The
Winter War ( , , ) was a military conflict between
the Soviet
Union
and Finland
. It
began with a Soviet offensive on 30 November 1939, three months
after the start of
World War II and the
Soviet invasion of Poland,
and ended on 13 March 1940 with the
Moscow Peace Treaty. The
League of Nations deemed the attack
illegal and expelled the Soviet Union on 14 December 1939.
The Soviet forces had three times as many soldiers as the Finns, 30
times as many aircraft, and a hundred times as many
tanks. The
Red Army, however,
had been crippled by a
drastic purge in
1937, reducing its morale and efficiency shortly before the
outbreak of fighting. With up to 50 percent of its
army officers executed or imprisoned,
including most of those of the highest ranks, the Red Army in 1939
had many inexperienced senior officers. Because of these factors,
and high commitment and morale in the Finnish forces, Finland was
able to resist the Soviet invasion for far longer than the Soviets
expected.
Hostilities ceased in March 1940 with the signing of the Moscow
Peace Treaty. Finland ceded 11 percent of its pre-war
territory and 30 percent of its economic assets to the Soviet
Union. Soviet losses on the front were heavy and the country's
international reputation suffered.
Moreover, the Soviet forces did not
accomplish their objective of the total conquest of Finland, but
did gain sufficient territory along Lake Ladoga
to provide a buffer for Leningrad
. The Finns, however, retained their
sovereignty and improved their international
reputation.
The peace treaty thwarted the
Franco-British
plan to send troops to Finland through northern
Scandinavia. One of the Allied operation's major
goals had been to take control of
northern Sweden's iron
ore and cut its deliveries to
Germany.
Background
Politics of Finland before the War
[[File:Northern europe november 1939.png|thumb|right|250px|alt=Map
of the Northern Europe where Finland, Sweden, Norway and Denmark
are tagged as neutral countries. The Soviet Union has military
bases in Estonia, Latvia and Lithuania.|Northern Europe in November
1939.
]]
Finland
comprised the eastern part of the Swedish kingdom
for centuries until 1809. At this time, to
protect its imperial capital Saint Petersburg
, Imperial
Russia
conquered and converted Finland into an autonomous buffer
state within the Russian Empire. Finland enjoyed wide
autonomy and its
Senate until the
end of the nineteenth century, when Russia began
to assimilate Finland as part of a
general policy to strengthen the central government and unify the
Empire by Russification. These attempts ruined Russia's relations
with the Finns and increased the support of Finnish
self-determination movements.
The outbreak of the
First World War
and the collapse of the Russian Empire gave Finland a window of
opportunity and on 6 December 1917, the Senate of Finland
declared the country's
independence. The new
Bolshevik
Russian government was weak and, with the threat of
civil war looming, Soviet Russia
recognized the new Finnish government just three weeks after the
declaration of independence. Sovereignty was fully achieved in May,
1918 after a short
civil war and
the expulsion of Bolshevik troops.
Finland joined the
League of
Nations in 1920. Finland sought security guarantees from the
League, but its primary goal was cooperation with the
Scandinavian countries.
The Finnish and
Swedish militaries engaged in wide-ranging cooperation, but were
more focused on the exchange of information and defence planning
for the Åland
islands
than on military
exercises, or the stockpiling and deployment of
materiel. While the
Government of Sweden was aware of the
military cooperation, it carefully avoided committing itself to
Finnish foreign policy.
Another Finnish military policy was the
top secret military
cooperation between Finland and Estonia
.
The 1920s and early 1930s were a politically unstable time in
Finland. The
Communist Party
of Finland was declared illegal in 1931, and the far-right
Lapua Movement organised
anti-Communist violence, which culminated in a
failed uprising in 1932.
Thereafter the ultra-nationalist
Patriotic People's
Movement (IKL) had a minor presence — at best 14 seats out of
200 in the
Finnish parliament. By
the late 1930s the export-oriented Finnish economy was growing and
the country had almost solved its problems with extreme political
movements.
Soviet–Finnish relations and politics before the War
After the Soviet involvement in the
Finnish Civil War in 1918, no formal peace
treaty was signed. In 1918 and 1919, Finnish volunteer forces
conducted two unsuccessful military incursions across the Russian
border: the
Viena and
Aunus expeditions. In 1920,
Finnish communists, based in
Soviet Russia, attempted to
assassinate the former Finnish White Guards Commander-in-Chief
General C.G.E. Mannerheim.
After these low
intensity military actions, on 14 October 1920 Finland and Soviet
Russia signed the Treaty of Tartu,
confirming the new Finnish–Soviet border as the old border between
the autonomous Grand Duchy of
Finland and Imperial
Russia
proper. In addition, Finland received Petsamo, with its ice-free harbour on the Arctic Ocean
. Despite the signing of the treaty,
relations between the two countries remained strained. The Finnish
government allowed volunteers to cross the border to support the
East Karelian Uprising in 1921, and Finnish communists in the
Soviet Union continued to prepare for a revanche and staged a
cross-border raid into Finland, called the "
Pork mutiny", in 1922.
In 1932, the Soviet Union signed a
non-aggression
pact with Finland, which was reaffirmed for a ten year period
in 1934. However, relations between the two countries remained
largely
de minimis. While
foreign trade in Finland was
booming,
less than one percent of Finnish trade was with the Soviet Union.
In 1934 the Soviet Union joined the League of Nations.
During the
Stalin era, Soviet propaganda
painted Finland's leadership as a "vicious and reactionary Fascist
clique". The Finnish Marshal C.G.E. Mannerheim and the leader of
the
Finnish Social
Democrat Party Väinö
Tanner were subjected to particular scorn.
With
Joseph Stalin gaining
near-absolute power through the
Great
Purge of 1938, the Soviet Union changed its foreign policy
toward Finland in the late 1930s. The Soviet Union began pursuing
the recovery of the provinces of Tsarist Russia lost during the
chaos of the October Revolution and the Russian Civil War.
The Soviet
leadership believed that the old Empire had ideal security and
territorial possessions, and wanted the newly christened city of
Leningrad
to enjoy a similar security.
Soviet–Finnish prewar negotiations
In April 1938, an
NKVD agent
Boris Yartsev contacted the Finnish foreign
minister
Rudolf Holsti and prime
minister
Aimo Cajander, stating that
the Soviet Union did not trust Germany and that war was considered
possible between the two countries. The Red Army would not wait
passively behind the border but would rather "advance to meet the
enemy." Finnish representatives assured Yartsev that Finland was
committed to a policy of neutrality and that the country would
resist any armed incursion.
Yartsev suggested that Finland cede or lease some islands in the
Gulf of
Finland
along the seaward approaches to Leningrad.
Finland refused.
Negotiations continued throughout 1938 without results. Finnish
reception of Soviet entreaties was decidedly cool, as the violent
collectivisation and
purges in Stalin's
Soviet Union resulted in a poor opinion of the Soviet Union. In
addition, most of the Finnish Communist elite in the Soviet Union
had been executed during the Great Purge, further tarnishing the
Soviet Union's image in Finland. At the same time, Finland was
trying to negotiate a military co-operation plan with Sweden,
hoping for a joint defense of the Åland islands.
The Soviet Union and
Nazi Germany
signed the
Molotov–Ribbentrop Pact in
August 1939. The pact was nominally a
non-aggression treaty but it included
a secret protocol in which the Eastern European countries were
divided into
spheres of
interest. Finland fell into the Soviet sphere of interest.
