- Soviet–Lithuanian Peace Treaty
The Soviet–Lithuanian Peace Treaty, also known as the Moscow Peace Treaty, was signed between
Lithuania and Soviet Russia onJuly 12 1920 . In exchange for Lithuania's neutrality and permission to freely move its troops in the recognized territory during its war against Poland, Soviet Russia recognized the sovereignty of Lithuania. The treaty was a major milestone in Lithuania's struggle for international recognition. It also recognized Lithuania's eastern borders. Interwar Lithuania officially maintained that its "de jure " borders were those delineated by the treaty despite the fact that a large territory, theVilnius Region , was in fact controlled by Poland.Background
Lithuania declared independence from the former
Russian Empire onFebruary 16 1918 . In March the Bolsheviks signed theTreaty of Brest-Litovsk and renounced any claims to theBaltic states , including Lithuania.Ober Ost , the German occupying authority, did not allow Lithuania to establish government institutions, organize military or police forces, or attempt to define its borders. Lithuanian independence remained a largely-unrealized political declaration. That changed when Germany surrendered in November 1918. Lithuanians hurriedly adopted a provisional constitution, formed a government, and started organizing an army.Soviet Russia denounced the Treaty of Brest-Litovsk and renewed its interest in the Baltic region. In late December 1918, Lithuanian territory was invaded by Bolshevik forces, pursuing the retreating Germans. That marked the beginning of the
Lithuanian Wars of Independence and thePolish–Soviet War . Within a month Soviet forces controlled large portions of northern and eastern Lithuania. The advance was stopped only with help from German volunteers. InVilnius , the Bolsheviks proclaimed a puppet Soviet government, led byVincas Mickevičius-Kapsukas . In February 1919 the Lithuanian SSR was merged with the Byelorussian SSR, to formLitbel . The entity was short-lived as Poland and Lithuania successfully counterattacked.Vilnius , the historic capital of Lithuania, was seized by the Poles in April. The last Bolsheviks were pushed from Lithuanian territory at the end of August. The entire territory of Litbel was taken by September 1919 and it ceased to exist.cite book | title=Twentieth Century Russia | first= Donald W. |last= Treadgold | year=1995 |publisher=Westview Press |isbn=0813336724 |pages=137 |url= http://books.google.com/books?id=Xs8sYy1vIS0C&pg=PA137&sig=_H2DDCLvA4Id8G9gUyEuN1IwGCQ ]Negotiations
As the Bolsheviks were pushed from the Baltic region, Lenin sought to arrange peace treaties to ease anti-Bolshevik tensions in Europe.cite book | last=Gerutis | first=Algirdas | editor=Ed. Albertas Gerutis | others=translated by Algirdas Budreckis | title=Lithuania: 700 Years | year=1984 | edition=6th | publisher=Manyland Books | location=New York | id=LCC | 75-80057 |isbn=0-87141-028-1 | pages=163–165 | chapter=Independent Lithuania] The first Lithuanian–Russian attempt at negotiation took place on
September 11 1919 , after thePeople's Commissar of Foreign Affairs of Soviet Russia,Georgy Chicherin , sent a note with a proposal for apeace treaty . It was a "de facto" recognition of the Lithuanian state. Similar proposals were delivered toLatvia andEstonia . OnSeptember 14 andSeptember 15 1919 the Baltic states held a trilateral meeting inTallinn and agreed to begin simultaneous peace talks with the Soviets.However, Lithuania delayed contacting Moscow and the collective negotiations did not take place. Lithuanian feared that negotiations with communist Russia, which was isolated from European politics, would damage its relationships with the western powers that had not yet recognized Lithuania.lt icon cite book | last=Skirius | first=Juozas | title=Gimtoji istorija. Nuo 7 iki 12 klasės | url=http://mkp.emokykla.lt/gimtoji/ | accessdate=2008-03-30 | year=2002 | publisher=Elektroninės leidybos namai | location=Vilnius | isbn=9986-9216-9-4 | chapter=Lietuvos–Rusijos Sovietų Federacinės Socialistinės Respublikos taikos sutartis | chapterurl=http://mkp.emokykla.lt/gimtoji/?id=1018] While Lithuania was preparing for the first democratic elections to the
