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Katyń massacre

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The Katyn massacre, also known as the Katyn Forest Massacre (Polish: ), was a mass execution of Polish citizens by the order of Soviet authorities in 1940.Fischer, Benjamin B., "[The Katyn Controversy: Stalin's Killing Field]", Studies in Intelligence, Winter 1999-2000, last accessed on 10 December, 2005 Estimates of the number of Polish citizens executed at three mass-murder sites in the spring of 1940 range from some 14,540Mosnews story: Katyn Massacre Was Not Genocide — Russian Military Prosecutor, 11.03.2005 [online]Zawodny, Janusz K., Death in the Forest: The Story of the Katyn Forest Massacre, University of Notre Dame Press, 1962, ISBN 0268008493 [partial html online] through 21,857 to 28 000.(or more) Excerpt from the minutes No. 13 of the Politburo of the Central Committee meeting, shooting order of March 5, 1940 [online], last accessed on 19 December 2005, original in Russian with English translation Most of those killed were reserve officers taken prisoner during the 1939 Polish September Campaign, but the dead also included many civilians who had been arrested for being "intelligence agents and gendarmes, spies and saboteurs, former landowners, factory owners and officials". Decision to commence investigation into Katyn Massacre, Małgorzata Kużniar-Plota, Departamental Commission for the Prosecution of Crimes against the Polish Nation, Warsaw 30 November 2004, [online] (also see the [press release online]), last accessed on 19 December 2005, English translation of Polish document Since Poland's conscription system required every unexempted university graduate to become a reserve officer, the Soviets were thus able to round up much of the Polish, Jewish, Ukrainian, Georgian and Belarusian intelligentsias of Polish citizenship.

The term "Katyn massacre" originally referred to the massacre, at Katyn Forest, near the village of Gnezdovo, near Smolensk, Russia, of Polish military officers confined at the Kozelsk prisoner-of-war camp. The term subsequently came to be applied also to the execution of prisoners of war held at Starobelsk and Ostashkov camps, and political prisoners in West Belarus and West Ukraine, shot on Stalin's orders at Katyn Forest, at the NKVD (Narodny Kommisariat Vnutrennikh Del) Smolensk headquarters and at an abattoir in that same city, and at prisons in Kalinin (Tver), Kharkiv, Moscow and other Soviet cities.

The 1943 discovery of mass graves at Katyn Forest by Germany, after its armed forces had occupied the site in 1941, precipitated a 1943 rupture of diplomatic relations between the Soviet Union and the Polish government-in-exile in London. The Soviet Union continued to deny responsibility for the massacres until 1990, when it acknowledged that the NKVD had in fact committed the massacres of over 22 000 Polish soldiers and intelligentsia and the subsequent cover-up.BBC News story : Russia to release massacre files, December 16, 2004 [online] The Russian government has admitted Soviet responsibility for the massacres, although it does not classify them a war crime or an act of genocide, as this would have necessitated the prosecution of surviving perpetrators, which is what the Polish government has requested. Some however, continue to believe the official version maintained by the Soviet government until 1989, claimed that it had been the Germans who had killed the Poles after invading the Soviet Union in mid-1941.

Preparations

Main gate to Katyn war cemetery.
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Main gate to Katyn war cemetery.

Between 250,000 Молотов на V сессии Верховного Совета 31 октября цифра «примерно 250 тыс.»and 454,700 Отчёт Украинского и Белорусского фронтов Красной Армии Мельтюхов, с. 367. http://www.usatruth.by.ru/c2.files/t05.html Polish soldiers had become prisoners and were interned by the Soviets, following their invasion of Poland, on September 17, 1939, three weeks after Germany and the Soviet Union had signed the secret Molotov-Ribbentrop Pact.Encyklopedia PWN ['KAMPANIA WRZEŚNIOWA 1939'], last retrieved on 10 December 2005, Polish language This was a little over two weeks after the initial invasion of Poland, by Germany, on September 1, 1939.

As early as September 19, 1939, the People's Commissar for Internal Affairs and First Rank Commissar of State Security, Lavrenty Beria, ordered the NKVD to create a Directorate for Prisoners of War (or USSR NKVD Board for Prisoners of War and Internees, headed by State Security Captain Pyotr K. Soprunenko["The grave unknown elsewhere or any time before ... Katyń - Kharkov - Mednoe"], last retrieved on 10 December 2005. Article includes a note that it is based on a special edition of a ""Historic Reference-Book for the Pilgrims to Katyń - Kharkow - Mednoe" by Jędrzej Tucholski) to manage Polish prisoners.