On 1
September 1939, Germany began
its invasion of Poland and two days later Great Britain
and France
declared war
against Germany. Shortly afterwards, the Soviets
invaded eastern Poland. The
Baltic states were later forced to
accept treaties allowing the Soviets to establish military bases
and to station troops on their soil. The government of Estonia
accepted the
ultimatum, signing the
corresponding agreement in September. Latvia and Lithuania followed
in October. Unlike the Baltic states, Finland started a gradual
mobilisation under the guise of
"additional
refresher
training".
War preparations
On 5 October 1939, the Soviet Union invited a Finnish delegation to
Moscow for negotiations.
J.K.
Paasikivi, the Finnish
ambassador to Sweden, was sent to Moscow to represent the Finnish
government.
The Soviets demanded that the border between
the USSR and Finland on the Karelian Isthmus
be moved westward to a point only east of Viipuri
and that the Finns destroy all existing
fortifications on the Karelian Isthmus. They also demanded
the cession of islands in the Gulf of Finland
as well as the Kalastajansaarento
peninsula. Furthermore, the Finns would lease the
Hanko
Peninsula
for the
thirty years and permit the Soviets to establish a military base there. In exchange, the
Soviet Union would cede two parishes with twice the territory
demanded from Finland. Accepting Soviet demands would have forced
the Finns to dismantle their defences in
Finnish Karelia.
The Soviet offer divided the Finnish government, but it was
eventually rejected. On 31 October, in the assembly of the
Supreme Soviet, Molotov
announced Soviet demands in public.
The Finns made two counteroffers whereby
Finland would cede the Terijoki
area to the Soviet Union, far less than the Soviets
had demanded.
Following the failure of negotiations, the Soviets started an
intensive mobilisation near the Finnish border in 1938–1939.
Assault troops necessary for invasion did not begin deployment
until October 1939. Operational plans made in September called for
the invasion to start in November.
Shelling of Mainila
On 26 November 1939 the Soviet Union's Red Army shelled the Russian
village of
Mainila, located
close to the Finnish border. Soviet Foreign Minister
V.M. Molotov then
claimed it was a Finnish artillery attack, that Soviet border
guards had been killed, and demanded that Finland apologise for the
incident and move its forces past a line that was 20–25km away from
the border. Finland denied responsibility for the attack, rejected
the demands, and called for a joint Finnish–Soviet commission to
examine the incident. The Soviet Union, using the shelling as a
casus belli to gain a pretext
for withdrawing from the non-aggression pact, claimed that the
Finnish response was hostile and the
non-aggression
pact.
Soviet
historiography always recorded the incident as a Finnish
aggression. Even after the
Soviet Union's collapse the issue
still divides Russian historians, with some historians still
refusing to accept that the incident was staged by the Soviet
Union.
Soviet political and military offensive
On 30 November, Soviet forces invaded Finland with 21 divisions,
totaling some 450,000 men, and
bombed
Helsinki. Later the Finnish statesman J.K. Paasikivi commented
that the Soviet attack without a
declaration of war violated three
different non-aggression pacts: the Treaty of Tartu signed in 1920,
the non-aggression pact between Finland and the Soviet Union signed
in 1932 and again in 1934, and also the Charter of the League of
Nations, which the Soviet Union signed in 1934. C.G.E. Mannerheim
was appointed Commander-in-Chief of the
Finnish Defence Forces after the
Soviet attack. In further reshuffling, the Finnish government named
Risto Ryti as the new prime minister and
Väinö Tanner as foreign
minister.
On 1 December, the Soviet Union formed a
puppet government intended to rule Finland
once the war was over. Called the
Finnish Democratic Republic, it
was headed by
O. W. Kuusinen.
The government was
also called "The Terijoki Government", named after the village of
Terijoki
, the first place captured by the advancing Soviet
army. The puppet regime was unsuccessful and was quietly
disbanded during the winter of 1940. From the very outset of the
war,
working-class Finns stood behind
the legal government in Helsinki. Finnish national unity against
the Soviet invasion was later called the
spirit of the Winter War.
At the start of the Winter War, Finland brought up the matter of
the Soviet invasion before the League of Nations. The League
expelled the Soviet Union on
14 December
1939 and exhorted its members to aid Finland.
Soviet advance to the Mannerheim Line
Soviet military plan

Major Soviet offensives from 30
November – 22 December 1939.
At the beginning of the war, total victory over Finland was
expected within a few weeks. The Red Army had just finished the
invasion of
eastern Poland at a cost of less than a thousand casualties.
Stalin's expectations of a quick Soviet triumph were backed up by
the politician
Andrei Zhdanov and
military strategist
Kliment
Voroshilov, but other generals had their doubts. The
chief of staff of the Red Army,
Boris Shaposhnikov, advocated a serious
buildup, extensive logistical and
fire
support preparations, and a rational
order of battle, deploying the army's best
units. Zhdanov's military commander
Kirill Meretskov reported at the start of
the hostilities: "The terrain of coming operations is split by
lakes, rivers, swamps, and is almost entirely covered by forests...
The proper use of our forces will be difficult." However, these
doubts were not reflected in his troop deployments. Meretskov
announced publicly that the Finnish campaign would take at the most
two weeks. Soviet soldiers had even been warned not to cross the
border into Sweden by mistake.
Stalin's purges decimated the officer
corps of the Red Army; those purged included three of its five
marshals, 220 of its 264 division-level commanders or higher, and
36,761 officers of all ranks. Fewer than half of the officers
remained in total. They were commonly replaced by soldiers who were
less competent but more loyal to their superiors. Furthermore unit
commanders were superseded by a
political commissar, who ratified
military decisions on their political merits, further complicating
the Soviet chain of command.
Soviet order of battle
Soviet generals were impressed by the success of the German
blitzkrieg tactics. However, the blitzkrieg had been
tailored to central European conditions with a dense, well-mapped
network of paved roads. Armies fighting in central Europe had
recognised supply and communications centres, which could be easily
targeted by armored vehicle regiments. Finnish army centres, by
contrast, were deep inside the country. There were no paved roads,
and even gravel or dirt roads were scarce; most of the terrain
consisted of trackless forests and swamps. Waging a blitzkrieg in
Finland was a highly difficult proposition, and the Red Army failed
to meet the level of tactical coordination and local initiative
required to execute blitzkrieg tactics in the Finnish theatre. This
system of dual command destroyed the independence of commanding
officers.
The Soviet forces were positioned as follows:
- The
Seventh Army was located on
the Karelian
Isthmus
. Comprising nine divisions, a tank corps and
three tank brigades, its objective was the city of Viipuri
. The force was later divided into the
Seventh and Thirteenth
armies.
- The
Eighth Army was located
north of Lake
Ladoga
. Comprising six divisions and a tank brigade,
its mission was to execute a flanking maneuver around the northern
shore of Lake
Ladoga
to strike at the rear of the Mannerheim Line.
- The Ninth Army was
positioned to strike into central Finland. It was composed of three
divisions with one additional division on its way. Its mission was
to thrust westward to cut Finland in half.
- The
Fourteenth Army was based
in Murmansk
. Comprising three divisions, its objective
was to capture the Arctic port of Petsamo
and then advance to the town of Rovaniemi
.
Finnish order of battle

Finnish ski troops in Northern Finland
in January 1940.
The Finnish strategy was dictated by geography. The frontier with
the Soviet Union was more than long, but was mostly impassable
except along a handful of
unpaved
roads.
In prewar calculations, the Finnish General
Staff, which had established its wartime headquarters at Mikkeli
, estimated seven Soviet divisions on the Isthmus
and no more than five along the whole border north of Lake
Ladoga. In that case, the manpower ratio would favor the
attacker by a ratio of 3:1. The true ratio was much higher; for
example, twelve Soviet divisions were deployed to the north of Lake
Ladoga.
