The Eurasian Triangle. Russia, the Caucasus and Japan, 1904-1945

(WallPaper) #1

The Expansion of War Ë 183


decision had its rationale: compared with the south, the Soviet Far East appeared too


barren to secure the life-lines of the Japanese war machine.


By mid-October 1941, Stalin came to be reasonably certain that Japan, planning to


strike the United States, would not attack the Soviet Union in the near future. Moscow


had received a number of condential reports from spies placed high in the Japanese


establishment. This allowed Stalin to transfer from the Far East eight divisions of So-


viet military forces to ght against the Germans in the West. Such transfers had taken


place before, but this was the largest and most decisive.⁴⁹These forces helped Stalin


defend Moscow from the German onslaught. Of course, there was no guarantee that


Japan would not attack the Soviet Union in case the situation changed, and indeed


Japan retained such plans. Moscow was therefore forced to continue to maintain con-


siderable forces in the Far East even at the direst moment of the war against Germany


in the West. Meanwhile, Japan attacked the United States on 7/8 December 1941 (Pearl


Harbor), and the war thus spread to the Pacic.


Clearly Germany’s war against the Soviet Union emboldened the Caucasian émi-


grés, whereas Japan’s war against the United States mattered little to them. The sit-


uation had altered dramatically from that of the period after the Molotov-Ribbentrop


Pact: for the Caucasian émigré groups Japan was virtually out and Germany was de-


nitely in.


In the Soviet Caucasus, the specter of armed uprising was already present even be-


fore the German attack. In 1940, for example, Hasan Israilov (“Terloev”), a Chechen


barrister, openly broke with Soviet power and took control of parts of Southern Chech-


nia. In February of that year, the insurgents set up the Provisional People’s Revolu-


tionary State of Chechnia-Ingushetia. Although by the beginning of 1941, the area had


been retaken by Soviet forces,⁵⁰between January and 22 June 1941, there were thirty-


one cases of insurgencies in Chechnia and Ingushetia.⁵¹


After the German attack in June 1941, the specter of insurgency in the Caucasus


became a nightmare for the Soviet government. The day the war broke out, Chechen


insurgents declared war against the Soviet government in the name of the Chechen


people.⁵²It appears that in Chechnia and Ingushetia, roughly ninety percent of men


49 See V.M. Petrenko, “Dal’nevostochnyi front nakanune i v period Velikoi Otechestvennoi voiny
1941–1945 gg.”Voenno-istoricheskii zhurnal2010, no. 10, 21.
50 S.S. Magamadov and S.A. Kislitsyn,Politicheskaia vlast’ i povstancheskoe dvizhenie na Severnom
Kavkaze. Ocherki istorii 1920–1930-kh gg.(Rostov-na-Donu: Iuzhno-Rossiiskii institut-lial RANKh i GS
pri Prezidente RF, 2011), 301 and Burds, “The Soviet War against ‘Fifth Columnists’,” 293–94. For the
political situation in the Caucasus at the time, see a rsthand account by a Chechen who defected to
the West, though an account not always reliable: Aleksandr Uralov (A. Avtorkhanov),Narodoubiistvo
v SSSR. Ubiistvo chechenskogo naroda(Munich, Svobodnyi Kavkaz, 1952).
51 See V.P. Galitskii, “Velikaia otechestvennaia voina 1941–1945 gg. ‘... dlia aktivnoi podryvnoi diver-
sionnoi deiatel’nosti v tylu u Krasnoi Armii’.”Voenno-istoricheskii zhurnal2001, no. 1, 18.
52 See Georges Mamoulia,Gruzinskii legion v bor’be za svobodu i nezavisimost’ Gruzii v gody Vtoroi
mirovoi voiny(Tbilisi: private publication, 2007), 277.

Free download pdf