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valtrex
04-07-2008, 10:54 AM
Introduction
In 1919 , Greece was one of Nations contributed to the allied expedition of the Ukraine, against Soviet Russia, in order to overthrow the Communist regime. The Greek Expeditionary Corps composed of the entire A' Army Corps, under Maj. Gen. Constantinos Nither .
Greek A' Corps with three French divisions, one Polish division & detachments of White Russian Volunteers, consisted the 1st Allied Divisional Group. Soviet Russia responded to the allied intervention by sending three entire armies to Crimea & Odessa.
The Greeks fought in the battles of Bol-Buyalik, Cherson, Nikolaiev & finally in Odessa. By the summer of 1919 (Greek withdrawal), Greek losses accounted for 398 KIA, 657 WIA.

The battle & evacuation of Odessa (March 1919)
OoB
Greek Expeditionary Corps (EES)
A' Army Corps
CiC: Major General Constantinos Nither
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A. Eastern Sector
Command:
– General Nérel, commander of the [French] 30th ID;
– HQ at Odessa;
– Command post at Gevanova.
Troops:
– Infantry
– [French] 40th IR;
– two regiments of the Greek 13th ID;
– one regiment of the Greek 2nd ID;
– detachment of Russian Volunteer Army in cover.
– Artillery:
– one group from the divisional artillery of the [French] 30th ID;
– artillery of the Greek 13th ID;
– field and heavy artillery of the Russian Volunteer Army
– Cavalry
– two squadrons of the 4th Chasseurs d’Afrique and one battalion of MGs
– one squadron of Russian Volunteer Army
I. The advanced line ran along the Cerbka river, the bridge at Popovca on the Tilgulski [Liman] and the
defile of Koblievo-Troïtkoïe. Covered to the east by a detachment of the Russian Volunteer Army
operating between the Berezanski Liman and the Tiligulski Liman (1 battalion, 2 squadrons and 2 guns), it
was divided into three parts:
a. Under the orders of Lieutenant-Colonel de Clavières:
– advanced post of Cerbka
– advanced post of Pocrovscoe;
– bridge of Popovca.
– advanced post of Cerbka under the orders of Colonel Manetas and consisting of:
– one Greek IR;
– one Greek artillery group;
– two [French?] 75mm batteries;
– one Greek engineer company;
– one squadron of the 4th Chasseurs d’Afrique;
– one Greek infantry battalion at Bol Buyalic in support,
limited to the east by the Tchernogorka to Krasnogorka (included) road and to the west by the
Gradenfeld to Andriewka road, and liaising to the east with the Russian Volunteer Army
detachment and to the west with the Polish cavalry at Liebenthal.
– advanced post of Pocrovscoe under the orders of the commander of the Russian Volunteer Army
detachment and disposing of:
– four infantry companies;
– 36 machine-guns;
– two squadrons on foot;
– 10 guns,
limited to the west by the Tchernogorka to Krasnogorka road and the east by the village of Kapri.
Liaising to the west with the advanced post of Cerbka on the river of the same name and to the
east to the village of Kapri with the advanced post of Popovka.
– advanced post of Popovka held by two companies and 16 MGs of the Russian Volunteer Army in liaison
to the west with the company of the Russian Volunteer Army in Kapri and to the east with the garrison of
Koblievo at Savnia.
b. Fortified line of Koblievo-Troitkoie, under the orders of the commander of the Greek battalion
occupying the line and possessing a Greek battalion and 4 guns of the Russian Volunteer Army, limited to
the west by Tiligulski Liman and to the east by the sea. Liaison to the west to the village of Savnia with the
Russian Volunteer Army detachment at Popovka.
c. Cover to the east, under the direct orders of the general commanding the 1st Divisional Group
comprising a squadron of the Russian Volunteer Army (bulk at Krasnaia) patrolling in the direction of
Lubianka and Cozlo with a line of retirement on Koblievo-Troitkoie. The Russian Volunteer Army
occupied, as well, Otchakov, Fort National and Fort Kimburn.
The admiral to give all necessary orders to support, with the fleet, the occupation of Fort National and,
eventually, the evacuation of Otchakov.
II. An intermediate line, passing through Bol Buyalik and Kremidovska, to be held by:
– one Greek battalion;
– one half-company of Greek engineers;
– one French cavalry squadron;
– one platoon of French MGs;
– one French 75mm battery,
and placed in reserve at the disposition of the colonel commanding the 4th Chasseurs d’Afrique.
III. The principal line, under the orders of the colonel commanding the 30th ID, consisting of:
