1917: The Russian Revolution
In the early spring of 1917 the initiative was definitely with the Allies. A simultaneous offensive by all the Allies was planned, with the intention of preventing the Germans from transferring reserves from one front to another. This plan was ruined by the snapping of the weakest link in the Allied chain, Russia.
Collapse of the Russian army
Although the Russian army was now better armed, better equipped, and probably better directed than ever before, the losses of the previous two and a half years had worn out the rank and file, who were weary for peace. Still, the army could have held but for the internal collapse. The Russian Revolution broke out in the middle of March, and the effect on the army was immediate. The autocratic monarchy of imperial Russia was replaced with a Provisional Government, but the latter’s authority was at once contested by soviets, or “councils of workers’ and soldiers’ deputies.” The soviets could well claim to represent the masses of the people and so to be the rightful conductors of the Revolution, since mass demonstrations rather than constitutional politics had overthrown the old regime.
The Russian army remained in the field against the Central Powers, but its spirit was broken, and the Russian people were utterly tired of a war which the imperial regime had undertaken without being morally or materially prepared for it. Order No. 1, issued on March 1 (March 14, New Style) by the Petrograd Soviet, destroyed discipline among the troops by prescribing that committees of soldiers or sailors be formed in all military and naval units and that those committees should, in essence, mutiny against their officers and seize control of arms and munitions in the name of the soviet. The Provisional Government, by its weakness, allowed the situation to pass out of its control and into the hands of the soviets. The corps of officers, which had deteriorated during the war, was powerless to act.
Even as early as April, an Austro-Hungrian–German attack on the Stokhid bridgehead found the Russians little inclined for fight. The leaders of the Provisional Government were patriotic enough to see what a German victory would mean for Russia, and they were also conscious of Russia’s obligations toward the Western Allies. Some, such as the foreign minister Pavel Milyukov, still hoped to achieve Russia’s main national war aim—namely, control of the Turkish straits. Others, such as Aleksandr Kerensky, who became minister of war in May 1917, dreamed of inflaming patriotism by means of a victorious offensive. This was something for which, indeed, both the Western governments and visiting delegations of the French Socialists and of the British Labour Party were pressing.
The so-called Kerensky Offensive was launched on June 18 (July 1, New Style), 1917, in eastern Galicia, with Brusilov in command. It began with a spectacular advance against the Austro-Hungarian forces but was halted within days as German reinforcements came up and Russian troops refused to leave their trenches. As Bolshevik leader Vladimir Lenin said, the Russian soldiers had “voted for peace with their legs.” The last weeks of the month saw the catastrophic rout of the Russians, and the Germans advanced through Galicia and into Ukraine, halting at the Zbruch River.
Although the Russians performed dismally during the Kerensky Offensive, a Czechoslovak brigade fought well against the Austrians at Zborov, and a Polish cavalry regiment distinguished itself at Krechowce. After the fight at Zborov, the organization of an independent Czechoslovak army in Russia was approved by Kerensky (the Czechoslovak Legion, which had numbered only about 800 men under the tsarist regime, had already been increased to four regiments since the March Revolution). On October 9 the commander in chief of the Russian army, Gen. Nikolay Dukhonin, agreed that the Czechoslovak army should be under French command and should be used only against Austria-Hungary and Germany. Numbering about 30,000 men, the new army was to be transported to France for the Western Front, but the outbreak of the Russian Civil War complicated its departure. The Czechoslovak Legion responded by taking possession of the 6,000-mile-long (nearly 10,000-km-long) Trans-Siberian Railway in an ultimately successful effort to reach the port of Vladivostok and board ships for home.
The disintegration of the Russian Empire
The Germans had halted their advance into Ukraine, but they struck again in the north, taking Riga on September 3, 1917, and occupying the greater part of Latvia. Although they did not yet enter mainland Estonia, they landed in October on the offshore islands Ösel (Saaremaa) and Dagö (Hiiumaa), thus securing access to the Gulf of Finland. After the collapse of Kerensky Offensive, with anarchy increasing in Russia, nationalist forces, some of which had already appeared in April 1917, became visibly stronger as the leaders of Russia’s oppressed groups demanded territorial autonomy and, later, full independence.
