, for example, until the German attack on the USSR on June 22, 1941. This despite the fact that Nazi Germany proceeded to start rounding up Communists in the various European nations that it invaded and conquered in the interim.
On
September 28 1939, the three
Baltic States were given no choice but to sign a so-called
Pact of defence and mutual assistance, which permitted the Soviet Union to station troops in
Estonia,
Latvia, and
Lithuania. On the same day, a supplementary German-Soviet protocol (
German-Soviet Boundary and Friendship Treaty,) had transferred
Lithuania's territory (with the exception of left bank of river
Scheschupe, which remained in the German sphere) from the envisioned German sphere to the Soviet sphere of influence.
Finland resisted similar claims, and war broke out with the Soviet Union on
November 30 1939. After more than three months of heavy fighting and losses in the ensuing
Winter War - initially an embarassment to the much larger Soviet army - the Soviet Union overwhelmed Finland's military. The ensuing peace negotiations resulted approximately 10% of Finland's territory ceded to the Soviet Union (a more onerous territorial change than the USSR had sought to impose on Finland before the outbreak of the war, although the "Terijoki Governement" episode shows that Stalin's original goal was to occupy the entire country) and a lease on the Baltic port of
Hanko. The about 400,000 Finnish inhabitants of the occupied territories were evacuated and resettled in Western parts of Finland.
On June 15–17, 1940, after the
Wehrmacht's swift occupation of
Norway,
Denmark, the
Netherlands,
Belgium,
Luxembourg, and the defeat of
France, the three
Baltic states were occupied, and they were soon
annexed by the Soviet Union. The USSR annexed the whole of Lithuania, including the Scheschupe area, which was to be given to Germany. On January 10, 1941, the German ambassador to Moscow
von Schulenburg and Commissar for Foreign Affairs Viacheslav M.
Molotov signed another secret protocol: the Lithuanian territories west of the river Scheschupe were to be regarded as in the Soviet sphere, and Germany was paid 7.5 million dollars (31.5 million
Reichsmark) compensation by the USSR.
Finally, on
June 26, four days after France sued for an armistice with the Third Reich, the Soviet Union
issued an ultimatum demanding
Bessarabia,
Bukovina, and the
Hertza region from
Romania. Alerted to this Soviet move, Ribbentrop stressed in his reply to the Soviet leaders on June 25, 1940, the strong German "economic interests" (the oil industry and agriculture being paramount) in Romania. This ensured that Romanian territory wouldn't be transformed into a battlefield. Additionally, Ribbentrop claimed that this German interest also arose from a concern over the "faith" and "future" of 100,000 ethnic Germans of Bessarabia. In September, almost all ethnic Germans in Bessarabia were resettled in Germany as part of the
Nazi-Soviet population transfers.
With France no longer in a position to be the guarantor of the status quo in Eastern Europe, and the Third Reich pushing Romania to make concessions to the Soviet Union, the Romanian government gave in, following Italy's counsel and
Vichy France's recent example.
In August 1940, fear of the Soviet Union, in conjunction with German support for the territorial demands of Romania's neighbors and the Romanian government's own miscalculations, resulted in more territorial losses for Romania. The
Second Vienna Award (orchestrated mainly by Ribbentrop) created a competition between Romania and Hungary for Germany's favor concerning Transylvania.
By September 1940, Romania's economic and military resources were fully dedicated to German interests in the East.
Aftermath
The Soviet-occupied territories were organized into
republics of the Soviet Union. The local population was purged of anti-Soviet or potentially anti-Soviet elements and in new border regions tens of thousands of people were executed and
hundreds of thousands were deported to far eastern regions of the USSR and to
Gulag work camps, where many perished. Later, these occupied territories were in the front line of the war, and also suffered from the Nazi terror on the
WWII Eastern Front.
By early 1941, the German and Soviet occupation zones shared a border running through what is now Lithuania and Poland. Nazi–Soviet relations began to cool again, and signs of a clash between the
Wehrmacht and the
Red Army began to show in German propaganda — a clash that wasn't without appeal to some in occupied Western Europe, where
anti-Bolshevism stemming from the time of the
Russian Civil War twenty years before hadn't faded. The Nazis had started recruiting for their cynical 'great crusade' against the Soviet Union. By appearing as the unifying leader of the West against the East, Hitler hoped to boost Nazi popularity at home and abroad, and used this as an instrument for peace feelers with the United Kingdom.
Meanwhile, the Soviet Union was supporting Germany in its war effort against Western Europe through the
German-Soviet Commercial Agreement, with supplies of
raw materials (including
phosphates,
chromium,
iron ore,
mineral oil,
grain,
cotton, and
rubber). These and other supplies were being transported through Soviet and occupied Polish territories, and this allowed Nazi Germany to circumvent the British naval blockade.
Nazi Germany terminated the Molotov-Ribbentrop Pact with its invasion of the Soviet Union in
Operation Barbarossa on
June 22,
1941. Hitler issued a proclamation at 5:30am dissolving the non-aggression Pact. At the same time a note indicating a state of war now existed between Nazi Germany and the Soviet Union was delivered to Molotov. However, the Pact had already been annulled nearly two hours earlier with the commencement of military operations at 3:15am. After the launch of the invasion, the territories gained by the Soviet Union due to the Molotov-Ribbentrop Pact were lost in a matter of weeks, and the Baltic countries were incorporated into
Reichskommissariat Ostland by the Germans, while the native population were conscripted for either labour or military service by the occupation authorities.
Denunciation of the Secret Protocol's existence by the Soviet Union
For decades, it was the official policy of the Soviet Union to deny the existence of the secret protocol. On August 23, 1986, tens of thousands of demonstrators in 21 western cities including New York, London, Stockholm, Toronto, Seattle, and Perth participated in Black Ribbon Day Rallies to draw attention to the secret protocols. It was only after the
Baltic Way demonstrations of
August 23,
1989, set on the 50th anniversary of the pact, that a special commission under
Alexander Nikolaevich Yakovlev started an investigation into the existence of the secret protocols. In December 1989, Yakovlev concluded that the protocol had existed and revealed his findings to the Soviet
Congress of People's Deputies. As a result, the first democratically elected Congress passed a declaration admitting the existence of the secret protocols, and condemning and denouncing them.
Further Information
Get more info on 'Molotov-ribbentrop Pact'.
|
External Link Exchanges
Do you know how hard it is to get a link from a large encyclopaedia? Well we're different and will prove it. To get a link from us just add the following HTML to your site on a relevant page:
<a href="http://molotov-ribbentrop_pact.totallyexplained.com">Molotov-Ribbentrop Pact Totally Explained</a>
Then simply click through this link from your web page. Our crawlers will verify your link, extract the title of your web page and instantly add a link back to it. If you like you can remove the words Totally Explained and embed the link in article text.
As long as your link remains in place, we'll keep our link to you right here. Please play fair - our crawlers are watching. Your site must be closely related to this one's topic. Any kind of spamming, dubious practises or removing the link will result in your link from us being dropped and, potentially, your whole site being banned. |