– two Greek battalions (of which one detached to the Troitkoie line);
– one French regiment;
– one Greek 65mm battery,
was divided into two sub-sectors each occupied by a Greek battalion and organised defensively:
– one sub-sector from the sea to Kouialnitchki Liman;
– one sub-sector from Kouialnitchki Liman to Gadjibiesky Liman.
In reserve, a French regiment at Marewska at the disposition of the general commanding the eastern sector.
B. Western Sector
Placed under the orders of General Borius, commander of the [French] 156th ID, limited between
Gadgibiesky Liman [exclusive] and the Dniestr (exclusive) and consisting of:
– a sub-sector of defence, properly speaking;
– Odessa itself;
– a detachment in cover at the water plant under the direct orders of the general commanding the 1st
Divisional Group.
A. Sub-sector of defence, under the orders of General Borius, limited to the east by Gadgibiesky Liman and
the Dniestr to the west, in liaison to the east around Andriewka with the Polish Cavalry and to the west, on
the Dniestr, with the Romanian units occupying Tiraspol and consisting of:
– Infantry:
– one regiment of the [French] 30th ID;
– one regiment of the [French] 156th ID;
– one regiment of the Greek 2nd ID;
– one Romanian infantry regiment, under certain conditions.
– Cavalry:
– one regiment of Polish cavalry.
– Artillery:
– one group from the divisional artillery of the [French] 30th ID;
– one group from the Greek 13th ID;
– one Romanian group.
B. Advanced line: Under the orders of the lieutenant-colonel commanding the [French] 58th IR, running
along the railway to Razdelnaia and consisting of:
– the advanced post of Razdelnaia-Tiraspol;
– Tiraspol;
– the detachment at Bielajewska.
a. The advanced post of Razdelnaia-Tiraspol, under the orders of the commander of the 1st battalion of the
58th IR and comprising:
– one Romanian battalion;
– one battalion of the 58th IR (less one section);
– one Romanian battery,
in liaison to the east with the Polish cavalry around Poniatowka and to the west with the garrison of
Tiraspol around Strasburg.
b. Tiraspol, under the orders of the lieutenant-colonel commanding the Romanian regiment and consisting
of:
– two Romanian battalions;
– one Romanian battery;
– one section of the [French] 58th IR,
in liaison to the east with the garrison of Razdelnaia around Strasburg, to the west with the Romanian
troops of Bessarabia at the Bender bridge. The liaison with the advanced post of Cerbka (eastern sector)
and with Razdelnaia (western sector) was confided to the Polish cavalry of which the bulk was at
Chimiotowka, under the direct orders of the lieutenant-colonel commanding the 58th IR.
c. Detachment at Bielajewska [the water plants] under the direct orders of the general commanding the 1st
Divisional Group and consisting of:
– three infantry companies;
– one squadron;
– one battery.
of the Polish 4th ID.
C. The intermediate line, under the orders of the lieutenant-colonel commanding the [French] 58th IR,
holding Novodlagodatnaya with the staff of the regiment and one battalion of the 58th IR.
D. The principal line, established at 6 to 8 kilometres from Odessa, running via Ustowa, Dalnik and
Tatarka, under the orders of Colonel Gargalidis, commander of the Greek 2nd ID and held by one infantry
regiment of that division.
Finally, the town of Odessa. This was placed under the orders of General Borius, the governor, charged
with the interior defence of the town. The defence was to be based on the organisation of a principal line
established around the rail line and a redoubt in support of the port.
The support of the fleet was to be realised by agreement between the governor and the admiral
commanding the naval forces in Odessa.
General Borius had for the defence of the town:
– the [French] 156th ID (less a regiment);
– one company of the legion;
– one regiment of tirailleurs algériens;
– the 4th regiment of Chasseurs d’Afrique, less two squadrons;
– the remainder of the Polish 4th ID;
– the remainder of the Russian Volunteer Army;
– the Russian police;
– the disembarked companies [naval landing parties]
– the staging battalions (Indo-Chinese for the port guard and Algerian for the redoubt).
A general reserve, at the disposition of the general commanding the 1st Divisional Group, consisted of:
– one infantry regiment of the Greek 2nd ID and the advised reinforcements;
– tanks of the AS/303 (one section at Peressip, one at the station, one in the proximity of the HQ)
– the 534th Hellenic Aviation Sq.