An even greater problem than lack of soldiers was the lack of
materiel; foreign shipments of antitank
weapons and aircraft were arriving in small quantities. The
ammunition situation was alarming, as stockpiles had cartridges,
shells and fuel only for 19–60 days. The ammunition shortage meant
the Finns could seldom afford
counterbattery or
saturation fire. Finnish tank forces were
operationally non-existent.
The Finnish forces were positioned as follows:
First battles
[[File:Winterwar-december1939-karelianisthmus.png|thumb|right|250px|alt=Diagram
of the Karelian Isthmus battle illustrates the positions of the
Soviet and Finnish troops. The Red Army penetrated dozens of
kilometers into Finnish territory, but stopped at the Mannerheim
defence line.|The war situation in December. Soviet units have
reached the main Finnish defence line, the
Mannerheim Line, on the Karelian
Isthmus.
-XX- Finnish Divisional Boundary
-XXX- Finnish Corps Boundary]]The Finnish main defensive line,
which became known as the
Mannerheim
Line, was located on the Karelian Isthmus about distant from
the old Soviet/Finnish border. Red Army soldiers on the Isthmus
numbered 250,000 facing 130,000 Finns. The Finnish command deployed
a covering force of about 21,000 men in the area in front of the
Mannerheim Line in order to delay and damage the Red Army before it
reached the line.
In combat, the biggest cause of confusion among Finnish soldiers
were Soviet
tanks. The Finns had few
anti-tank weapons and insufficient training
in modern
anti-tank tactics.
However, the favored Soviet armored tactic was a simple frontal
charge, the weaknesses of which could be exploited. The Finns
learned that at close range, tanks could be dealt with in many
ways; for example, logs and crowbars jammed into the
bogie wheels would often immobilise a
tank. Soon, Finns fielded a better
ad
hoc weapon, the
Molotov
Cocktail. It was a glass bottle filled with
flammable liquids, with a
simple hand-lit
fuse. Molotov
cocktails were eventually mass-produced by the Finnish
Alko corporation and bundled with matches with
which to light them. Eighty Soviet tanks were destroyed in the
border-zone fighting.
By 6 December, all the Finnish covering forces had withdrawn to the
Mannerheim Line.
The Red Army began its first major attack
against the Line in Taipale
– the area between the shore of Lake Ladoga, the
Taipale
river
and the Suvanto
waterway. Along the Suvanto sector, the
Finns had a slight advantage of elevation and dry ground to dig
into. The Finnish
artillery had scouted
the area and made fire plans in advance, anticipating a Soviet
assault. The
Battle of Taipale
began with a forty-hour Soviet artillery preparation. After the
barrage, the Soviet infantry
attacked across open ground, but was repulsed with heavy
casualties. From 6–12 December the Red Army continued trying to
engage using only one division. The Red Army next strengthened its
artillery and brought tanks and the 10th
Rifle Division to the Taipale front. On 14 December, the
bolstered Soviet forces launched a new attack, but were pushed back
again. A third Soviet division entered the fight, but performed
poorly and panicked under shell fire. The assaults continued
without success and the Red Army suffered heavy losses. One typical
Soviet attack during the battle lasted just an hour, but left 1,000
dead and twenty-seven tanks strewn on the ice.
North of
Lake Ladoga, on the Ladoga Karelia
front, the defending Finnish units relied on the
terrain. Ladoga Karelia, as a large forest wilderness, did
not have road networks for the modern Red Army. However, the Soviet
8th Army had extended a new railroad line to the border, which
could double the supply capability on the front. But on 12
December, the advancing Soviet
139th Rifle Division, supported by the
56th Rifle Division, was defeated by a much smaller Finnish force
under
Paavo Talvela in the
Tolvajärvi, the first Finnish
victory of the war.
In central and northern Finland, roads were few and the terrain
hostile. The Finns did not expect large-scale Soviet attacks but
the Soviets sent eight divisions, heavily supported by armor and
artillery.
The 155th Rifle Division attacked at
Lieksa
and further
north, the 44th attacked at Kuhmo
.
The 163rd
Rifle Division was deployed at Suomussalmi
and charged with cutting Finland in half by
marching the Raate
Road
. In Finnish Lapland
, the Soviet 88th and 122nd Rifle Divisions attacked
at Salla
. The
arctic port of Petsamo was attacked by the 104th Mountain Rifle
Division by sea and land, supported by
naval gunfire.
Defense of Finland
Weather conditions

Major Soviet operations during the
winter of 1939–1940
The winter of 1939–1940 was exceptionally cold. One location on the
Karelian Isthmus experienced a record low temperature of on 16
January 1940. At the beginning of the war, only those Finnish
soldiers who were in active
service
at the time had
uniforms and
weapons. The rest had to make do with their own
clothing, which for many soldiers was their normal winter clothing
with semblance of an insignia added. Finnish soldiers were also
skilled in
cross-country
skiing.
The cold, the snow, the forest, and the long hours of darkness were
factors that the Finns could turn to their advantage. The Finns
dressed in layers and the
ski troopers
wore a lightweight white snow
cape. This
snow-camouflage made the ski troopers almost invisible as the Finns
executed
guerrilla attacks against
Soviet columns. At the beginning of the war, Soviet tanks were
painted in standard
olive drab and men
dressed in regular
khaki uniforms. Not until
late January 1940 did the Soviets paint their equipment in white
and issue
snowsuits to their
infantry.
Most Soviet soldiers had proper winter clothes, but this was not
the case with every unit.
In the battle of Suomussalmi
, many Soviet soldiers died of frostbite. The Soviet troops lacked skill
in skiing, so soldiers were restricted to movement by road and were
forced to move in long columns. Furthermore, the Red Army lacked
proper winter tents and men had to sleep in improvised shelters.
Some Soviet units had frostbite casualties as high as
10 percent even before crossing the Finnish border. The cold
weather did confer one advantage: Soviet tanks were able to move
more easily over frozen terrain and bodies of water, rather than
being immobilised in
swamps and mud.
Finnish tactics

Trenches on the Mannerheim Line.
In battles from Ladoga Karelia all the way north to the Arctic port
of Petsamo, the Finns used
guerrilla
tactics. The Red Army was superior in men and materiel, but the
Finns used the advantages of speed, tactics, and economy of force.
Particularly on the Ladoga Karelia front and
during the battle of
Raate road
, the Finns isolated smaller portions of numerically
superior Soviet forces. With Soviet forces divided into
smaller pieces, the Finns could deal with them individually and
attack from all sides.
For many of the encircled Soviet troops in a
pocket, (
motti in
Finnish), just staying alive was an ordeal comparable to combat.
The men were freezing and starving, and endured poor sanitary
conditions. Historian
William R.
Trotter describes these
conditions thus: "The Soviet soldier had no choice. If he refused
to fight, he would be shot. If he tried to sneak through the
forest, he would freeze to death. And surrender was no option for
him; Soviet propaganda had told him how the Finns would torture
prisoners to death."
Defence of the Mannerheim Line

Stone barriers and barbed wire on the
Mannerheim Line.
Further in the background is the Finnish bunker Sj 5.
The terrain on the Karelian Isthmus did not allow the exercise of
guerilla tactics, so the Finns were forced to resort to more
conventional means: a fortified defence line, the
Mannerheim Line, with its flanks protected
by large bodies of water. Soviet
propaganda claimed that it was as strong as or
even stronger than the
Maginot Line.
Finnish
historians, for their part, have
belittled the line's strength, insisting that it was mostly
conventional
trenches and
log-covered
dugouts.
