On the eve of a major
offensive into Poland, the Soviet Union decides to recognise the pro-Soviet
Lublin Committee as the Provisional Government of Poland instead of the
government-in-exile that was temporarily being headquartered in London.
On September 1, 1939, a
massive German army invaded Poland. Sixteen days later, the USSR invaded Poland
from the east. During this tumultuous period, Gen. Wladyslaw Sikorski became
leader of a Polish government-in-exile in London. He developed a good working
relationship with the Allies until April 1943, when Soviet Premier Joseph Stalin broke off
Polish-Soviet diplomatic relations after Sikorski requested that the Red Cross
investigate the alleged Soviet slaughter of Polish officers in the Katyn forest
of eastern Poland in 1942.
As the war progressed and the
Soviets battled the Germans in western Poland, the Polish government-in-exile
began to fear that Soviet domination might follow if the Soviets defeated
Germany for control of the Polish territory. Stanislaw Mikolajczyk, Sikorski's
successor as the provisional government head, pleaded with the Allies to secure
Poland's postwar borders and sovereignty, but no such assurances were granted.
In August 1944, the Polish Home Army, fearful that the Soviets would march on
Warsaw to battle the Germans and never leave the capital, led an uprising
against the German occupiers. They hoped that if they could defeat the Germans,
the Allies would help install the anti-Communist government-in-exile after the
war.
Unfortunately, the Soviets,
rather than aiding the uprising that they encouraged in the name of beating
back their common enemy, stood idly by and watched as the Germans slaughtered
the Poles and sent survivors to concentration camps.
With native Polish resistance
eradicated, and in anticipation of one last offensive against the Germans, the
Soviet Union created its own pro-communist Polish provisional government to
counter the anti-communist government-in-exile. At the Yalta Conference in
February 1945, the Allies agreed that an interim government would be formed
from both the pro- and anti-communist sides, with free elections to follow. The
Soviets had other plans, though, and promptly turned the exhausted and battered
Poland into a nondemocratic satellite country, which it remained until 1989.
No comments:
Post a Comment