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Eastern Front of the Russian Civil War
Siberian front of the Russian Civil War
Siberian front of the Russian Civil War
| Field | Value | |
|---|---|---|
| conflict | Eastern Front | |
| partof | the Russian Civil War | |
| image | Kolchak troop inspection.jpg | |
| image_size | 300 | |
| caption | Kolchak inspecting White Russian troops | |
| date | 14 May 1918 – 16 June 1923 | |
| place | Volga, Ural, Siberia, Far East, Mongolia | |
| result | Bolshevik victory | |
| combatant1 | Bolsheviks: | |
| Russian SFSR | ||
| Flag of the Far Eastern Republic.svg Far Eastern Republic | ||
| Flag of the People's Republic of Mongolia (1921-1924).svg Mongolian People's Party | ||
| Калужская организация левых эсеров.svg Left SRs | ||
| (Until March 1918) | ||
| combatant2 | White movement: | |
| commander1 | {{ubl | Russian SFSR Leon Trotsky |
| commander2 | {{ubl | Russia Alexander Kolchak |
| strength1 | Total: 600,000 | |
| Red Army: 5 Field Armies | ||
| strength2 | Total: 740,000 | |
| White Army: 420,000 | ||
| Siberian Army: 80,000 | ||
| Czechoslovak Legion: 42,000 | ||
| People's Army of Komuch: 10,000 | ||
| Irregulars and Bandits: 50,000 | ||
| Allied Expeditionary Force: 140,000Green Ukraine: 5,000 | ||
| casualties1 | 150,000–300,000 | |
| casualties2 | 250,000–400,000 |
- Collapse of White and anti-Soviet Resistance Russian SFSR Flag of the Far Eastern Republic.svg Far Eastern Republic Flag of the People's Republic of Mongolia (1921-1924).svg Mongolian People's Party Калужская организация левых эсеров.svg Left SRs (Until March 1918)
- Russia Russian State
- Russia Priamur Government (1921–1922)
Allied Powers: |Kingdom of Italy Kingdom of Italy |United States |United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland |French Third Republic |Czechoslovakia Czechoslovakia |Republic of China (1912–1949) China}}
- China Mongolia (1921)
|Buryat-Mongolia |Mongolia Mongolia}} |Russian SFSR Jukums Vācietis |Russian SFSR Sergey Kamenev |Russian SFSR Mikhail Muravyov |Russian SFSR Mikhail Tukhachevsky |Russian SFSR Mikhail Frunze |Russian SFSR Aleksandr Samoylo |Russian SFSR Pavel Lebedev |Russian SFSR Vasily Blyukher |Russian SFSR Ivan Smirnov |Russian SFSR Sergey Lazo |Far Eastern Republic A. Krasnoshchyokov |Flag of the People's Republic of Mongolia (1921-1924).svg Damdin Sükhbaatar |Flag of the People's Republic of Mongolia (1921-1924).svg Khorloogiin Choibalsan }} |Russia Grigory Semyonov |Russia Mikhail Diterikhs |Russia Vladimir Kappel |Russia R. Ungern-Sternberg |Russia Anatoly Pepelyayev |Czechoslovakia Radola Gajda |Czechoslovakia Stanislav Čeček |Czechoslovakia Jan Syrový |Empire of Japan Kikuzo Otani |Empire of Japan Yui Mitsue |United States William S. Graves |UKGBI Alfred Knox |French Third Republic Maurice Janin}}
|Mongolia Bogd Khan}} Red Army: 5 Field Armies White Army: 420,000 Siberian Army: 80,000 Czechoslovak Legion: 42,000 People's Army of Komuch: 10,000 Irregulars and Bandits: 50,000 Allied Expeditionary Force: 140,000Green Ukraine: 5,000
The Russian Civil War spread to the east in May 1918, with a series of revolts along the route of the Trans-Siberian Railway, on the part of the Czechoslovak Legion and officers of the Russian Army. Provisional anti-Bolshevik local governments were formed in many parts of Siberia and the Russian Far East during that summer in the wake of the Czechoslovak Legion uprising, including in Samara, Omsk, Yekaterinburg, and Vladivostok.