The Finns had built 221 strongpoints along the Karelian Isthmus,
mostly in the early 1920s. Many were extended in the late 1930s.
Despite these defensive preparations, even the most fortified
section of the Mannerheim Line had only one
reinforced concrete bunker per
kilometer. Overall, the line was weaker than similar lines in
mainland Europe. According to the Finns, the real strength of the
line was "stubborn defenders with a lot of
sisu" – a Finnish
idiom
roughly translated as "
guts".
On the eastern side of the Isthmus, the Red Army attempted to break
through the Mannerheim line in the
battle of Taipale.
On the western side,
Soviet units faced the Finnish line at Summa,
near the city of Viipuri
, on 16 December. The Finns had built 41
reinforced concrete bunkers in the Summa area, making the defensive
line in this area stronger than anywhere else on the Karelian
Isthmus. However, because of a mistake in planning, the nearby
Munasuo swamp had a kilometre-wide gap in the line. During the
first
battle of Summa, a number of
Soviet tanks broke through the thin line on 19 December, but the
Soviets could not benefit from the situation because of
insufficient cooperation between branches of service. The Finns
remained in their trenches, allowing the Soviet tanks to move
freely behind the Finnish line, as the Finns had no proper
anti-tank weapons. However, the Finns succeeded in repelling the
main Soviet assault. The tanks, now stranded behind enemy lines,
attacked the strongpoints at random until they were eventually
destroyed, twenty in all, eliminating the threat they posed. By 22
December, the battle ended in a Finnish victory.
The Soviet advance was stopped at the Mannerheim Line. Red Army
troops suffered from poor
morale and a
shortage of supplies, eventually refusing to participate in more
suicidal frontal attacks. The
Finns, led by General
Harald
Öhquist decided to launch a counterattack and encircle three
Soviet divisions into a
motti near
Viipuri on 23 December. Öhquist's plan was bold, but it failed. The
Finns lost 1,300 men and the Soviets were later estimated to have
lost a similar number.
Battles in Ladoga Karelia
The strength of the Red Army north of Lake Ladoga (in Ladoga
Karelia) surprised the Finnish General Staff. Two Finnish divisions
were deployed there: the 12th Division led by
Lauri Tiainen and the 13th Division led by
Hannu Hannuksela. They also had a
support group of three
brigades, bringing
their total strength to over 30,000. The Soviets deployed a
division for almost every road
leading west to the Finnish border. The Eighth Army was led by
Ivan Khabarov, who was
replaced by
Grigori Shtern on 13
December.
The Soviets' mission was to destroy the
Finnish troops in the area of Ladoga Karelia and advance into the
area between Sortavala
and Joensuu
within ten days. The Soviets had a
three-to-one advantage in manpower and five-to-one advantage in
artillery as well as
air
supremacy.
Finnish forces panicked and retreated in front of the overwhelming
Red Army. The commander of the Finnish IV Army Corps was replaced
by
Woldemar Hägglund on 4
December. On the 7th of December, in the middle of the Ladoga
Karelian front, Finnish units retreated near the small stream of
Kollaa. The waterway itself did not
offer protection, but alongside there were
ridges up to high.
The battle of Kollaa
lasted until the end of the war. A memorable
quote, "Kollaa holds" ( ) became a legendary motto among the Finns.
Further contributing to the legend of Kollaa was the sniper
Simo Häyhä, dubbed "the White
Death" by Soviets, who served in the Kollaa front.
To the north, the
Finns retreated from Ägläjärvi
to Tolvajärvi
on 5 December and then repelled a Soviet offensive
in the battle of
Tolvajärvi on December 11.
In the south, two Soviet divisions were united on the northern side
of the Lake Ladoga coastal road. As before, these divisions were
trapped as the more mobile Finnish units were able to counterattack
from the north to flank the Soviet columns. On 19 December, the
Finns temporarily ceased their assaults, as the soldiers were
exhausted. It was not until the period 6 January to 16 January 1940
that the Finns went on the offensive again, cutting Soviet division
into smaller groups of different sized
mottis.
Contrary to Finnish expectations, the encircled Soviet divisions
did not try to break through to the east, but instead entrenched.
They were expecting reinforcements and supplies to
arrive by air. As the Finns lacked the necessary
heavy artillery equipment and were short of men, they often did not
directly attack
mottis they had created; instead, they
focused on eliminating only the most dangerous threats. Often the
motti tactic was not part of pre-planned doctrine, but a
Finnish adaptation to the behaviour of Soviet troops under
fire.
In spite of the cold and hunger, the Soviet troops did not
surrender easily, but fought bravely, often entrenching their tanks
to be used as
pillbox and building
timber dugouts. Some specialist Finnish soldiers were called in to
attack the
mottis; the most famous of them was Major
Matti Aarnio, or "Motti-Matti," as he
became known.
In
northern Karelia, Soviet forces were outmaneuvered at Ilomantsi
and Lieksa
. The
Finns used effective guerrilla tactics, taking special advantage of
superior skiing skills and snow-white layered clothing and
executing many surprise ambushes and raids. By the end of December,
the Soviets decided to retreat and transfer resources to more
critical fronts.
Suomussalmi–Raate double operation
The Suomussalmi–Raate was a double operation, which would later be
used by
military academics as a
classic example of what well-led troops and innovative tactics can
do against a much larger adversary.
Suomussalmi
was a small provincial town of 4,000. The
area has long lakes, many wild forests, and few roads.
The Finnish command
believed that the Soviets would not attack here, but the Red Army
committed two divisions to the area with orders to cross the
wilderness, capture the city of Oulu
and
effectively cut Finland in two. There were two roads leading
to Suomussalmi from the frontier: the northern Juntusranta road and
the southern Raate road.
The
battle of
Raate road
, which occurred during the month-long battle of
Suomussalmi
, resulted in one of the largest losses in the
Winter War. The Soviet 44th and parts of the 163rd Rifle
Divisions, comprising about 14,000 troops, were almost completely
destroyed by a Finnish ambush as they marched along the forest
road. A small unit blocked the Soviet advance while Finnish Colonel
Hjalmar Siilasvuo and his 9th
Division cut off the retreat route, split the enemy force into
smaller fragments, and then proceeded to destroy the remnants as
they retreated. The Soviets suffered 7,000–9,000 casualties, while
the Finnish units lost only 400 men. In addition, the Finnish
troops captured dozens of tanks, artillery pieces, anti-tank guns,
hundreds of trucks, almost two thousand horses, thousands of
rifles, and much-needed ammunition and medical supplies. Colonel
Siilasvuo was later promoted to major-general.
Finnish Lapland
In
Finnish Lapland
the forests gradually thin out until in the north
there are no trees at all. Thus, the area offers more room
for tank deployment, but it is vastly underpopulated and
experiences copious snowfall. The Finns expected nothing more than
raiding parties and reconnaissance patrols, but instead the Soviets
sent full divisions. On 11 December, the Finns rearranged the
defence of Lapland and detached the
Lapland Group from the
North Finland Group. The Group was
placed under the command of
Kurt
Wallenius.
In
southern Lapland, near the tiny rural village of Salla
, the Soviet
force advanced with two divisions, the 88th and 112th, totalling
35,000 men. In the battle of Salla
the Soviets advanced easily to Salla, where the
road forked. The northern branch moved toward Pelkosenniemi
while the rest pushed on toward Kemijärvi
. On 17 December, the Soviet northern group,
comprising an infantry regiment, a battalion, and a company of
tanks, was outflanked by a Finnish
battalion. The 112th retreated, leaving much of
its heavy equipment and vehicles behind. Following this success,
the Finns shuttled reinforcements down to the defensive line in
front of Kemijärvi. The Soviets hammered the defensive line without
success. The Finns counterattacked and the Soviets were pushed back
to a new defensive line where they stayed for the rest of the
war.