By March 1919, the French military wanted to abandon Odessa. The food supply was insufficient to feed the city of a million people and the political situation was unfavourable.
French foreign policy, was aimed at providing a cordon sanitaire between the communists and the West, and an independent Ukraine could have been part of that cordon, along with Rumania, Poland and the Baltic states.
Part of the generals’ concern was that the numerous “workers” of Odessa were both “red” and armed. The French and Greeks had seen the workers rise up to fight them in Nikolaiev and rightly feared the same if Odessa came under direct attack.
On 23 March, General Anselme, commanding the 1st Divisional Group, received from General Franchet d’Esperey
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Commander of the Allied Armies in the Orient, new directives for the occupation, defence and security of Odessa. A revised defensive plan was drawn up based on this. The new defensive plan was made with the White Russian, Polish and Greek troops in the front line, with the French in support or reserve.
The White Russians were not very effective, but it was seen that the intervention had been to assist them to save their country and they should at least pull their weight.
The Poles were more committed as fighters, though badly organised, and they were tasked mainly with protecting the town’s water supply and some exterior patrolling.
The Greeks formed the bulk of the front line because they formed the bulk of the troops available.
The French units were largely in reserve because they were much easier to command in an emergency, trained in French doctrine and with no language problems. The poor morale of the French troops at this time has been grossly over-stated, mostly for political reasons. The troops were tired and units were at skeleton strengths and this bred poor spirit, but all the intervention troops in the Russian Civil War suffered from similar poor morale. The plan of defence was an advanced line, a principal defensive line and a redoubt close to the port. Forces were not spread out and care was taken that detachments were not smaller than a company, this having shown itself in the past to be dangerous. An intermediate line, with troops in support of the advanced line, was also given.
The redoubt, from which all civilian population had been evacuated, grouped the French reserve troops, all the services and the officers’ quarters. Access to it was permanently defended and liaison for naval fire support worked out.
The Eastern sector was to come under sustained attack soon after this plan was put into operation. The collapse of the initial lines over the next weeks was sufficient to persuade the French that the entire area should be evacuated, which they did soon after.
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Despite exaggerated reports of the Reds’ drive on Odessa, the city was in no real danger of falling to external attack – the support of the navy’s guns would ensure any Red troops would not approach too aggressively. The only real danger to the French was that the local population, which they could not feed, would start an internal rising. Despite that, French Zouaves had so poor morale that immediately after the first clashes with the Reds, panic spread among their ranks, retreated disorderly and left the entire Greek flank uncovered. Soon, hard fights began between the Poles, the Greeks, the remaining French troops & the advancing Red Army. The entire front line was collapsing. Greeks & Poles withdrew the front in order (showing remarkable discipline) while on the other hand French Units fled in disarray. Major Nicholodemos of the 5/42 Evzone Rgt, was promoted to the rank of Major for Valour in the field. Greek losses in Odessa accounted for 118 KIA, 140 WIA.
In August 1919, Greeks evacuated Ukraine.
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Cavalry Lance Corporal (left), Infantry Captain (right)

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Greek Infantry Corporal. He's armed with the twin bolt, Mannlicher-Schonauer 6.5 mm M1903/14 rifle. The point up chevrons on the left sleeve suggest 24-month combat service

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The Greeks in Odessa, February 1919

Vorian
04-07-2008, 12:08 PM
Not a very well known part of our history.


It was a stupid move though, it encouraged the communists to provide support to Kemal in the war in Anatolia.