The Finnish parliament on July 18, 1917, took upon itself the powers that the Russian emperor had formerly exercised in Finland and then, on December 6 (after the Bolsheviks’ November Revolution in Russia), proclaimed Finland’s complete independence. Soviet Russia somewhat hypocritically recognized this declaration on January 4, 1918. In Estonia a provisional government was formed on October 12, 1917, and independence was proclaimed on November 28. In Latvia, where a national conference at Riga had claimed complete political autonomy on July 30, 1917, the situation was subsequently confused by the military presence of the Germans, but nevertheless a Latvian assembly at Valka set up a National Council the following November. For Lithuania, under German occupation since the autumn of 1915, a National Council met at Vilnius in September 1917.
All of Russian Poland had been under German and Austro-Hungarian occupation since the summer of 1915, and, in the hope of winning the Poles to their cause and of forming a Polish army to fight Russia, the occupying Central Powers had promised, on November 5, 1916, to create an independent monarchy there. The Poles had received this promise with skepticism, though they were not displeased that the war should have forced the Central Powers to make a move toward internationalizing “the Polish question,” which France and Great Britain had hitherto treated as an exclusively Russian domain. After Russia’s provisional government on March 29, 1917, recognized Poland’s right to independence and territorial unity, Józef Piłsudski, who had fought at the head of the Polish Legions on Austria-Hungary’s side against imperial Russia, refused to raise a Polish army against the new Russia. While the German appeal to the Poles failed completely, a Polish army was successfully formed in France (June 4, 1917), under the political authority of the Polish National Committee headed by Roman Dmowski. In the course of the year, two Polish army corps were organized in Belorussia (Belarus) and in Ukraine from Poles mobilized in the Russian army.
Events in the south were also serious. The Ukrainian National Congress had met in Kyiv in April 1917 and elected a Central Rada (“Council”), which proclaimed Ukraine an autonomous republic on June 23 and a sovereign country on January 22, 1918. To the southwest of Ukraine, the ethnically Romanian people of Bessarabia had set up their own National Council in April 1917. They had to be reticent about its ultimate purpose—namely, political union with Romania—because Romania and Russia were still formally allies against the Central Powers and because there were Russian forces in adjacent Moldavia. To the far southeast of European Russia, meanwhile, the Georgians, the Armenians, and the Azerbaijanis were also preparing for national independence. They formed their Council of Transcaucasian Peoples at Tbilisi on April 22, 1917, but its task was complicated by competing nationalisms, local territorial disputes, and the threat of Turkish invasion.
The Bolshevik Revolution
In Russia proper during the late summer and autumn of 1917, the Provisional Government’s authority and influence were rapidly fading away. On October 24–25 (November 6–7, New Style) Lenin’s Bolsheviks and their Left Socialist Revolutionary allies staged a nearly bloodless coup. Although it was presented to the world as the result of a bloody and heroic struggle, it was really a fairly simple operation, because by that time there was practically no one to fight for a democratic Russia. Nevertheless, it was of epoch-making importance both for the course of the war and for all subsequent history.
On November 8, one day after taking power, Lenin published two decrees which overnight dissolved the Eastern Front, increased chaos in Russia, and made very difficult any organized resistance to Communist rule. His Land Decree, which abolished landed estates without compensation, drew the peasant soldiers away from the front line in a rush back to their villages. His Peace Decree offered to the peoples of all belligerent states peace negotiations on the basis that there should be no annexations and no indemnities but that the right of self-determination should be recognized for all. On November 26, 1917, the Soviet of People’s Commissars, as the new Communist government was called, ordered unilaterally the cessation of hostilities on Russia’s European and Transcaucasian fronts.
Armistice with the Central Powers and the Treaties of Brest-Litovsk
The Central Powers responded by agreeing to negotiate an armistice, which was signed on December 15 at Brest-Litovsk. Three weeks later peace negotiations began at the same location. The Communist masters of Russia needed peace to extend and to consolidate their power; they also believed that proletarian revolution in Germany and elsewhere in Europe would break out among the war-weary populace. Germany, on the other hand, wanted peace in the east so as to be free to transfer the bulk of its forces to the Western Front in the hope of defeating the French and the British there before the enormous military and industrial potential of the United States could be brought to bear.