To the north was Finland's only ice-free port in the Arctic,
Petsamo. The Finns did not have the manpower to defend it fully as
the main front was down the Karelian Isthmus.
In the battle of
Petsamo
, the Soviet 104th division attacked the Finnish
104th Independent Cover Company. The Finns gave up Petsamo
easily and concentrated on delaying actions. The area was treeless,
windy and relatively low, offering little defensible terrain.
However, during the winter, the Finnish Lapland had the advantage
of
almost constant darkness and extreme
temperatures. The Finns executed guerrilla attacks against Soviet
supply lines and patrols. As a result, the Soviet movements were
frozen solid by the efforts of one-fifth as many Finns.
Soviet Breakthrough of the Mannerheim Line
Red Army reforms and offensive preparations
Joseph Stalin was not pleased with the results of the first month
of the Finnish campaign. The Red Army had been humiliated. By the
third week of the war, Soviet propaganda was working hard to
explain the failures of the Soviet army to the populace: blaming
bad terrain and harsh climate, and falsely claiming that the
Mannerheim Line was stronger than the
Maginot Line, and that the Americans had sent
1,000 of their best pilots to Finland. Chief of Staff Boris
Shaposhnikov was given full authority over operations in the
Finnish theatre and he ordered the suspension of frontal assaults
in late December. Kliment Voroshilov was replaced with
Semyon Timoshenko as the commander of the
Soviet forces in the war on 7 January.
The main focus of the Soviet attack would now be on the Karelian
Isthmus. Timoshenko and
Zhdanov
reorganised and tightened control between different branches of
service in the Red Army. They also changed tactical doctrines to
meet the realities of the situation. All Soviet forces on the
Karelian Isthmus were divided into two armies: the
7th and the
13th Armies.
The 7th Army, now
under Kirill Meretskov, would concentrate three-fourths of its
strength against the stretch of the Mannerheim Line between
Taipale
and the Munasuo swamp. Tactics would be
basic: an armored wedge for the initial breakthrough, followed by
the main infantry and vehicle assault force. The Red Army would
prepare by pinpointing the Finnish frontline fortifications. The
123rd Assault Division then rehearsed the assault on life-size
mockups. The Soviets shipped massive numbers
of new tanks and artillery pieces to the theatre. Troops were
increased from ten divisions to 25–26 divisions, 6–7 tank brigades
and several independent tank platoons, totalling 600,000 men. On 1
February 1940, the Red Army began a massive offensive, firing
300,000 shells into the Finnish line in the first 24 hours of
the
bombardment.
Soviet all-out offensive on the Karelian Isthmus
Although the Karelian Isthmus front was less active in December
than in January, the Soviets began increasing bombardments, wearing
down the defenders and softening their fortifications. During
daylight hours, the Finns took shelter inside their fortifications
from the bombardments and repaired damage during the night. The
situation led quickly to war exhaustion among the Finns, who lost
over 3,000 men in
trench warfare. The
Soviets also made occasional small infantry assaults with one or
two companies. Because of the shortage of ammunition, Finnish
artillery emplacements were under orders to fire only against
directly threatening ground attacks. On 1 February, the Soviets
further escalated their artillery and air bombardments.
Although the Soviets refined their tactics and morale improved, the
generals were still willing to accept massive losses in order to
reach their objectives. Attacks were screened by smoke, heavy
artillery, and armor support, but the infantry charged in the open
and in dense formations. Unlike their tactics in December, Soviet
tanks now advanced in smaller numbers. The Finns could not easily
eliminate tanks if infantry troops protected them. After ten days
of round-the-clock artillery barrages, the Soviets achieved a
breakthrough on the western Karelian Isthmus in the second
battle of Summa.
On 11 February, the Soviets had about 460,000 men, over 3,350
artillery pieces, about 3,000 tanks, and about 1,300 aircraft
deployed on the Karelian Isthmus. The Red Army was constantly
receiving new recruits after the breakthrough. Opposing them the
Finns had 8 divisions, totalling about 150,000 men. One by one, the
defenders' strongholds crumbled under the Soviet attacks and the
Finns were forced to retreat. On 15 February, Mannerheim authorised
a general retreat of the
Second Corps to the
Intermediate Line. On the eastern side of the Isthmus, the Finns
continued to resist Soviet assaults, repelling them in the
battle of Taipale.
Peace negotiations
Although the Finns attempted to re-open negotiations with Moscow by
every means during the war, the Soviets did not respond. In early
January, the Finnish communist and feminist playwright
Hella Wuolijoki contacted the Finnish
government. She offered to contact Moscow through the Soviet
Union's ambassador to Sweden,
Alexandra Kollontai.
Wuolijoki departed
for Stockholm
and met Kollontai secretly at a hotel. Soon
Molotov decided to extend recognition to the
Ryti–
Tanner
government as the legal government of Finland and put an end to the
puppet regime
Terijoki
Government of
Kuusinen that
the Soviets had set up.
By mid-February, it become clear that the Finnish forces were
rapidly approaching exhaustion. For the Soviets, casualties were
high, the situation was a source of political embarrassment of the
Soviet regime, and there was a risk of
Franco-British
intervention. Furthermore, with the spring thaw approaching,
the Soviet forces risked becoming bogged down in the forests. The
Finnish foreign minister Väinö Tanner arrived in Stockholm on 12
February and negotiated the peace terms with the Soviets through
the Swedes. German representatives, not aware that the negotiations
were underway, suggested on 17 February that Finland negotiate with
the Soviet Union.
Both Germany and Sweden were keen to see an end to the Winter War.
The Germans feared losing iron ore fields in Northern Sweden and
threatened to attack at once if the Swedes granted the Allied
forces right of passage. The Germans even had a theoretical
invasion plan called the
Studie Nord, which later would be
the full-blown
Operation
Weserübung. As the Finnish Cabinet hesitated in the face of the
harsh Soviet conditions, Sweden's King
Gustav V made a
public statement on 19
February in which he confirmed having declined Finnish pleas for
support from Swedish troops. On 25 February, the Soviet peace terms
were spelled out in detail. On 29 February, the Finnish government
accepted the Soviet terms in principle and was willing to enter
into negotiations.
Last days of war

Situation on the Karelian Isthmus on
13 March 1940, on the last day of the war.
On 5 March, the Red Army advanced past the Mannerheim Line and
entered the suburbs of Viipuri.
That same day, the Red Army established a
beachhead on the western Gulf of Viipuri
. The Finns proposed an armistice on that
day, but the Soviets, wanting to keep the pressure on the Finnish
government, declined the offer the next day. The Finnish peace
delegation went to Moscow via Stockholm and arrived on 7 March. The
Soviets made further demands as their military position was strong
and improving. On 9 March, the Finnish military situation on the
Karelian Isthmus was dire as troops were experiencing heavy
casualties. In addition, artillery ammunition supplies were
exhausted and weapons were wearing out.
The Finnish
government, noting that the hoped-for Franco-British military
expedition would not arrive in time, as Norway
and Sweden
had not given the right of Allied passage, had little choice but to
accept the Soviet terms. The formal peace treaty was signed
in Moscow on 12 March. A
cease-fire took
effect the next day at noon Leningrad time, 11 a.m. Helsinki
time.