The NKVD took custody of Polish prisoners from the Red Army, and proceeded to organize a network of reception centers and transfer camps and arrange rail transport to prisoner-of-war camps in the western USSR. The camps were located at Jukhnovo (Babynino rail station), Yuzhe (Talitsy), Kozelsk, Kozelshchyna, Oranki, Ostashkov (Stolbnyi Island on Seliger Lake near Ostashkov), Tyotkino rail station (90 km from Putyvl), Starobielsk, Vologda (Zaenikevo rail station) and Gryazovets.

Kozelsk and Starobielsk were used mainly for military officers, while Ostashkov was used mainly for Boy Scouts, gendarmes, police officers and prison officers. Contrary to a widespread misconception, prisoners at these camps were not exclusively military officers (and the above groups) but also included Polish intelligentsia. The approximate distribution of men at the camps was as follows: Kozelsk, 5,000; Ostashkov, 6,570; and Starobelsk, 4,000. They totalled 15,570 men.

Contours of mass graves, fashioned from limestone tablets; symbolic gravestones.
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Contours of mass graves, fashioned from limestone tablets; symbolic gravestones.

Once at the camps, from October 1939 to February 1940, the Poles were subjected to lengthy interrogations and constant political agitation by NKVD officers such as Vasily Zarubin. The Poles were encouraged to believe they would be released,["The Katyn Diary of Leon Gladun"], last accessed on 19 December 2005, English translation of Polish document. See entries on 25th Decembert, 1939 and 3rd April, 1940. but the interviews were in effect a selection process to determine who would live and who would die. According to NKVD reports, the prisoners could not be induced to adopt a pro-Soviet attitude. They were declared "hardened and uncompromising enemies of Soviet authority."

On March 5, 1940, pursuant to a note to Joseph Stalin from Lavrenty Beria, the members of the Soviet PolitburoStalin, Vyacheslav Molotov, Lazar Kaganovich, Mikhail Kalinin, Kliment Voroshilov, Anastas Mikoyan and Beria — signed an order to execute 25,700 Polish "nationalists and counterrevolutionaries" kept at camps and prisons in occupied western Ukraine and Belarus. (Montefiore Stalin 296)

Aerial photo (October 13, 1943).  Center (circled):  mass graves.  Top:  Smolensk-Vitebsk highway.  Bottom:  NKVD dacha (circled); below it, Dnieper River.
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Aerial photo (October 13, 1943). Center (circled): mass graves. Top: Smolensk-Vitebsk highway. Bottom: NKVD dacha (circled); below it, Dnieper River.

The crime

In the period from April 3 to May 19 1940 about 22,000 prisoners were executed: 14,700-15,570 from the three camps and about 11,000 prisoners in Western parts of Belarus and Ukraine. A 1956 memo from KGB chief Alexander Shelepin to First Secretary Nikita Khrushchev confirmed 21,257 of these killings at the following sites: Katyn–4,421, Starobelsk Camp–3,820, Ostashkov Camp–6,311, other places of detention–7,305.["Noncombatant Deaths in WW II"], the Holocaust History Project, last accessed on 19 December 2005 Those who died at Katyn included an admiral, two generals, 24 colonels, 79 lieutenant colonels, 258 majors, 654 captains, 17 naval captains, 3,420 NCOs, seven chaplains, three landowners, a prince, 43 officials, 85 privates, and 131 refugees. Also among the dead were 20 university professors (including Stefan Kaczmarz); 300 physicians; several hundred lawyers, engineers, and teachers; and more than 100 writers and journalists as well as about 200 pilots. In all, the NKVD eliminated almost half the Polish officer corps. Altogether, during the massacre the NKVD murdered 14 Polish generals:, , , , , , Leon Billewicz (ret.), Bronisław Bohatyrewicz (ret.), Xawery Czernicki (admiral), Stanisław Haller (ret.), Aleksander Kowalewski (ret.), Henryk Minkiewicz (ret.), Kazimierz Orlik-Łukoski, Konstanty Plisowski (ret.), Rudolf Prich (murdered in Lwów), Franciszek Sikorski (ret.), Leonard Skierski (ret.), Piotr Skuratowicz, Mieczysław Smorawiński and Alojzy Wir-Konas (promoted posthumously). A mere 395 prisoners were saved from the slaughter, among them Stanisław Swianiewicz. They were taken to the Yukhnov camp and then to Gryazovets. They were the only ones who escaped death.
Aerial photo of mass graves during April 1943 German exhumations.
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Aerial photo of mass graves during April 1943 German exhumations.

