ABSTRACT

This third volume in Michael Kettle's series on Allied intervention in the Russian civil war, begins at the point when small-scale Allied intervention in Bolshevik-overrun Russia had failed, but had succeeded in covering the formation of some anti-Bolshevik White groups sympathetic to allied aid.
Written on a panoramic basis which includes detailed documents from both sides, Kettle reveals what each side's leadership had to face as the Russian kaleidoscope constantly changed. Kettle argues that British intervention was doomed to failure and that the White Russians became expendable British pawns in a temporary forward holding position, designed to contain the Bolshevik inferno within Russia. The strategic and military miscalculations of British medium intervention thus prolonged the Russian civil war, and caused a further 14 million Russian deaths. Using Churchill's previously unpublished, last papers and recently available French documents, Kettle provides a fascinating and in-depth analysis of the `Archangel Fiasco'.

chapter 2|22 pages

The Russian theatres: preparations for war

chapter 3|44 pages

Peacemaking: the Prinkipo proposal

chapter 4|34 pages

War or Peace: Churchill’s proposal

chapter 8|56 pages

The French débâcle at Odessa

chapter 10|42 pages

The War Office & Archangel: no second Odessa

chapter 12|42 pages

Kolchak & the Allies: quasi-recognition

chapter 13|44 pages

South Russia: Denikin at Kharkov & Tsaritsin

chapter 15|40 pages

North Russia: Kotlas & the Dvina river

chapter 16|24 pages

The Kotlas Operation: mutiny & fiasco