Aerial warfare
Soviet bombings
The Soviet Union enjoyed
air supremacy
throughout the war. The
Soviet Air
Force, supporting the Red Army's invasion with about 2,500
aircraft, the most common of which was the
Tupolev SB-2, was not as effective as the
Soviets might have hoped. The material damage by the bomb raids was
slight, as Finland did not offer many valuable targets for
strategic bombing. Very often, targets
were small village depots with little value. The country had only a
few modern
highways in the interior,
therefore making
railway systems the main
targets for bombers. The
rail tracks were
cut thousands of times, but they were easy to repair and Finns
usually had
trains running again in a matter
of hours. The Soviet air force learned from its early mistakes and
by late February they instituted more effective tactics.
The
largest bombing raid against the capital of Finland, Helsinki
, occurred on the first day of the
war. The capital was bombed only a few times thereafter.
All in all, Finland lost only 5 percent of total man-hour
production time because of Soviet bombings. Nevertheless, Soviet
air attacks affected thousands of civilians, killing 957, as the
Soviets recorded 2,075 bombing attacks in 516 localities. The city
of Viipuri, a major Soviet objective close to the Karelian Isthmus
front, was almost levelled by nearly 12,000 bombs. No attacks on
civilian targets were mentioned in Soviet radio or newspaper
reports. In January 1940
Pravda continued to
stress that no civilian targets in Finland had been struck, even by
accident.
Finnish Air Force
At the beginning of the war, Finland had a very small air force,
with only 114 combat planes fit for duty. Because of this, missions
were very limited and
fighter
aircraft were mainly used to repel Soviet bombers. Strategic
bombings could also double as opportunities for military
reconnaissance. Old-fashioned and few in
number, aircraft could not offer support for Finnish ground troops.
In spite of losses, the number of planes in the Finnish Air Force
had risen by over 50 percent by the end of the war. The Finns
received shipments of British, French, Italian, Swedish and
American aircraft.
Finnish fighter pilots would often fly their motley collection of
planes into Soviet formations that outnumbered them ten or even
twenty times. Finnish fighters shot down a confirmed 200 Soviet
aircraft, losing 62 of their own. In addition, Finnish
anti-aircraft brought down more than 300 enemy aircraft. Many times
a Finnish forward
air base consisted of a
frozen lake, a
windsock, a
telephone set and some tents. Air-raid warnings
were given by Finnish women organised by the
Lotta Svärd. In addition to combat, it is
estimated that the Soviet air force lost about 400 aircraft because
of inclement weather, lack of fuel and tools, and during
transportation to the front. The Soviet Air Force flew
approximately 44,000 sorties during the war.
Naval warfare
Navies in frost
Naval activity during the Winter War was low.
The Baltic Sea
began to freeze over by the end of December, which
made the movement of warships very difficult
and in mid-winter only ice-breakers and
submarines could still move. The
other reason for low naval activity was the nature of
Soviet Navy forces in the area. The
Baltic Fleet was a provincial coastal defence
force which did not have the training, logistical structure, or
landing craft to undertake large-scale
operations. Furthermore, the Soviet Navy was technologically
inferior to the British
Royal Navy or the
German
Kriegsmarine. Still, the Baltic
Fleet was strong; it possessed two
battleships, one
heavy
cruiser, almost twenty
destroyers, 50
motor torpedo boats, 52
submarines, and other miscellaneous vessels.
The Soviets used
naval bases in Paldiski
, Tallinn
and Liepāja
for their operations.
The
Finnish Navy was a coastal defence
force with two
coastal defence
ships, five submarines, four
gunboats,
seven motor torpedo boats, one
minelayer
and six
minesweepers.
The two
coastal defence ships, Ilmarinen and
Väinämöinen,
were moved to the harbour in Turku
where they
were used to bolster the air defences. Their anti-aircraft
guns shot down one or two planes over the city and the ships
remained there for the rest of the war. In addition to its role in
coastal defense, the Finnish Navy protected the Åland islands and
Finnish
merchant vessels in the
Baltic Sea, as only a minor part of the fleet could execute
offensive warfare maneuvers.
Soviet aircraft bombed Finnish vessels and harbours and dropped
mines into Finnish
seaways. Still, Finnish losses were relatively low,
numbering 26 merchant vessels, only four of which were lost inside
Finnish
territorial waters.
Coastal artillery
In addition to its navy, Finland had coastal artillery batteries to
defend important harbours and naval bases along its coast. Most
batteries were left over from the
Russian period, with guns being the
most numerous. However, Finland attempted to modernise its old guns
and installed a number of new batteries, the largest of which
featured a gun battery originally intended to block the Gulf of
Finland to Soviet ships with the
help of batteries
on the Estonian side.
The first
naval battle took place on 1 December, near the island of Russarö
, south of Hanko
.
That day, the weather was fair and the visibility excellent. The
Finns spotted the Soviet
cruiser
Kirov and two destroyers. After the ships were at a
range of , the Finns opened fire with coastal guns. After five
minutes of firing by four coastal guns, the cruiser had been
damaged by near misses and retreated. The destroyers remained
undamaged, but the
Kirov suffered 17 dead and 30 wounded.
The Soviets already knew the locations of the Finnish coastal
batteries but were surprised by their firing range. Although their
coastal artillery was largely old-fashioned, the Finns had managed
to modernise and improve it.
The coastal artillery had a greater effect upon the land war by
helping to reinforce the defence in conjunction with army
artillery. Two sets of fortress artillery made significant
contributions to the early battles on the Karelian Isthmus and in
Ladoga Karelia.
These were located at Kaarnajoki
on the eastern Isthmus, and at Mantsi
on the
north-eastern shore of Lake Ladoga. Furthermore, the
fortress of Koivisto
provided similar support from the south-western
coast of the Isthmus. Coastal artilleries had the ability to
fire high-explosive shells of calibre to a range of .
Foreign support
Foreign volunteers

Norwegian volunteers in Northern
Finland.
World opinion largely supported the Finnish cause and the Soviet
aggression was generally deemed unjustified. The World War had not
yet begun in earnest; at that time, the Winter War was the only
real fighting in Europe and thus held major world interest. Several
foreign organisations sent material aid, and many countries granted
credit and military material to Finland. Nazi Germany allowed arms
to pass through Sweden to Finland, but after a Swedish newspaper
made this fact public,
Adolf Hitler
initiated a policy of silence towards Finland, as part of improved
German–Soviet relations following the signing of the
Molotov–Ribbentrop
Pact.
Volunteers arrived from various countries. By far the largest
foreign contingent came from neighbouring Sweden, which provided
nearly 8,760 volunteers during the war. The Swedish Volunteer Corps
(
Svenska
Frivilligkåren), formed from the Swedes, the Norwegians
(727 men) and the Danes (1,010 men), fought on the quiet northern
front during the last weeks of the war. The Corps mainly took care
of the air defence of northern Finland.
Further volunteers
arrived from Estonia
, Italy
and
Hungary. Also,
350 American nationals of Finnish background volunteered, and 210
volunteers of other nationalities made it to Finland before the war
ended. In total Finland received 12,000 volunteers of whom 50 died
during the war.
Franco-British intervention plans
France had been one of the earliest supporters of Finland during
the Winter War. The French saw an opportunity to weaken Germany's
major ally if the Finns were to attack the Soviet Union. France had
other motives as well, because it preferred to have a major war in
a remote part of Europe than on French soil. France planned to
re-arm the
Polish exile
units and transport them to the Finnish Arctic port of Petsamo.
Another
scheme was to execute a massive air strike with Turkish
co-operation against the Caucasus oil
fields.