Up to 99% of the remaining prisoners were subsequently murdered. People from Kozelsk were murdered in the usual mass murder site of Smolensk country, called Katyn forest; people from Starobielsk were murdered in the inner NKVD prison of Kharkov and the bodies were buried near Pyatikhatki; and police officers from Ostashkov were murdered in the inner NKVD prison of Kalinin (Tver) and buried in Miednoje (Mednoye).

Polish currency and military insignia from the mass graves.
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Polish currency and military insignia from the mass graves.

Detailed information on the executions in Kalinin NKVD prison was given during the hearing by Dmitrii S. Tokarev, former head of the Board of the District NKVD in Kalinin. According to Tokarev, the shooting started in the evening and ended at dawn. The first transport on April 4, 1940, carried 390 people, and the executioners had a hard time killing so many people during one night. The following transports were no greater than 250 people. The executions were usually performed with German made Walther-type pistols supplied by Moscow., also in .

The killings were methodical. After the condemned's personal information was checked, he was then handcuffed and led to a cell insulated with a felt-lined door. The sounds of the murderers were also masked by the operation of loud machines (perhaps fans) throughout the night. After being taken into the cell, the victim was immediately shot in the back of the head. His body was then taken out through the opposite door and laid in one of the five or six waiting trucks, whereupon the next condemned was taken inside. The procedure went on every night, except for the May Day holiday.#redirect Near Smolensk, the Poles, with their hands tied behind their backs, were led to the graves and shot in the neck.

Discovery

The question of the Polish prisoners' fate was first raised soon after the Germans invaded the Soviet Union in June 1941, when the Polish government-in-exile and the Soviet government signed the Sikorski-Mayski Agreement in which they agreed to cooperate against Germany, and that a Polish army on Soviet territory was to be formed. When the Polish general Władysław Anders began organizing this army, he requested information about the Polish officers. During a personal meeting Stalin assured him and Władysław Sikorski, the Prime Minister of the Polish government-in-exile, that all the Poles had been freed, though some of them may have escaped to Manchuria for example.Brackman, Roman, The Secret File of Joseph Stalin: A Hidden Life, 2001, ISBN 0714650501. [Google Books link to page]

German poster depicting executions of Polish military officers by the Soviets, with caption in Slovak:  "Forest of the dead at Katyn."
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German poster depicting executions of Polish military officers by the Soviets, with caption in Slovak: "Forest of the dead at Katyn."

The fate of the missing prisoners remained unknown until April 1943 when the German Wehrmacht discovered the mass grave of more than 4,000 Polish military reserve officers in the forest on Goat Hill near Katyn. Dr. Joseph Goebbels saw this discovery as an excellent tool to drive a wedge between Poland, Western Allies, and the Soviet Union. On April 13 Berlin Radio broadcast to the world that the German military forces in the Katyn forest near Smolensk had uncovered "a ditch ... 28 metres long and 16 metres wide, in which the bodies of 3,000 Polish officers were piled up in 12 layers".Engel, David, Facing a Holocaust: The Polish Government-In-Exile and the Jews, 1943-1945, 1993, ISBN 0807820695. [Google Books page view] The broadcast went on to charge the Soviets with carrying out the massacre in 1940.

The Katyn Massacre was beneficial to Nazi Germany, which it used to discredit the Soviet Union. Dr. Goebbels wrote in his diary on April 14, 1943: "We are now using the discovery of 12,000 Polish officers, murdered by the GPU, for anti-Bolshevik propaganda on a grand style. We sent neutral journalists and Polish intellectuals to the spot where they were found. Their reports now reaching us from ahead are gruesome. The Fuehrer has also given permission for us to hand out a drastic news item to the German press. I gave instructions to make the widest possible use of the propaganda material. We shall be able to live on it for a couple weeks"Goebbels, Joseph. The Goebbels Diaries (1942-1943). Translated by Louis P. Lochner. Doubleday & Company. 1948 The Germans had succeeded in discrediting the Soviet Government in the eyes of the world and briefly raised the spectre of a communist monster rampaging across the territories of Western civilisation; moreover they had forged the unwilling General Sikorski into a tool which could threaten to unravel the alliance between the Western Allies and Soviet Union.

