Search engine for discovering works of Art, research articles, and books related to Art and Culture
ShareThis
Javascript must be enabled to continue!

Soviet Armed Forces in Lithuania in 1939–1941

View through CrossRef
During the first period of bringing the Soviet armed forces into the country, Soviet officers remained neutral in Lithuania for some time, however, they violated the Lithuanian border on the frontier, kidnapped our ordinary citizens and officials under the false pretext and tried to obtain information about the Lithuanian Armed Forces from them. After Germany had launched an attack on France, the situation changed and the behaviour of the Soviet military officers became more impudent; they used their deserters as a means of blackmail and pressure on Lithuania. Soviet military documents stored in the Lithuanian Special Archives show that it was on the third and the fourth of June, 1940 that the Soviet armed forces were started to be concentrated to occupy Lithuania. It becomes clear that the fate of the Lithuanian State was decided during the first days of June already. In the evening of 15 June, in the territory of Belarus, a new agreement signed on the deployment of the new Soviet military divisions established the occupation. The title of the reporting package of the Soviet documents Description of Combat Work of 3 Military Units and Divisions of the Armed Forces in the Baltics Campaign proves that this was a military operation of the Soviet Union – to occupy Lithuania and other Baltic countries. Utterances and statements of high-ranking Soviet officers claiming that Lithuania surrendered and accepted the ultimatum also confirm that. Instructions, prohibitions and orders issued by the Soviet military officers to the military of Lithuania, self-will and abuse of Soviet military disregarding all laws of Lithuania clearly show that the Soviet armed forces behaved as an occupying army.
Genocide and Resistance Research Centre of Lithuania
Title: Soviet Armed Forces in Lithuania in 1939–1941
Description:
During the first period of bringing the Soviet armed forces into the country, Soviet officers remained neutral in Lithuania for some time, however, they violated the Lithuanian border on the frontier, kidnapped our ordinary citizens and officials under the false pretext and tried to obtain information about the Lithuanian Armed Forces from them.
After Germany had launched an attack on France, the situation changed and the behaviour of the Soviet military officers became more impudent; they used their deserters as a means of blackmail and pressure on Lithuania.
Soviet military documents stored in the Lithuanian Special Archives show that it was on the third and the fourth of June, 1940 that the Soviet armed forces were started to be concentrated to occupy Lithuania.
It becomes clear that the fate of the Lithuanian State was decided during the first days of June already.
In the evening of 15 June, in the territory of Belarus, a new agreement signed on the deployment of the new Soviet military divisions established the occupation.
The title of the reporting package of the Soviet documents Description of Combat Work of 3 Military Units and Divisions of the Armed Forces in the Baltics Campaign proves that this was a military operation of the Soviet Union – to occupy Lithuania and other Baltic countries.
Utterances and statements of high-ranking Soviet officers claiming that Lithuania surrendered and accepted the ultimatum also confirm that.
Instructions, prohibitions and orders issued by the Soviet military officers to the military of Lithuania, self-will and abuse of Soviet military disregarding all laws of Lithuania clearly show that the Soviet armed forces behaved as an occupying army.

Related Results

Soviet Shipbuilding: Productivity improvement Efforts
Soviet Shipbuilding: Productivity improvement Efforts
Constant demand for new naval and commercial vessels has created special conditions for the Government-owned Soviet shipbuilding industry, which practically has not been affected b...
Biography pages of Juozas Albinas Lukša-Daumantas 1940–1941
Biography pages of Juozas Albinas Lukša-Daumantas 1940–1941
The article examines some pages of the life history of the famous post-war partisan Juozas Albinas Lukša Daumantas (10 August 1921 – 4 September 1951) from 1940 through 1941 that h...
Soviet Union in World War II
Soviet Union in World War II
The Soviet Union in World War II is the story of several wars. When World War II started, the Soviet Union was effectively an ally of Nazi Germany in a relatively conventional Euro...
The Activities in the West in the 1940s to Free Lithuania: the Lithuanian American Council in 1940–1950
The Activities in the West in the 1940s to Free Lithuania: the Lithuanian American Council in 1940–1950
In the 1940s, when Lithuania and the other Baltic states were occupied, the old Lithuanian émigré community in the USA was the first to defend Lithuania's independence and freedom ...
Juozas Urbsys in the KGB spotlight. Source Outcrops
Juozas Urbsys in the KGB spotlight. Source Outcrops
After occupying Lithuania, the Soviet Union first arrested and imprisoned members of the Lithuanian government and later other government operatives. Lithuanian Foreign Minister Ju...
Formation of a hierarchy of doctrinal documents in the Armed Forces of Ukraine as an element of the stability of the management system
Formation of a hierarchy of doctrinal documents in the Armed Forces of Ukraine as an element of the stability of the management system
The modern conditions of conducting armed struggle require the search for rational ways and means of maintaining the necessary level of combat effectiveness of the Armed Forces of ...
Archyvų pertvarkymas Lietuvoje Tarybų valdžios metais (1918–1919 m.)
Archyvų pertvarkymas Lietuvoje Tarybų valdžios metais (1918–1919 m.)
The October Revolution began a new era in the archives organization – Soviet centralization of archives. His foundation was the decree of June 1, 1918 “About the reorganization and...
Jonas Ženauskas – Soviet Prisoner of 1940–1941, Member of the July Uprising of 1941, Rescuer of Jews
Jonas Ženauskas – Soviet Prisoner of 1940–1941, Member of the July Uprising of 1941, Rescuer of Jews
This article is mostly concerned with the biographical facts of Jonas Ženauskas, a Bolshevik prisoner of 1940-1941, anti-Soviet rebel and Jewish rescuer; these facts were mainly de...

Back to Top