The British, for their part, wanted to block the flow of
iron ore from Swedish mines to
Germany, because the Swedes supplied up to 40 percent of Germany's
need. The matter was raised by the British Admiral
Reginald Plunkett on 18 September 1939,
and next day
Winston Churchill
brought the subject in the
Cabinet. On 11 December
Churchill opined that the British would gain a foothold in
Scandinavia with the objective of helping them, but without a war
on the Soviet Union. Because of heavy German reliance on Swedish
iron, Hitler had made it clear to the Swedish government in
December that any Allied troops on Swedish soil would immediately
provoke a German invasion.
On 19 December the French Prime Minister
Édouard Daladier introduced his plan
to the General Staff and the British
War
Cabinet. In his plan, Daladier created linkage between the war
in Finland and the iron ore in Sweden. There was a danger of
Finland's collapse under Soviet hegemony. In turn, Nazi Germany
could occupy both Norway and Sweden. These two dictatorships could
divide Scandinavia between them, as they had already done with
Poland. The main motivation of France was to export the European
battle front to Scandinavia in order to protect French soil,
whereas the British were concerned with reducing the German
war-making ability.
The
Military Coordination Committee met the next day in London
and two
days later the French plan was put forward. The
Supreme War Council elected to send
notes to Norway and Sweden on 27 December in which they urged the
Norwegians and Swedes to help Finland and offer the
Allies their support. Norway and Sweden
rejected the offer on 5 January 1940. The Allies then came up with
a new plan, in which they would demand that Norway and Sweden give
them
right of passage by citing the
League of Nations resolution as justification.
The expedition troops
would disembark at the Norwegian port of Narvik
and
proceed by rail toward Finland, passing through the Swedish ore
fields on the way. This demand was sent to Norway and Sweden
on 6 January, but it too was rejected six days later.
Stymied but not yet dissuaded from the possibility of action, the
Allies formulated a new plan on 29 January. First, the Finns would
make a formal request for assistance. Then the Allies would ask
Norway and Sweden for permission to move the "volunteers" across
their territory.
Finally, in order to protect the supply line
from German actions, the Allies would send additional units ashore
at Namsos
, Bergen
, and
Trondheim
. The operation would require 100,000 British
and 35,000 French soldiers with naval and air support. The supply
convoys would sail on 12 March and the landings would begin on 20
March.
Peace of Moscow

Winter War: Finland's
Concessions
The Moscow Peace Treaty was signed on 12 March 1940 and went into
effect the following day. Finland ceded a portion of Karelia – the
entire Karelian Isthmus as well as a large swath of land north of
Lake Ladoga.
The area included the city of Viipuri
, the country's second largest, much of Finland's
industrialised territory, and significant parts still held by
Finland's army, all in all, 11 percent of the territory and
30 percent of the economic assets of pre-war Finland.
Almost the entire population of the ceded territories, some 422,000
Karelians, which amounted to 12 percent of Finland's
population, were
evacuated and lost their
homes.
Finland
also had to cede a part of the region of Salla
, the
Kalastajansaarento
peninsula in the Barents
Sea
, and four islands in the Gulf of Finland
. The Hanko Peninsula
was leased to the Soviet Union as a military base
for 30 years. The region of Petsamo, captured by the Red
Army during the war, was returned to Finland according to the
treaty.
Aftermath
Finnish views
The 105-day war had a profound and depressing effect in Finland.
Useful international support had been minimal and had arrived late,
and the German blockade had prevented most armament shipments. The
15-month period between the Winter War and the
Continuation War was later called the
Interim Peace.
After the end of the war, the situation of the Finnish army on the
Karelian Isthmus had been the subject of debate in Finland. Orders
were already issued to prepare a retreat to the next line of
defence in the Taipale sector. Estimates of how long the Red Army
could have been held in these kinds of retreat-and-stand operations
varied from a few days to a few weeks or to a couple of months at
most.
The Finnish
Karelians evacuated from the ceded areas
established an interest group
Karjalan
Liitto. The group was to defend the rights and interests of
Karelian evacuees and to find a way to
return ceded regions of
Karelia to Finland.
Soviet views
During the period between the war and the
perestroika in the late 1980s,
Soviet historiography leaned solely on
Vyacheslav Molotov's speeches on
the Winter War. In his radio speech of 29 November 1939, Molotov
argued that the Soviet Union had tried to negotiate guarantees of
security for
Leningrad for two
months. However, the Finns had taken a hostile stance to "please
foreign imperialists". Finland had
undertaken military provocation and the
Soviet Union could no longer hold to nonaggression pacts. According
to Molotov, the Soviet Union did not want to occupy or annex
Finland; the goal was purely to secure Leningrad.
Another source later used widely in Soviet historiography was
Molotov's speech in front of the
Supreme
Soviet on 29 March 1940, in which he blamed Western countries
for starting the war and argued that they had used Finland as a
proxy to fight the Soviet Union. The Western Allies had furthermore
tried to take neutral Sweden and Norway along with them. Thus, the
"masterminds" behind the war were the United Kingdom and France,
but also Sweden, the United States, and Italy, who had issued
massive amounts of materiel, money, and men to Finland. According
to Molotov, the Soviet Union was merciful in peace terms, as the
problem of Leningrad security had been solved.
On 18 May 1994, the president of Russia,
Boris Yeltsin, denounced the Winter War in a
joint press conference with the president of Finland,
Martti Ahtisaari, agreeing that it was a
war of aggression.
Military consequences
The Supreme Military Soviet met in April 1940, reviewed the lessons
of the Finnish campaign, and recommended reforms. The role of
frontline political commissars was reduced and old-fashioned ranks
and forms of discipline were reintroduced. Clothing, equipment and
tactics for winter operations were improved. However, not all of
these reforms had been completed when the Germans began
Operation Barbarossa fifteen months
later.
The Baltic states of Estonia, Latvia and Lithuania had consented to
Soviet demands in autumn 1939 and were eventually
occupied in June 1940. They
were then annexed as
Soviet Socialist Republics,
and within another year, over 100,000 nationals were deported or
lost their lives. That same year, Finland and Sweden negotiated a
military alliance, but the negotiations ended once it became clear
that both Germany and the Soviet Union opposed such an
alliance.
Germany
The Winter War was a political success for the Germans. Both the
Red Army and the League of Nations were humiliated and furthermore,
the Allied Supreme War Council had been revealed to be chaotic and
powerless. However, the German policy of neutrality was not popular
in the homeland and relations with Italy had suffered badly. After
the Peace of Moscow, Germany did not hesitate to move to improve
ties with Finland, and within two weeks, Finno-German relations
were at the top of the agenda.
During the
Interim Peace, Finland
established close ties with Germany in hopes of a chance to reclaim
areas ceded to the Soviet Union. Three days after the beginning of
Operation Barbarossa, the
Continuation War began.
Western Allies
The Winter War put in question the organisation and effectiveness
of not only the Red Army, but also that of the Western Allies. The
Supreme War Council was unable
to formulate a workable plan, revealing its total unsuitability to
make effective war in either Britain or France. This failure led to
the collapse of the
Daladier
government in France.
See also
Footnotes
- Bullock .
p. 489.
- Glanz . p.
58.
- Ries . p.
56.
- Ries . pp.
79–80.
- Trotter .
p. 239.
- Kilin;
Raunio p. 10.
- Trotter .
pp. 4–6.
- Jowett; Snodgrass . p. 3.
- Edwards .
pp. 26–27.
- Edwards .
p. 18.
- Edwards .
p. 31.
- Edwards .
pp. 32–33.
- Edwards .
pp. 28–29.
- Trotter .
pp. 12–13.
- Engle; Paananen . p. 6.