The Red Army mounted a counter-offensive in the autumn of 1918. Throughout the winter and spring of 1918/1919, the White Army had dominance over this front. In the summer of 1919, and from then onward, the Red Army defeated the White commander Aleksandr Kolchak. The White Army collapsed in the East as well as on other fronts throughout the winter of 1919/1920. Smaller-scale conflicts in the region went on until as late as 1923.
Czechoslovak and White uprising
Main article: Revolt of the Czechoslovak Legion, Spring offensive of the White Army, Eastern Front counteroffensive
In May 1918, soldiers of the Czechoslovak Legion revolted against the Bolsheviks in Chelyabinsk. The revolt was triggered by Trotsky's order to local Bolshevik commanders to disarm the Czechslovaks (in violation of previous agreements) following a confrontation between the Czechslovaks traveling Eastwards and a train full of Austro-Hungarian former POWs traveling westward. The Czechslovak Legion was formed out of Czech and Slovak POWs of the Austro-Hungarian army who volunteered to fight against the empire ruling their homeland. Consequently, The Legion was trying to evacuate to the Western Front to continue the fight against the Central powers, but after the Treaty of Brest-Litovsk in March, the Bolsheviks no longer supported this move. The revolt quickly spread across Siberia, because the Czechoslovaks used the Trans-Siberian Railway to move their troops east quickly and because they were supported by local uprisings instigated by Russian army officers. When the uprising reached Yekaterinburg, the former Tsar and his family who were being held there by the Bolsheviks were executed to prevent their release by the Whites. By the end of August, Vladivostok was in Czechoslovak hands.
The Komuch quickly ordered a general mobilisation, with its troops coming from the anti-Bolshevik forces of the former Volga Military District. The Czechoslovaks allied with Komuch and advanced to the west as they formed a Volga Front, taking key cities in the region, including Kazan, where they captured the tsar's gold reserves which had been moved east for safekeeping.
On 24 January, the Red 4th Army captured Uralsk.
Provisional White governments
In the power vacuum left by the departure of the Bolsheviks multiple White Movement governments were established, including the Committee of Members of the Constituent Assembly (or Komuch) at Samara on 8 June 1918, the Provisional Siberian Government at Omsk on 23 June 1918, and a Provisional Regional Government of the Urals in Yekaterinburg on 25 August 1918. Earlier in January 1918 a Provisional Government of Autonomous Siberia had been created by the Siberian regionalists in Tomsk, but it was broken up by Bolshevik Red Guards, and its leaders fled to Vladivostok, where they reasserted their authority in July 1918. When the State Conference in Ufa led to the creation of the Provisional All-Russian Government in September, all of these governments at least nominally recognized the new authority, and it also had the support of Russia's diplomatic missions abroad.
The Komuch government in Samara and the Provisional Siberian Government organized the Ufa Conference to unite anti-Bolshevik forces, but their alliance was tenuous from the beginning. Komuch was controlled by the Party of Socialist Revolutionaries, whose goal was to restore the Russian Constituent Assembly elected in 1917, which had been dominated by the SRs and had no significant non-socialist representation. The right-wing factions leading the Omsk government, the Constitutional Democrats (Kadets) and the military, had no interest in reviving the Constituent Assembly or cooperating with the socialists, but this was the outcome of the conference. The Provisional All-Russian Government, with a five-member Directory at its head, was created by the Ufa Conference on 23 September 1918 to fight Bolshevism and continue the war against Germany.
The Provisional All-Russian Government united all White Russian forces east of the Urals, at least in name, but only lasted for eight weeks. The Directory was transferred from Ufa to Omsk, where the institutions of the former Provisional Siberian Government were based, and where the Western Allies had established their diplomatic and military missions. The Directory was opposed to this, but having no administrative state of its own, had to rely on the Omsk government to carry out day-to-day functions. Not long after the move to Omsk, a coup d'etat was carried out against the Directory by Admiral Alexander Kolchak, supported by Kadets, army officers, and Cossacks on 18 November 1918. He was declared the Supreme Ruler of Russia without much opposition among the Whites in Siberia, and pledged to wipe out Bolshevism. Kolchak quickly gained the support of the Siberian Army command, Cossack leaders in Siberia and the Far East (including Ataman Grigory Semyonov), and the local industry.
Notes
References
- Bullock, David (2008). The Russian Civil War 1918–22. Osprey Publishing.
References
- Bullock 2008, p. 44-46.
- Bullock 2008, p. 46.
- Bullock 2008, p. 46-48.
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