Constituent Assembly of Lithuania , election campaigns urged the government to start negotiations. OnMarch 31 1920 Augustinas Voldemaras , Lithuania's Minister of Foreign Affairs, informed Soviet diplomats that Lithuania was ready to open the talks on condition that Moscow recognized Lithuania within its ethnic lands and acknowledged that Vilnius was its capital. [cite book | title=Survival and Consolidation: The Foreign Policy of Soviet Russia, 1918-1921 | pages=206 |first=Richard K. |last=Debo |year=1992 |publisher=McGill-Queen's Press | isbn=0773508287| url= http://books.google.com/books?vid=ISBN0773508287&id=gQfUB0CXBO4C&pg=PA206&lpg=PA206&sig=yWktYodVe-O8fJV4JKBUbqtQ0rE#PPA206,M1] The Soviets agreed to discuss the situation and suggested that preliminary negotiations begin onApril 15 . The talks in Moscow did not begin untilMay 7 .The Lithuanian delegation, led by Tomas Naruševičius, demanded that Russia recognize independent Lithuania as a legal successor of the
Grand Duchy of Lithuania , while the Soviet delegation, led byAdolph Joffe , was prepared to recognize Lithuania only based on theself-determination principle. Territorial disputes were the most contentious issue. Lithuania demanded the territories of former Kovno, Vilna, Grodno, andSuwałki Governorate s. These areas, according to the Lithuanians, were ethnically Lithuanian. M. Balinsky's census of 1857 was provided as evidence that the territory was inhabited primarily by Lithuanians. Lithuanians asserted that the Jewish and Belarusian populations in the region, which were large, wished to be part of Lithuania. They brought a representative of each group, Simon Rosenbaum and Dominyk Semashko, to support this case. It was agreed that the territory of Lithuania could be easily identified, as it was inhabited byLitvaks .lt icon cite book |last= Čepėnas |first= Pranas |authorlink= Pranas Čepėnas | title=Naujųjų laikų Lietuvos istorija |volume= II |year= 1986 |publisher= Dr. Griniaus fondas | location= Chicago |isbn= 5-899570121 |pages= 355–359] TheSecond Polish Republic also laid claim to this territory and had actual control over it at the time.The Soviets agreed to recognize the territory to Lithuania if it agreed to form a military alliance against Poland, which was engaged in the Kiev Offensive against the Soviet Russia. The Lithuanians were tempted by the opportunity to regain Vilnius, but refused. Even though the Soviets seemed a natural ally against Poland, Lithuanians reasoned that staying on good terms with Poland and its allies, France and Great Britain, was a better long-term strategy.cite book | last=Eidintas | first=Alfonsas | coauthors=Vytautas Žalys, Alfred Erich Senn | editor=Ed. Edvardas Tuskenis | title=Lithuania in European Politics: The Years of the First Republic, 1918-1940 | edition=Paperback | year=1999 | month=September | publisher=St. Martin's Press | location=New York | isbn=0-312-22458-3 | pages=67–70] Lithuania informed Britain about Soviet plans. They hoped such a move would prove Lithuania's trustworthiness and would put indirect pressure on Poland to reach an acceptable agreement in regards to Vilnius. These tactics did not prove successful, as Poland was invariably backed by France and indirect British pressure was not strong enough to change Poland's foreign policy.
The negotiations were long and difficult. While the Russians were losing ground to the Poles, who took Kiev in May 1920, the Lithuanians sought to delay the talks. On
May 22 1920 the Lithuanian delegation even threatened to withdraw from the peace talks. However, as the situation changed and Russia successfully counterattacked, the Lithuanians were pressured into signing the treaty onJuly 12 . After some debate over whether the treaty was sincere, and whether the Soviets had assumed any real liability, theConstituent Assembly of Lithuania ratified it onAugust 8 1920 .The treaty
The treaty had 19 articles. Article 1 stipulated that Russia recognized Lithuania's independence without reservations and voluntarily abandoned any territorial claims.cite encyclopedia | editor=Simas Sužiedėlis | encyclopedia=
Encyclopedia Lituanica | title=Moscow, Treaty of | year=1970–1978 | publisher=Juozas Kapočius | volume=III | location=Boston, Massachusetts | id=LCC | 74-114275 | pages=554–555] Article 2 described Lithuanian territory. The Soviet Union acknowledged Lithuanian authority over theVilnius Region , includingBrasłaŭ ,Hrodna ,Lida ,Pastavy andVilnius . The fate of theSuvalkai Region was not determined by the treaty as the line was drawn only to the village ofSztabin . The Bolsheviks also promised to paywar reparations in the amount of three millionruble s and 107,000hectares of timber. Lithuania was relieved of any debt obligations.The treaty allowed refugees and
prisoners of war to return to their homeland. At the time Lithuania held about 2,000 Russian prisoners, while Russia held about 150 Lithuanians. Russians in Lithuania could opt for either Lithuanian or Russian citizenship. Russia promised to return any cultural and historical property removed during the wars. A working commission was created which evaluated the damage to Lithuania at about 816 million rubles, and 407 million rubles for damage to the territory then controlled by Poland. Separate agreements would be made later to decide protection of the frontier, conventions of trade and transit, and other details.The treaty also contained a secret clause allowing Soviet forces unrestricted movement within Soviet-recognized Lithuanian territory in the event of war with Poland; this clause would lead to questions regarding the issue of Lithuanian neutrality in the ongoing
Polish-Soviet War .pl icon cite book |first= Piotr |last= Łossowski |authorlink =Piotr Łossowski |title= Litwa | location = Warszawa | publisher= TRIO |year= 2001 | isbn= 83-85660-59-3 |pages=85–86] pl icon cite book |first= Piotr |last= Łossowski |authorlink =Piotr Łossowski |title= Konflikt polsko-litewski 1918-1920 | location = Warszawa | publisher= Książka i Wiedza |year= 1995 | isbn= 8305127699 |pages=126-128]Lithuania was to stop the activities of the "anti-Soviet organisations and groups" on its territory, including the activities of the exiled bodies of the
Belarusian People's Republic . ["Гісторыя Беларусі: У 6 т. Т. 5. Беларусь у 1917—1945. — Мн.: Экаперспектыва, 2006. — 613 с.; іл. ISBN 985-469-149-7."]Aftermath
Immediate aftermath
While the treaty was being negotiated and signed, most of the territory by the treaty granted to Lithuania was already controlled by Bolshevik forces. As the Poles were retreating from western Russia, Lithuania attempted to secure the borders outlined in the treaty. Lithuanian forces crossed the
Foch line on19 July , seeking to take control of the territories granted to Lithuania by the Soviet Union, advancing rapidly despite Polish protests, and in several cases fighting skirmishes with retreating Polish forces. This led to clashes in southern Lithuania over the towns ofSejny ,Augustów , andSuwałki .cite encyclopedia | editor=Simas Sužiedėlis | encyclopedia=Encyclopedia Lituanica | title=Independence, Wars of | year=1970–1978 | publisher=Juozas Kapočius | volume=II | location=Boston, Massachusetts | id=LCC | 74-114275 | pages=448–449] According to historianPiotr Lossowski , the Lithuanians also provided the Soviets with logistical support.The Bolshevik forces were the first to enter Vilnius on
July 14 1920 , and despite the treaty did not intend to transfer it to the Lithuanians.cite book | last=Eidintas | first=Alfonsas | coauthors=Vytautas Žalys, Alfred Erich Senn | editor=Ed. Edvardas Tuskenis | title=Lithuania in European Politics: The Years of the First Republic, 1918-1940 | edition=Paperback | year=1999 | month=September | publisher=St. Martin's Press | location=New York | isbn=0-312-22458-3 | pages=72–74] The Soviets installed apuppet government , the formerLitbel , with the intent of fomenting asocialist revolution .Leon Trotsky andMikhail Tukhachevsky were making preparations to overthow the Lithuanian government. The plans never came to pass as Poland defeated Soviet forces in the Battle of Warsaw betweenAugust 13 andAugust 25 . [cite journal |authorlink=Alfred E. Senn |first=Alfred Erich |last=Senn |title=The Formation of the Lithuanian Foreign Office, 1918-1921 |journal= Slavic Review | volume=3 |issue=21 |month=September | year=1962 | pages=500–507] OnAugust 26 , as the Polish Army was approaching the southern borders of Lithuania, the Soviets finally transferred Vilnius to Lithuanian control and theRed Army retreated.During September, when the Poles had gained an upper hand and were pursuing the Soviets back to the east, Soviet forces moved through Lithuanian-controlled territory at will, but Polish forces that tried to pursue them were arrested and interned. Lithuania's declared neutrality was challenged by Poland, which accused Lithuania of allowing free Soviet passage through its territory. Lithuania could not deny this. The treaty did not create a formal
military alliance between the Soviets and Lithuanians, but diminished Lithuania's standing as a neutral state. Łossowski has written that Lithuania's lack of neutrality towards Poland was such that "the Polish government could have with full justification treated Lithuania as a country participating in the war on the other side, with all of its political and legal implications." HistorianAlfred E. Senn wrote that "the Lithuanians cannot claim to have been 'strictly neutral'", and that "the Lithuanians should not have been surprised when, at the end of August, Warsaw refused to recognize Kaunas's neutrality." [A. E. Senn, "The Great Powers, Lithuania and the Vilna question 1920-1928, Leiden, 1966, p.34]In late August Lithuanian and Polish missions met in
Kaunas to negotiate the situation. While the talks were underway, Polish troops retook Sejny, Augustów, and Suwałki in the south. TheSuwałki region held great symbolic importance for Lithuanians as a locus of their independence movement. [cite journal|title=LITHUANIA 1863-1893: TSARIST RUSSIFICATION AND THE BEGINNINGS OF THE MODERN LITHUANIAN NATIONAL MOVEMENT|journal=Lituanus |author=A. S. STRAŽAS|url=http://www.lituanus.org/1996/96_3_03.htm|year=1996|quote=The Lithuanian regions of Suwałki brought forth a large number of scholars, writers, poets and public figures of both a nationalist orientation and belonging to various social ideologies.] Lithuania mounted military operations in the area. Poland also wanted to reclaim Vilnius, which it had been forced to abandon during the Soviet offensive in July. These clashes led to a war on a wide front between Poland and Lithuania in September. An intervention was made by theLeague of Nations , which brokered theSuwałki Agreement onOctober 7 1920 ; it was to have taken effect onOctober 10 . However, onOctober 9 , Polish GeneralLucjan Żeligowski staged a mutiny, invaded Lithuania, and took over Vilnius. Most of the Vilnius and Suwałki regions would remain under Polish control during the interwar period, and Polish-Lithuanian relations during that time were described as "no war, no peace."Fact|date=April 2008ignificance in interwar years and later
The treaty represented a major breakthrough in the Lithuanian Republic's quest for international recognition. The provision that permitted the return of Lithuanian
World War I refugees and prisoners was a welcomed development. However, the Soviet Union did not pay all its reparations and never seriously considered returning cultural and historical property. Lithuanian politicians and historians continue to seek the return of those items, but the Russian government claims that they are lost.Modern Belarusian historiography regards the treaty, especially the cession of ethnic Belarusian territories to Lithuania (primarily,
Hrodna ,Shchuchyn ,Lida ,Ashmyany ,Smarhon ,Pastavy ,Braslaw , but also the contemporaryVilna land withVilna [Cf. History of Belarus, 1917-1945...] ) as a unilateral act by the Soviet authorities that disregarded the national interests of the Belarusian people, aimed at immediate military and political gains. [E.g., in "У.Ф. Ладысеў. Станаўленне беларускай нацыянальнай дзяржаўнасці ў XX стагоддзі (метадалагічны аспект) // Заходні рэгіён Беларусі вачыма гісторыкаў і краязнаўцаў : зборнік навук. артыкулаў. — Гродна: ГрДУ, 2006. — 422 с. ISBN 985-417-834-Х."]ee also
*
Treaty of Tartu (Russian–Estonian) – similar treaty with Estonia, signed onFebruary 2 1920
*Latvian–Soviet Peace Treaty – similar treaty with Latvia, signed onAugust 11 1920 References
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