The Soviet government immediately denied the German charges and claimed that the Polish prisoners of war had been engaged in construction work west of Smolensk and consequently were captured and executed by invading German units in August 1941. The Soviet response on April 15 to the German initial broadcast of April 13, prepared by the Soviet Information Bureau stated that "[...]Polish prisoners-of-war who in 1941 were engaged in construction work west of Smolensk and who [...] fell into the hands of the German-Fascist hangmen[...]".

The Allies were aware that the Nazis had found a mass grave as the discovery transpired, via radio transmissions intercepted and decrypted by Bletchley Park. Germans and the international commission, which was invited by Germany, investigated the Katyn corpses and soon produced physical evidence that the massacre took place in early 1940, at a time when the area was still under Soviet control.Norman Davies, "Europe: A History", HarperCollins, 1998, ISBN 0060974680, [Google Book page view]

Graves of Generals Bronisław Bohatyrewicz (right) and Mieczysław Smorawiński, victims of the massacres.
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Graves of Generals Bronisław Bohatyrewicz (right) and Mieczysław Smorawiński, victims of the massacres.

In April 1943, when the Polish government in exile insisted on bringing this matter to the negotiation table with Soviets and on an investigation by the International Red Cross, The Polish Government official statement on òApril 17, 1943, published in London on April 18[online], last accessed on 19 December 2005, English translation of Polish document, Stalin accused the Polish government in exile of collaborating with Nazi Germany, broke diplomatic relations with it,Soviet Note of April 25, 1943, severing unilaterally Soviet-Polish diplomatic relations [online], last accessed on 19 December 2005, English translation of Polish document and started a campaign to get the Western Allies to recognize the alternative Polish pro-Soviet government in Moscow led by Wanda Wasilewska.Martin Dean, "Collaboration in the Holocaust: Crimes of the Local Police in Belorussia and Ukraine, 1941-44", Palgrave, 1999, ISBN 0312220561 [Google Book page view] Sikorski, whose uncompromising stance on that issue was beginning to create a rift between the Western Allies and the Soviet Union, died suddenly two months later. The cause of his death is still disputed.Paczkowski, Andrzej, The Spring Will Be Ours: Poland and the Poles from Occupation to Freedom, 2003, ISBN 0271023082. [Google Books link to page]Kubit, Jozef Kazimierz, [Was General Sikorski a victim of the Katyn massacre?], Polish News

Cover-up

Actions taken by the Soviet Union

When in September 1943 Goebbels was informed that the German Army had to withdraw from the Katyn area, he entered a prediction in his diary. His entry for September 29, 1943 reads: "Unfortunately we have had to give up Katyn. The Bolsheviks undoubtedly will soon 'find' that we shot 12,000 Polish officers. That episode is one that is going to cause us quite a little trouble in the future. The Soviets are undoubtedly going to make it their business to discover as many mass graves as possible and then blame it on us.".

Indeed, having retaken the Katyn area almost immediately after the Red Army had recaptured Smolensk, Soviet Union, led by the MKVD, began a cover-up. A cemetery the Germans had permitted the Polish Red Cross to build was destroyed and other evidence removed. In January 1944, the Soviet Union sent the "Special Commission for Determination and Investigation of the Shooting of Polish Prizoners of War by German-Fascist Invaders in Katyn Forest," (U.S.S.R. Spetsial'naya Kommissiya po Ustanovleniyu i Rassledovaniyu Obstoyatel'stv Rasstrela Nemetsko-Fashistskimi Zakhvatchikami v Katynskom) to investigate the incidents again. The so-called "Burdenko Commission", headed by Nikolai Burdenko, the President of the Academy of Medical Sciences of the USSR, exhumed the bodies again and reached the conclusion that the shooting was done in 1941, when the Katyn area was under German occupation. No foreign personnel, including the Polish communists, were allowed to join the Burdenko Commission. , whereas the Nazi German investigation had allowed wider access to both international press and organizations (like the Red Cross) and even used Polish workers, like Józef Mackiewicz[online "I saw it with my own eyes..."], last accessed on 19 December 2005, English translation of Polish document.

Response to the Massacre by the Western Allies

The Western Allies had an implicit, if unwilling, hand in the cover-up in their endeavour not to antagonise a then ally, the Soviet Union. The resulting Polish-Soviet crisis was beginning to threaten the vital alliance with the Soviet Union at a time when the Poles' importance to the Allies, essential in the first years of the war, was beginning to fade due to the entry into the conflict of the military and industrial giants, the Soviet Union and the United States. In retrospective review of records, it is clear that both British Prime Minister Winston Churchill and US President Franklin D. Roosevelt were increasingly torn between their commitments to their Polish ally, the uncompromising stance of Sikorski and the demands by Stalin and his diplomats.

