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The Molotov-Ribbentrop Pact - ELTE BTK Történelem Szakos Portál

The Molotov-Ribbentrop Pact - ELTE BTK Történelem Szakos Portál

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importance for the events considered here. Further developments in Germanoccupied<br />

Poland and Eastern Europe, especially the Holocaust, would be too<br />

big a topic for this paper.<br />

I will first take a look back on the two years of occupation in either part of<br />

the former Polish Republic, before analysing possible reasons for the pogroms<br />

in the summer of 1941.<br />

<strong>The</strong> Hitler-Stalin-<strong>Pact</strong><br />

<strong>The</strong> Hitler-Stalin-Pakt‘s ultimate goal, as the secret additions show, was to<br />

destroy the Polish state, which had only been established in the course of<br />

remodelling Europe after World War I. 3 <strong>The</strong> Germans had - ever since the<br />

treaty of Versailles - lamented the loss of land and people and, in Beata<br />

Kosmala‘s words: To revise the new borderlines was of the highest priority to<br />

all parties during the inter-war years. 4 <strong>The</strong> Soviet Union too had lost territories<br />

in the wake of WWI, but also had to deal with additional losses after the<br />

Soviet-Polish war of 1921. 5 Nevertheless - the Polish government felt save in<br />

its position between two political opponents, who would - as the Poles hoped -<br />

never find a common ground and would never unite against Poland.<br />

It was the ever harsher German rhetoric during 1939 that caused Great<br />

Britain and France to assure Poland of their assistance in case the Germans<br />

would dare to announce war. Both countries had been negotiating with the<br />

Soviet government about some kind of alliance, but they did not show much<br />

earnest and the Soviet leadership reached out for a more eager partner. 6 When<br />

the Reich showed interest in a non-aggression treaty, it was a matter of days<br />

before it would be signed on the 23rd August 1939 by von <strong>Ribbentrop</strong> and<br />

<strong>Molotov</strong> respectively. <strong>The</strong>re are various explanations for this sudden change of<br />

policy of which Geoffrey Roberts‘ can be taken as a good example; he sums<br />

up: Stalin did not want to start a war in 1939, but feared that he would be an<br />

easy victim and thus engaged in the dangerous alliance with Hitler. 7<br />

3 Secret additions to the treaty of 1939 („Geheimes Zusatzprotokoll zum Deutsch-<br />

Sowjetischen Nichtangriffsvertrag”), 23rd August 1939, cited from http://mdzx.bibbvb.de/cocoon/1000dok/dok_0025_pak.html?object=translation&lang=de,<br />

19.3.2009.<br />

4 KOSMALA, Beata: Der deutsche Überfall auf Polen - Vorgeschichte und<br />

Kampfhandlungen. In: BORODZIEJ, Wlodzimierz (Ed.): Deutsch-polnische Beziehungen 1939 -<br />

1945 - 1949 - Eine Einführung. Osnabrück, 2000. 21.<br />

5 OVERY, Richard: Russlands Krieg - 1941-1945, Reinbek bei Hamburg, 2003. 26.<br />

6 OVERY, Richard: Russlands Krieg - 1941-1945, Reinbek bei Hamburg, 2003. 79-87.<br />

7 ROBERTS, Geoffrey: Stalins Kriege - Vom Zweiten Weltkrieg bis zum Kalten Krieg.<br />

Düsseldorf, 2008. 51. See also 45-63, and OVERY, Richard: Russlands Krieg - 1941-1945,<br />

Reinbek bei Hamburg, 2003. 87-92. Soviet Foreign Affairs 1939: O‘SULLIVAN, Donald: „Je<br />

später man uns um Hilfe bittet, desto teurer wird man sie uns bezahlen” - Die sowjetische<br />

Außenpolitik zwischen dem Münchner Abkommen und dem 22. Juni 1941, in: THOMAS,<br />

Ludmilla und KNOLL, Viktor (Ed.): Zwischen Tradition und Revolution - Determinanten und<br />

Strukturen sowjetischer Außenpolitik 1917-1941. Stuttgart, 2000. 157-203.<br />

170

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