During the Civil War in the USSR, what were the foreign intervention armies?

Updated on military 2024-02-09
9 answers
  1. Anonymous users2024-02-06

    The foreign intervention armies are:

    Eastern Front: Germany (Reich), Pilsudski's White Poland, Ukrainian Rada, Belarusian Lada.

    Caucasian Front: Ottoman Turkey, Great Britain, British-backed Kolchak and the Green Army.

    Kazan Front: British-backed Kolchak.

    Petersburg Front: Finland, Sweden, Netherlands, Great Britain, France, Italy.

    Ulyanovsk Front (Lenin's hometown): Czechoslovak rebels, Japanese Empire, Beiyang warlords (Duan Qirui**), British Expeditionary Force.

    Commanders of the Eastern Front: Dzerzhinsky, Tukhachevsky, Trotsky, Smoldelov, Stalin.

    Commanders of the Caucasian front: Stalin, Voroshilov, Budyonny.

    Commanders of the Kazan Front: Lenin, Trotsky.

    Ulyanovsk Front: Lenin, Trotsky, Stalin.

  2. Anonymous users2024-02-05

    There were white dogs outside, that is, the Poles and those Germans who did not want the reunification of the USSR, as well as different warlords at home.

  3. Anonymous users2024-02-04

    Indeed, there was the invasion of Czechoslovakia, and then there was the famous Cuban Missile Crisis, especially the Cuban Missile Crisis, which was seen as the pinnacle and turning point of the Cold War. Never before in the history of the world has humanity been so close to the brink of a nuclear war. Then there is the physical war of aggression, and there is only the Soviet-Afghan war...

  4. Anonymous users2024-02-03

    Without the existence of NATO, the annexation of Europe by the Soviet Union was a sure thing, and the Soviet Union did not even hide its ambitions, and the Soviet Union had absolute superiority over NATO in the 70s during the Cold War, which was also the most vulnerable period for the United States (of course, it was the result of the Soviet Union's all-out military development regardless of the domestic economy).

    As for the signs of the beginning of the Cold War, many people say that Churchill's "Iron Curtain" speech was the cause, but I am afraid that the countries of the socialist camp will collectively lose their memory of the fact that Stalin first made the so-called "decisive speech of the new capitalist imperialism" ......

  5. Anonymous users2024-02-02

    The most typical is Afghanistan. At the end of December 1979, the Soviet Union invaded Afghanistan, resulting in a 10-year war.

    Others, such as the Pozlan incident in Poland in June 1956, the Budapest incident in Hungary in October-November 1956, and the Prague incident in the Czech Republic in August 1968, were all manifestations of the Soviet Union's armed interference in the internal affairs of other countries.

    In addition, in March 1969, the Soviet army invaded our territory, and the resulting "Zhenbao Island Incident" and so on.

  6. Anonymous users2024-02-01

    The former Soviet Union was the first socialist country in the world, so it was surrounded by capitalism for a long time. Stalin said in 1925 that the preconditions for war were ripening and the outbreak of war was inevitable.

    This view constituted the basic starting point of Stalin's domestic and foreign policy. He believed that war was imminent and that it was likely to destroy the Soviets before they had time to gather strength. It was with this in mind that he advocated the immediate collectivization of agriculture and the industrialization of socialism, the strengthening of his own forces, and his activities in international affairs centered around the avoidance of fighting as much as possible.

    In 1933, Hitler came to power in Germany, and the dark clouds of war began to gather over Europe. Hitler openly expressed hostility to the USSR and put forward territorial claims to Ukraine.

    In 1933, the Soviet Union signed non-aggression pacties with Poland and Finland. In the same year, the USSR and the USA formally established diplomatic relations. In the summer of 1934, the Soviet Union signed contracts with Czechoslovakia, Romania and Bulgaria, which to some extent ensured the security of the southwestern border.

    In September 1934, the Soviet Union joined the League of Nations, a step towards the search for peace. In 1935, Stalin sought an alliance with Britain and France, but was rejected by Britain and France.

    In October 1936, the German-Italian axis was formed. The Nazis constantly shouted hostile to the Soviet Union. In the East, Japan constantly stirred up trouble on the eastern borders of the USSR, which put increasing pressure on Stalin.

    In March 1938, Hitler occupied Austria. Then came the Sudetenland Germanic crisis. German belligerence frightened British Chancellor Neville Chamberlain and French ** Daladier, who hastily negotiated with Hitler, and the two countries agreed to put pressure on Czechoslovakia to cede the Sudetenland to Germany.

    Stalin immediately suggested that Britain, France, and the Soviet Union should establish a united anti-German front, and that the three countries should jointly send troops to stop German expansion when Germany attacked the Czech Republic. However, Britain and France did not want to offend Hitler, and hoped to exchange the policy of concessions for peace in the West, sacrificing Czechoslovakia and directing the scourge of war to the Soviet Union. They did not accept Stalin's suggestion and, at the infamous Munich Conference, forced Czechoslovakia to cede the Sudetenland to Hitler.

    Stalin had no doubt that the Anglo-French motive for agreeing to the dismemberment of Czechoslovakia was apparently to encourage Hitler to let go of the East in exchange for peace in the West.

    The short-sightedness and selfishness of Britain and France caused Stalin to lose confidence in them, and in order to save the Soviet Union from war, Stalin turned to a policy of pragmatism and made peace with Hitler for as long as possible. Because his country is not ready for war now. In order to ensure the existence of the socialist Soviet Union in the world, in August 1939, the Soviet Union and Germany signed a non-aggression pact.

  7. Anonymous users2024-01-31

    Hello: I'm glad to answer your questions!

    At the end of World War II, the Iron Curtain opened, and the Soviet Union and the United States began the Cold War. The U.S. military participated in many wars overseas, including: the Korean War, the Vietnam War, the invasion of Glinda, Operation Desert Storm, the invasion of Afghanistan, the Iraq War, etc.

    The Soviet Union's overseas military brothers included the famous invasion of Afghanistan, Hungary, strategic Czechoslovakia, and the Treasure Island, an armed conflict with our country.

  8. Anonymous users2024-01-30

    What I'm saying may not be lacking.

    United States: 14.

    Korean War June 25, 1950 July 27, 1953 Vietnam War 1961 1975.

    Invasion of Grenada: October 1983.

    Panamanian War: 1989-1990.

    Air strikes on Libya: Long-range U.S. air strikes on Libya in 1986.

    The Kuwaiti war was fought against Liberia from 2 August 1990 to 28 February 1991: 3 June 1990.

    Gulf War, January 17, 1991, February 28, 1991.

    Kosovo War March 1992.

    Intervention in Somalia: December 4, 1992 Air strikes on the Federal Republic of Yugoslavia on March 21, 1994: March 24, 1999 - June 9, 1999 War in Afghanistan: 2001.

    Iraq War: 2003.

    Libyan war: 2011.

    USSR (Russia).

    Invasion of Czechoslovakia: 1968.

    Treasure Island War: 1969.

    Invasion of Afghanistan: 1973-1979.

    Georgian War: 2008 year.

  9. Anonymous users2024-01-29

    Detailed? Nobody knows.

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