German exhumations of Polish dead at Katyn Forest (1943).
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German exhumations of Polish dead at Katyn Forest (1943).

In private, British Prime Minister Winston Churchill agreed that the atrocity was likely carried out by the Soviets. According to the note taken by Count Raczyński, Churchill admitted on April 15 during a conversation with General Sikorski: "Alas, the German revelations are probably true. The Bolsheviks can be very cruel."David Carlton, "Churchill and the Soviet Union ", Manchester University Press, 2000, ISBN 0719041074[Google Books page online]However at the same time, on April 24, Churchill assured the Soviets: "We shall certainly oppose vigorously any 'investigation' by the International Red Cross or any other body in any territory under German authority. Such investigation would be a fraud and its conclusions reached by terrorism."Michael Fowler. "Winston S. Churchill. Philosopher and statesman". University Press of America. 1985. ISBN 0819144169[link] Unofficial or classified UK documents concluded that Soviet guilt was a "near certainty", but alliance with the Soviet was deemed to be more important than moral issues, thus official version supported the Soviet version, up to censoring the contradictory accounts.Churchill's own post-war account of the Katyn affair is laconic. In his memoirs, he quotes the 1944 Soviet inquiry into the massacre, which predictably proved that the Germans had committed the crime, and adds, "belief seems an act of faith."Churchill, Winston, The Hinge of Fate, 1986 (1950), ISBN 0395410584. [Google Book Search page view]

Katyn memorial in Baltimore
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Katyn memorial in Baltimore

In America, a similar line was taken notwithstanding that two official intelligence reports into Katyn massacre were produced that contradicted the official position.

In 1944 Roosevelt assigned Army Captain George Earle, his special emissary to the Balkans, to compile information on Katyn which he did using contacts in Bulgaria and Romania. He concluded that the Soviet Union committed the massacre. After consulting with Elmer Davis, the director of the Office of War Information, Roosevelt rejected that conclusion, saying that he was convinced of Nazi Germany's responsibility, and ordered Earle's report suppressed. When Earle formally requested permission to publish his findings, the President gave him a written order to desist. Earle was reassigned and spent the rest of the war in American Samoa.

Largest of the Katyn mass graves.
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Largest of the Katyn mass graves.

A further report in 1945 supporting the same conclusion was produced and stifled. In 1943 two US POWs - Lt. Col. Donald B. Stewart and Col. John H. Van Vliet - had been taken by Nazi Germans to Katyn in 1943 for an international news conference. National Archives and Records Administration, documents related to Committee to Investigate and Study the Facts, Evidence, and Circumstances of the Katyn Forest Massacre (1951-52) [online], last accessed on 23 December, 2005. Also, Select Committee of the US Congress final report: "The Katyn Forest Massacre," House Report No. 2505, 82nd Congress, 2nd Session (December 22. 1952) [online pdf], [unofficial reproduction of the relevant parts]. Later, in 1945, Van Vliet wrote a report concluding that the Soviets, not the Germans, were responsible. He gave the report to Maj. Gen. Clayton Bissell, Gen. George Marshall's assistant chief of staff for intelligence, who destroyed it[Van Vliet Report (reconstructed and discussion of)], last accessed on 19 December 2005 . During the 1951–52 investigation Bissell defended his action before Congress, contending that it was not in the US interest to embarrass an ally whose forces were still needed to defeat Japan.

Nuremberg Trials

In November 1945, seven officers of the German Wehrmacht, K.H. Strueffling, H. Remlinger, E. Böhom, E. Sommerfeld, H. Jannike, E. Skotki and E. Geherer were tried by a Soviet court. They were falsely charged and condemned to death for their role in the Katyn massacre and were subsequently hanged. Three more were tried on the same charges; E.P. Vogel, F. Wiese, A. Diere. They received sentences of 20 years of hard labor, were turned over to the Soviets and never heard from again.Montréal Gazette, Canada, November 5, 1990, "Germans Hanged for Katyn" [online reproduction] and [Letter published in Anzeiger der Notverwaltung des Deutschen Ostens, No.5, Sept./Oct. 2005], last accessed on 10 December, 2005([Disputed statementdisputed]