ABSTRACT

The Forgotten Appeasement of 1920 examines a turning point in East European history: the summer of 1920, when Lenin’s Soviet Russia decided to challenge the Versailles system and launch a military attack on the continent.

The outcome of this attack might have been the occupation of all of Poland and East Central Europe, and a Red Army sweep further west. This book probes the British–Soviet negotiations and diplomatic operations behind the scenes. Professor Nowak uses hitherto unexamined documents from Russian and British archives to show how (and why) top British politicians were ready to accept a new Russian imperial control over the whole of Eastern Europe. Nowak unravels this previously untold story of that first and forgotten appeasement, stopped only by the Polish military victory over the Red Army. His excellent historical craftsmanship and new sources contribute to the book’s quality, filling up a lacuna in contemporary historiography.

This book will appeal to researchers of geopolitical affairs and the Great Powers, the history of Poland, and the political mentality of Western elites. It will also be of interest to university students and tutors, scholars of history and international relations and – thanks to the book’s brisk and fascinating narrative – amateur historians and history aficionados.

chapter |11 pages

Introduction

part One|49 pages

The dream of an independent Poland and “concepts of the world”

chapter 1|5 pages

Trouble with Polish independence

chapter 2|17 pages

Limits to the power (and imagination) of the winners

A view from Versailles

chapter 3|15 pages

Was Piłsudski a tool in French hands?

France and Poland's Eastern policy (January–April 1920)

chapter 4|10 pages

Powerlessness

Washington respecting the Soviet Empire and the threat to Polish independence

part Two|54 pages

The Polish crisis

part Three|134 pages

How does the imperial brain work?

chapter 10|11 pages

Balfour, or shunning chaos

chapter 12|7 pages

Kerr and Hankey, the two secretaries

chapter 13|18 pages

The right man in the wrong place

Horace Rumbold in Warsaw

chapter 15|12 pages

The Vox Populi and its representatives

chapter 17|10 pages

Coda

part Four|78 pages

Polish a‌nnexes and questions

chapter 18|21 pages

Left hand side free

Piłsudski's policy of appeasement

chapter 19|55 pages

Questions about the Peace of Riga