- Trotter .
pp. 14–16.
- Jowett; Snodgrass . p. 4.
- Ries . pp.
55–56.
- Edwards
2006, p. 105
- Tanner . pp.
85–86
- Ries . pp.
77–78. "This is confirmed in Khrushchev's memoirs, where he states that
Artillery Marshal Kulik personally supervised the bombardment of
the Finnish village."
- Jowett; Snodgrass . p. 6.
- Trotter .
pp. 48–51.
- Trotter .
p. 58.
- Trotter .
p. 61.
- Trotter .
p. 34.
- Conquest
. p. 450.
- Trotter .
pp. 35–36.
- Edwards .
p. 189.
- Trotter .
pp. 38–39.
- Kilin;
Raunio p. 13.
- Trotter .
pp. 42–44.
- Trotter .
p. 47.
- Geust;
Uitto . p. 54.
- Trotter .
p. 69.
- Trotter .
pp. 72–73.
- Trotter .
pp. 76–78.
- Trotter .
pp. 51–55.
- Trotter .
p. 121.
- Trotter .
pp. 53–54.
- Trotter .
pp. 145–146.
- Trotter .
pp. 131–132.
- Trotter .
pp. 148–149.
- Trotter .
pp. 62–63.
- Trotter .
pp. 87–89.
- Kilin;
Raunio p. 113.
- Trotter .
p. 110.
- Jowett; Snodgrass . p. 44.
- Trotter .
p. 150.
- Kulju . p.
230. The Russian historian Yuri Kilin calculated 13,962 men and the
Ukrainian Oleg Bozhko 14,003 men. Furthermore, there are uncertain
estimations of 20,000–30,000 men.
- Kulju . p.
229. See also the section Casualties of the battle in the article
of the Battle of the Raate road.
- Kantakoski . p. 283. Detailed casualties:
310 dead, 92 missing and 618 wounded.
- Kulju 2007,
pp. 217–218
- Trotter .
pp. 171–174.
- Trotter .
pp. 178–180.
- Trotter .
pp. 203–204.
- Trotter .
pp. 214–215.
- Trotter
2002. p. 218.
- Geust;
Uitto . p. 77.
- Trotter .
p. 233.
- Trotter .
pp. 234–235.
- Trotter .
pp. 246–247.
- Edwards .
p. 261.
- Trotter .
pp. 247–248.
- Kilin;
Raunio p. 260.
- Trotter .
pp. 249–251.
- Trotter .
p. 254.
- Trotter .
p. 187.
- Trotter p.
193.
- Trotter .
pp. 187–188.
- Tillotson . p. 157.
- Trotter .
p. 189.
- Tillotson . p. 160.
- Trotter .
pp. 191–192.
- Tillotson . pp. 152–153.
- Trotter .
pp. 194–202.
- Jowett; Snodgrass . pp. 21–22.
- Trotter .
pp. 235–236.
- Edwards .
p. 141.
- Edwards .
p. 145.
- Trotter .
p. 237.
- Edwards .
p. 146.
- Trotter .
pp. 237–238.
- Trotter .
pp. 238–239.
- Engle; Paananen . pp. 142–143.
- Jowett; Snodgrass . p. 10.
- Edwards .
pp. 272–273.
- Laaksonen . p. 365.
- Paasikivi . p. 177
- Halsti . p.
412.
- (See: )
- Trotter .
p. 264.
- Lieven . pp.
84–86.
- Edwards .
pp. 277–279.
- Jowett; Snodgrass . pp. 10–11.
- Edwards .
pp. 13–14.
Citations
- Bullock .
p. 489.
- Glanz . p.
58.
- Ries . p.
56.
- Ries . pp.
79–80.
- Trotter .
p. 239.
- Kilin;
Raunio p. 10.
- Trotter .
pp. 4–6.
- Jowett; Snodgrass . p. 3.
- Edwards .
pp. 26–27.
- Edwards .
p. 18.
- Edwards .
p. 31.
- Edwards .
pp. 32–33.
- Edwards .
pp. 28–29.
- Trotter .
pp. 12–13.
- Engle; Paananen . p. 6.
- Trotter .
pp. 14–16.
- Jowett; Snodgrass . p. 4.
- Ries . pp.
55–56.
- Edwards
2006, p. 105
- Tanner . pp.
85–86
- Ries . pp.
77–78. "This is confirmed in Khrushchev's memoirs, where he states that
Artillery Marshal Kulik personally supervised the bombardment of
the Finnish village."
- Jowett; Snodgrass . p. 6.
- Trotter .
pp. 48–51.
- Trotter .
p. 58.
- Trotter .
p. 61.
- Trotter .
p. 34.
- Conquest
. p. 450.
- Trotter .
pp. 35–36.
- Edwards .
p. 189.
- Trotter .
pp. 38–39.
- Kilin;
Raunio p. 13.
- Trotter .
pp. 42–44.
- Trotter .
p. 47.
- Geust;
Uitto . p. 54.
- Trotter .
p. 69.
- Trotter .
pp. 72–73.
- Trotter .
pp. 76–78.
- Trotter .
pp. 51–55.
- Trotter .
p. 121.
- Trotter .
pp. 53–54.
- Trotter .
pp. 145–146.
- Trotter .
pp. 131–132.
- Trotter .
pp. 148–149.
- Trotter .
pp. 62–63.
- Trotter .
pp. 87–89.
- Kilin;
Raunio p. 113.
- Trotter .
p. 110.
- Jowett; Snodgrass . p. 44.
- Trotter .
p. 150.
- Kulju . p.
230. The Russian historian Yuri Kilin calculated 13,962 men and the
Ukrainian Oleg Bozhko 14,003 men. Furthermore, there are uncertain
estimations of 20,000–30,000 men.
- Kulju . p.
229. See also the section Casualties of the battle in the article
of the Battle of the Raate road.
- Kantakoski . p. 283. Detailed casualties:
310 dead, 92 missing and 618 wounded.
- Kulju 2007,
pp. 217–218
- Trotter .
pp. 171–174.
- Trotter .
pp. 178–180.
- Trotter .
pp. 203–204.
- Trotter .
pp. 214–215.
- Trotter
2002. p. 218.
- Geust;
Uitto . p. 77.
- Trotter .
p. 233.
- Trotter .
pp. 234–235.
- Trotter .
pp. 246–247.
- Edwards .
p. 261.
- Trotter .
pp. 247–248.
- Kilin;
Raunio p. 260.
- Trotter .
pp. 249–251.
- Trotter .
p. 254.
- Trotter .
p. 187.
- Trotter p.
193.
- Trotter .
pp. 187–188.
- Tillotson . p. 157.
- Trotter .
p. 189.
- Tillotson . p. 160.
- Trotter .
pp. 191–192.
- Tillotson . pp. 152–153.
- Trotter .
pp. 194–202.
- Jowett; Snodgrass . pp. 21–22.
- Trotter .
pp. 235–236.
- Edwards .
p. 141.
- Edwards .
p. 145.
- Trotter .
p. 237.
- Edwards .
p. 146.
- Trotter .
pp. 237–238.
- Trotter .
pp. 238–239.
- Engle; Paananen . pp. 142–143.
- Jowett; Snodgrass . p. 10.
- Edwards .
pp. 272–273.
- Laaksonen . p. 365.
- Paasikivi . p. 177
- Halsti . p.
412.
- (See: )
- Trotter .
p. 264.
- Lieven . pp.
84–86.
- Edwards .
pp. 277–279.
- Jowett; Snodgrass . pp. 10–11.
- Edwards .
pp. 13–14.
References
External links