The negotiations at Brest-Litovsk were dramatic: first, because the Central Powers intended to annex certain territories of the defunct Russian Empire under cover of the principle of national self-determination, and, second, there was a serious divergence of opinion on the Soviet side between Lenin and foreign commissar Leon Trotsky. During the negotiations, the Central Powers concluded a separate peace with the Ukrainian Republic on February 9, 1918. Then, after growing tired of propagandizing and stalling from the Russian delegation, the Germans launched their armies not only into Ukraine, where Ukrainian nationalists needed their help against the Bolsheviks, but also across the armistice lines in Belorussia and Latvia and even beyond Latvia into Estonia. Knowing that Soviet Russia could not survive such a blow and in order to save his revolution, Lenin rejected Trotsky’s formula of “neither peace nor war” and accepted Germany’s dictated terms. On March 3, 1918, a treaty was signed at Brest-Litovsk between Soviet Russia and the Central Powers. Soviet Russia recognized both Finland and Ukraine as independent; renounced control over Estonia, Latvia, Lithuania, Poland, and most of Belorussia; and ceded Kars, Ardahan, and Batumi in Transcaucasia to Turkey.
Casualties and significance
Both the Ukrainian and Russian treaties of Brest-Litovsk were annulled by the Armistice on November 11, 1918, which marked the Allied defeat of Germany. By that point, however, many of the territorial changes caused by the collapse of the Russian Empire had to be regarded as a fait accompli by the Western Allies. Finland had fought a bloody civil war and would reconstitute itself as a republic. The newly independent Baltic States were invaded by Soviet troops within days of the general armistice, and the ensuing Baltic War of Liberation would stretch into 1920. Under the terms of the Treaty of Versailles, Poland was resurrected and given most of formerly German West Prussia and Poznań (Posen), as well as a “corridor” to the Baltic Sea (which separated East Prussia from the rest of Germany). Gdańsk (Danzig) was declared a free city, and a conflict between Poland and Lithuania over the status of Vilnius would remain unsettled until 1939.
Ukraine briefly tasted independence before it became a primary theatre of battle during the Russian Civil War and subsequent Russo-Polish War. After a brief war with Poland, the Ukrainian government of Symon Petlyura made an abrupt about-face and allied itself with Poland to present a united front against the Bolsheviks. By the time the fighting ended, the territories of Ukraine had been divided among four countries: Romania annexed Bukovina; Transcarpathia was joined to the new country of Czechoslovakia; Poland incorporated Galicia and western Volhynia; and the lands east of the Polish border were constituted as the Ukrainian Socialist Soviet Republic.
Even when measured against the enormous bloodshed at Verdun, the Somme, and Passchendaele, the loss of life caused by the war on the Eastern Front was staggering. Among the Allies, an estimated 1.7 million Russian troops were killed, with nearly 5 million more wounded and an estimated 2.5 million captured or missing. The Romanians suffered more than 530,000 killed and wounded, as well as some 360,000 troops listed as captured or missing.
For the armies of the Central Powers, the casualties were equally stunning. Germany suffered an estimated 900,000 killed and wounded, with nearly 160,000 captured or missing. More than 2.7 million troops from Austria-Hungary were killed or wounded, and an additional 1.7 million were captured. Bulgaria suffered some 30,000 troops killed and wounded during the Romanian campaign.
Civilian losses on the Eastern Front were enormous, with disease, malnutrition, exposure, and military encounters claiming the lives of millions of noncombatants. An estimated two million subjects of the Russian Empire were casualties of the war; among these were some 500,000 Poles and Lithuanians who lost their lives during the battles of 1914–15 and the subsequent German occupation. Approximately 275,000 Romanian civilians died as a result of the operations in that country in 1916. Some 300,000 Austrian subjects died; the overwhelming majority of these were Polish civilians in Galicia. Untold numbers of people were internally and externally displaced, and the hardship of war soon gave way to one of the deadliest pandemics in human history: the mass movement of refugees, demobilizing armies, and repatriated prisoners fueled the influenza outbreak of 1918–19, which would ultimately prove deadlier than the war itself.
The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica