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Soviet Invasion of Poland

Soviet invasion of Poland
Part of the Invasion of Poland in World War II
Soviet parade in Lwów, 1939
Soviet parade in Lwów, 1939
Date 17 September – 6 October 1939
Location Poland
Result Soviet victory
Territorial
changes
Territory of Eastern Poland annexed to the Soviet Union
Belligerents
Poland  Soviet Union
Commanders and leaders
Flag of Poland.svg Edward Rydz-Śmigły
(Marshal of Poland)
Soviet Union Kliment Voroshilov
(Commander-in-Chief)
Soviet Union Mikhail Kovalyov
(Belarusian Front)
Soviet Union Semyon Timoshenko
(Ukrainian Front)
Strength
20,000 Border Protection Corps,
250,000 Polish Army.
466,516–800,000 troops
33+ divisions
11+ brigades
4,959 guns
4,736 tanks
3,300 aircraft
Casualties and losses
3,000–7,000 dead or missing,
up to 20,000 wounded.
99,149 captured
1,475–3,000 killed or missing
2,383–10,000 wounded.

The Soviet invasion of Poland was a Soviet military operation that started without a formal declaration of war on 17 September 1939. On that morning, 16 days after Nazi Germany invaded Poland from the west, the Soviet Union invaded Poland from the east. The invasion and battle lasted for the following 20 days and ended on 6 October 1939 with the two-way division and annexation of the entire territory of the Second Polish Republic by both Germany and the Soviet Union. The joint German-Soviet invasion of Poland was secretly agreed in the Molotov-Ribbentrop Pact, signed on 23 August 1939.

The Red Army, which vastly outnumbered the Polish defenders, achieved its targets by using strategic and tactical deception. Some 230,000 Polish prisoners of war had been captured. The campaign of mass persecution in the newly acquired areas began immediately. In November 1939 the Soviet government ostensibly annexed the entire Polish territory under its control. Some 13.5 million Polish citizens who fell under the military occupation were made into new Soviet subjects following mock elections conducted by the NKVD secret police in the atmosphere of terror, the results of which were used to legitimize the use of force. The Soviet campaign of ethnic cleansing began with the wave of arrests and summary executions of officers, policemen and priests. Over the next year and a half, the Soviet NKVD sent hundreds of thousands of people from eastern Poland to Siberia and other remote parts of the Soviet Union in four major waves of deportation between 1939 and 1941.

Soviet forces occupied eastern Poland until the summer of 1941, when they were driven out by the invading German army in the course of Operation Barbarossa. The area was under Nazi occupation until the Red Army reconquered it again in the summer of 1944. An agreement at the Yalta Conference permitted the Soviet Union to annex almost all of their Molotov–Ribbentrop Pact portion of the Second Polish Republic, "compensating" the People's Republic of Poland with the southern half of East Prussia and territories east of the Oder–Neisse line. The Soviet Union enclosed most of the annexed territories into the Ukrainian Soviet Socialist Republic and the Byelorussian Soviet Socialist Republic.


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