The Soviet Counterinsurgency in the Western Borderlands
Cambridge University Press, 4/19/2010
EAN 9780521768337, ISBN10: 0521768330
Hardcover, 386 pages, 23.4 x 15.6 x 2.2 cm
Language: English
The Soviet Counterinsurgency in the Western Borderlands investigates the Soviet response to nationalist insurgencies that occurred between 1944 and 1953 in the regions the Soviet Union annexed after the Nazi-Soviet pact: Eastern Poland, Lithuania, Latvia, and Estonia. Based on new archival data, Alexander Statiev presents the first comprehensive study of Soviet counterinsurgency that ties together the security tools and populist policies intended to attract the local populations. The book traces the origins of the Soviet pacification doctrine and then presents a comparative analysis of the rural societies in Eastern Poland and the Baltic States on the eve of the Soviet invasion. This analysis is followed by a description of the anti-communist resistance movements. Subsequently, the author shows how ideology affected the Soviet pacification doctrine and examines the major means to enforce the doctrine: agrarian reforms, deportations, amnesties, informant networks, covert operations, and local militias.
Introduction
1. Origins of Soviet counterinsurgency
2. The borderland societies in the interwar period
the first Soviet occupation and the emergence of nationalist resistance
3. The borderlands under German occupation (1941–4)
social context of the Soviet re-conquest
4. Nationalist resistance after the Soviet re-conquest
5. Soviet agrarian policy as a pacification tool
6. Deportations, 'repatriations' and other types of forced migrations as aspects of security policy
7. Amnesties
8. Red rurales
the destruction battalions
9. Police tactics
actions of NKVD security units, intelligence gathering, covert operations and intimidation
10. The church in Soviet security policy
11. Violations of official policy and their impact on pacification
12. Conclusion
nationalist resistance and Soviet counterinsurgency in the global context
Appendix 1. Note on used terms and geographic and personal names
Appendix 2. Note on primary sources.