Peris
04-07-2008, 07:30 PM
Thanks valtrex.

one old man of my native place now deceased was the radio man for a high ranking officer (can't remember who) in this operation and he had some interesting stories to tell. It was a mistake from a political and military point of view and gave to Bolsheviks the excuse to assist Kemal and wipe out the Hellenism in the area living there since BC. Later came Stalin who completed the pogroms with the ''Gretseskaya oreratsia''aka the Greek operation.

valtrex
04-09-2008, 04:03 AM
RED ARMY
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Red Army Official Badge in 1918. It has the hammer-and-plough device which gave away officially in 1922 to the better-known hammer-and-sickle

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Non-regulation sleeve badges, 1918-1920 (clockwise from top left): Cavalry Rgt; the most popular armoured unit badge; 2nd Moscow Red Heaavy Arty Commander's school; rare pattern used by aviation detachments; sapper Coy of an Infantry Rgt or Brigade

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WHITE RUSSIANS
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GREEK ARMY INSIGNIA IN 1919
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(For NCOs too, without the button)

Connaught Ranger
06-08-2009, 05:36 AM
There was no invasion of Russia by Allied military Forces with the idea of conquest, some, such as the British and French, were there to support the "White" Russians, other reasons were to stop the "Reds" getting their hands on the hugh military stockpiles of equipment located in Archangel, also the evacuation of the "Czech Legion" and with the idea of keeping the Trans-Siberian Railway open in case the "Reds" were defeated and they (the Whites and the Allies) would have a way to reopen the Eastern Front against Germany.

The numbers of troops involved in the Expedition to Russia, by the various countries (except Japan, who had a very short distance to move their men and equipment, compared to) should be reason enough to show that it was far to small to be a seriously seem as an "invasion" force. Twenty years later, the little corporal from Austria with one of the biggest "modern" armies of the day could not achieve it what chance has small expeditionary forces have.

There is no actual concrete evidence presented to show otherwise only in the minds of those who swallowed the Bolshevik Party line.

Connaught Ranger.:)

Connaught Ranger
06-08-2009, 02:52 PM
A. Eastern Sector
Command:
– General Nérel, commander of the [French] 30th ID;
– HQ at Odessa;
– Command post at Gevanova.
Troops:
– Infantry
– [French] 40th IR;
– two regiments of the Greek 13th ID;
– one regiment of the Greek 2nd ID;
– detachment of Russian Volunteer Army in cover.
– Artillery:
– one group from the divisional artillery of the [French] 30th ID;
– artillery of the Greek 13th ID;
– field and heavy artillery of the Russian Volunteer Army
– Cavalry
– two squadrons of the 4th Chasseurs d’Afrique and one battalion of MGs
– one squadron of Russian Volunteer Army
I. The advanced line ran along the Cerbka river, the bridge at Popovca on the Tilgulski [Liman] and the
defile of Koblievo-Troïtkoïe. Covered to the east by a detachment of the Russian Volunteer Army
operating between the Berezanski Liman and the Tiligulski Liman (1 battalion, 2 squadrons and 2 guns), it
was divided into three parts:
a. Under the orders of Lieutenant-Colonel de Clavières:
– advanced post of Cerbka
– advanced post of Pocrovscoe;
– bridge of Popovca.
– advanced post of Cerbka under the orders of Colonel Manetas and consisting of:
– one Greek IR;
– one Greek artillery group;
– two [French?] 75mm batteries;
– one Greek engineer company;
– one squadron of the 4th Chasseurs d’Afrique;
– one Greek infantry battalion at Bol Buyalic in support,
limited to the east by the Tchernogorka to Krasnogorka (included) road and to the west by the
Gradenfeld to Andriewka road, and liaising to the east with the Russian Volunteer Army
detachment and to the west with the Polish cavalry at Liebenthal.
– advanced post of Pocrovscoe under the orders of the commander of the Russian Volunteer Army
detachment and disposing of:
– four infantry companies;
– 36 machine-guns;
– two squadrons on foot;
– 10 guns,
limited to the west by the Tchernogorka to Krasnogorka road and the east by the village of Kapri.
Liaising to the west with the advanced post of Cerbka on the river of the same name and to the
east to the village of Kapri with the advanced post of Popovka.
– advanced post of Popovka held by two companies and 16 MGs of the Russian Volunteer Army in liaison
to the west with the company of the Russian Volunteer Army in Kapri and to the east with the garrison of
Koblievo at Savnia.
b. Fortified line of Koblievo-Troitkoie, under the orders of the commander of the Greek battalion
occupying the line and possessing a Greek battalion and 4 guns of the Russian Volunteer Army, limited to
the west by Tiligulski Liman and to the east by the sea. Liaison to the west to the village of Savnia with the
Russian Volunteer Army detachment at Popovka.
c. Cover to the east, under the direct orders of the general commanding the 1st Divisional Group
comprising a squadron of the Russian Volunteer Army (bulk at Krasnaia) patrolling in the direction of
Lubianka and Cozlo with a line of retirement on Koblievo-Troitkoie. The Russian Volunteer Army
occupied, as well, Otchakov, Fort National and Fort Kimburn.
The admiral to give all necessary orders to support, with the fleet, the occupation of Fort National and,
eventually, the evacuation of Otchakov.
II. An intermediate line, passing through Bol Buyalik and Kremidovska, to be held by:
– one Greek battalion;
– one half-company of Greek engineers;
– one French cavalry squadron;
– one platoon of French MGs;
– one French 75mm battery,
and placed in reserve at the disposition of the colonel commanding the 4th Chasseurs d’Afrique.
III. The principal line, under the orders of the colonel commanding the 30th ID, consisting of:
– two Greek battalions (of which one detached to the Troitkoie line);
– one French regiment;
– one Greek 65mm battery,
was divided into two sub-sectors each occupied by a Greek battalion and organised defensively:
– one sub-sector from the sea to Kouialnitchki Liman;
– one sub-sector from Kouialnitchki Liman to Gadjibiesky Liman.
In reserve, a French regiment at Marewska at the disposition of the general commanding the eastern sector.
B. Western Sector
Placed under the orders of General Borius, commander of the [French] 156th ID, limited between
Gadgibiesky Liman [exclusive] and the Dniestr (exclusive) and consisting of:
– a sub-sector of defence, properly speaking;
– Odessa itself;
– a detachment in cover at the water plant under the direct orders of the general commanding the 1st
Divisional Group.
A. Sub-sector of defence, under the orders of General Borius, limited to the east by Gadgibiesky Liman and
the Dniestr to the west, in liaison to the east around Andriewka with the Polish Cavalry and to the west, on
the Dniestr, with the Romanian units occupying Tiraspol and consisting of:
– Infantry:
– one regiment of the [French] 30th ID;
– one regiment of the [French] 156th ID;
– one regiment of the Greek 2nd ID;
– one Romanian infantry regiment, under certain conditions.
– Cavalry:
– one regiment of Polish cavalry.
– Artillery:
– one group from the divisional artillery of the [French] 30th ID;
– one group from the Greek 13th ID;
– one Romanian group.
B. Advanced line: Under the orders of the lieutenant-colonel commanding the [French] 58th IR, running
along the railway to Razdelnaia and consisting of:
– the advanced post of Razdelnaia-Tiraspol;
– Tiraspol;
– the detachment at Bielajewska.
a. The advanced post of Razdelnaia-Tiraspol, under the orders of the commander of the 1st battalion of the
58th IR and comprising:
– one Romanian battalion;
– one battalion of the 58th IR (less one section);
– one Romanian battery,
in liaison to the east with the Polish cavalry around Poniatowka and to the west with the garrison of
Tiraspol around Strasburg.
b. Tiraspol, under the orders of the lieutenant-colonel commanding the Romanian regiment and consisting
of:
– two Romanian battalions;
– one Romanian battery;
– one section of the [French] 58th IR,
in liaison to the east with the garrison of Razdelnaia around Strasburg, to the west with the Romanian troops of Bessarabia at the Bender bridge. The liaison with the advanced post of Cerbka (eastern sector) and with Razdelnaia (western sector) was confided to the Polish cavalry of which the bulk was atChimiotowka, under the direct orders of the lieutenant-colonel commanding the 58th IR.
c. Detachment at Bielajewska [the water plants] under the direct orders of the general commanding the 1st Divisional Group and consisting of:
– three infantry companies;
– one squadron;
– one battery.
of the Polish 4th ID.
C. The intermediate line, under the orders of the lieutenant-colonel commanding the [French] 58th IR, holding Novodlagodatnaya with the staff of the regiment and one battalion of the 58th IR.
D. The principal line, established at 6 to 8 kilometres from Odessa, running via Ustowa, Dalnik and Tatarka, under the orders of Colonel Gargalidis, commander of the Greek 2nd ID and held by one infantry regiment of that division.
Finally, the town of Odessa. This was placed under the orders of General Borius, the governor, charged with the interior defence of the town. The defence was to be based on the organisation of a principal line established around the rail line and a redoubt in support of the port.
The support of the fleet was to be realised by agreement between the governor and the admiral
commanding the naval forces in Odessa.
General Borius had for the defence of the town:
– the [French] 156th ID (less a regiment);
– one company of the legion;
– one regiment of tirailleurs algériens;
– the 4th regiment of Chasseurs d’Afrique, less two squadrons;
– the remainder of the Polish 4th ID;
– the remainder of the Russian Volunteer Army;
– the Russian police;
– the disembarked companies [naval landing parties]
– the staging battalions (Indo-Chinese for the port guard and Algerian for the redoubt).
A general reserve, at the disposition of the general commanding the 1st Divisional Group, consisted of:
– one infantry regiment of the Greek 2nd ID and the advised reinforcements;
– tanks of the AS/303 (one section at Peressip, one at the station, one in the proximity of the HQ)
– the 534th Hellenic Aviation Sq.

With regards Romanians involved in the Expedition:-


In the autumn 1918 the Bolsheviks started attacking the Volga front defended by the 1st Czech division and groups of the counterrevolutionary army. The Romanian battalion from Samara defended the left flank. A second Romanian battalion at Celeabinsk was detached at Kurgan where they guarded the city, installing a Romanian headquarter.

At the beginning of the winter the front it retreated in the Urals, on lines easier to defend. The Romanian troops from Samara, Celeabinsk and Kurgan were concentrated at Petropavlovsk. Lacking superior officers, the leader was chosen as Col. Kadletz.

During the winter the Romanian corp was concentrated at Irkutsk.

The corp was organized in two battalions: “Horia” and “Marasesti”, two armoured trains with the same name, a reserve battalion, a pioneer company, a cavalry squadron and a headquarter company.

At the beginning there were 2500 men, and later the number increased to 5000 with over 100 officers. It created a committee to run the formation (“the National Romanian Committee from Russia”).

At 24 august 1918 it signed a convention with the Czechoslovak Committee, recognizing the common interest. They edited a newspaper “Neamul Romanesc”, held over 40 conferences and organized a Romanian library. They were supposed to guard a sector of the Tran-Siberian railway almost 1000 km long. They led 37 incursions at 150-800 km from their bases. They had over 60 dead and a significant number of wounded.

After the Kolceac defeat the Romanians embarked in trains (19 January 1920) and started to retreat towards east. They were the rearguard of the national troops.

At Nijni-Udinsk the Yugoslav legion was destroyed. The Czech troops from the 3rd division didn’t intervene and retreated fast. The Romanians formed the rearguard.

At 3 february 1920 in Sergul rail station there were troops from the "Marasesti" battalion and several trains from the 3rd division. Several km west, the Bolshevik vanguard reached the Asei rail station with three battalions, some cavalry and 2 guns.

A Romanian cavalry reconnaissance troop was defeated. The prisoners are killed when they refused to give information. During the night the Russians attacked from the north-west from the Traktovaia village.

A Czech battalion left the train and retreated. The Bolsheviks attack the Romanians in the rail station. They resisted and the Russians are thrown towards the main road to Moscow. The second day the Romanians and the Czech blew up the station and started to retreat towards east. During the night they had 8 dead and 8 wounded.

A second try at surround the Romanian legion at Kuitun didn’t succeed. The Romanians formed the rearguard blowing up stations, stations water supplies, cut the telegraph lines etc. The moral was high. The armistice offers were rejected because they considered themselves part of the Romanian army, which was fighting the Soviets on the Dnister.

At 7 February 1920 the Czechoslovak's signed an armistice with the Bolsheviks, under the conditions that the Bolsheviks would keep 50 km distance from the rearguard troops. The Romanians were also part of the armistice, and they were placed in around lake Baikal, guarding the railway up to Transbaikalia, where the line was occupied by Japanese troops. The Czech took over the Irkutsk guard.

At Harbin the contacted Major V. Cadere sent from the country of Romania to help the repatriation. In spring 1920 the Romanians reached Vladivostok. In August 1921 the arrival of the first group of Transylvanian volunteers was celebrated at Brasov.

ALSO:-

About 5000 Romanian prisoners in Russia volunteered for the Allied Expeditionary Corps, constituting the Romanian Legion of Siberia. The Romanian corps was based at Irkutsk and was made out of two battalions (Horia and Mărăşeşti), two armoured trains bearing the same names as the battalions, a reserve battalion, a company of pioneers, a squadron of lancers and a general staff company.

The legion was commanded by an officer of Czech origin, Colonel Kodletz. The legion was part of a multitude of armies led by Admiral Kolceak described in the article as "a cruel officer of limited reasoning who did not want to collaborate with the national corps under his command (Czech, Romanian, Polish, Serbian, Lithuanian) ".

The mission of the Romanian corps was to defend the Trans-Siberian railway, all the time being the rearguard of Kolceak's troops who were in retreat. They thus fought over 9000 km from Irkutsk to Vladivostok. First they fought against Bolshevik gangs and then against regular troops of the Red Army. About 2600 soldiers reached Vladivostok.

The author states that when the various national corps were forced to reach armistices with the Red Army, the Romanian Legion did not as Romania was still at war with the Bolsheviks in Europe.

In 1920, Romania has sent to Vladivostok a military mission composed of Officer Victor Cadere and NCO Raul Alevra that had to secure the repatriation of the Siberian POWs of Romanian origin (about 15000).

On 23-30 May 1920, 2400 members of the Romanian Legion and 600 POWs were embarked on the British transport ships "Trasosmontes" and "Hendesgrum". About 14000 POWs of Romanian origin remained in Russia. A few were forcefully enrolled into the Red Army and some managed to return to Romania by their own means. However, nothing is known about the fate of the other ones (most of the remaining prisoners).

Sources:-

1. Romanian Military Archives, The General Headquarters Fund, Decorations Office, File no. 864

2. Monitorul Oficial no. 86/1918

3. Royal High Decree no. 3870/27.10.1939 in Monitorul Oficial no. 16/15.11.1939

4. V. Manea and C. Tucă 2000 Siberia, ultima escală Buletinul Arhivelor Militare Române 4

This is the link to an interesting article on this topic about Elie Bufnea, a former Legionnaire who wrote many books. He was later arrested by the communist regime (6 years jail).

http://www.revista.memoria.ro/?location=view_article&id=389
Romanian language only.


According to Bufnea, the Legion included around 5,000 volunteers (1,735 fromTransilvania, 597 from Banat, 160 from Bucovina, 24 from the Kingdom of Romania, 7 from Bessarabia). Banatul, a rather small historical province, provided the largest ratio of volunteers per surface.

Romanians were in the rearguard of the Czech Legions, attacked viciously by the Bolscheviks and repulsing them valliantly. Russians called them Dikaia Divisia/The Savage Division.



As Romania had had a disastrous war against the combined forces of Austro-Hungaria, Prussia, Bulgaria and Turky, between 1916 - 1919, lacking badly in equipment and supplies, and eventually losing their capital city of Bucharest, to the enemy and being pushed back all the way into Moldova, Romania was in no condition to mount an "Invasion" force into Russia. They were more concerned with getting Transylvania back and stopping the rise of Bolsheviks under Bella Kuhn in Budapest, this they achieved by successfully occupying Budapest in late 1919 - till early 1920, until being asked to leave by the Allied Military Command.

Connaught Ranger.:)

(http://www.revista.memoria.ro/?location=view_article&id=389)

Connaught Ranger
06-09-2009, 02:32 AM
I received a PM from Pezy, and to clear up any confusion with regards why I mention the Romanians here in what is titled "Greek Army in Russia 1919."


Two of your posts about the allied intervention in Russia were posted by mistake to the 'Greek Army in Russia 1919' thread.

My Reply:-

No mistake, if you go back to post number 1, you will see the original poster refers to the Romanians in the order of the troops listed under "The Greek Army in Russia" I suspect the original poster included all this to pad out his thread, he also lists troops from:- France, Poland, Free Russian Army, as well. The Romanians Legion were raised in Russia from P.O.W.'s and not sent as an "invasion force".

Connaught Ranger.