H-Diplo Article Review 770 on “‘Raging Rumors’: American Diplomats’ Reportage from Latvia and Estonia, 1938-1940.”
2018
H-Diplo
Article Review
No. 770
24 May 2018
Article Review Editors: Thomas Maddux and Diane Labrosse
Web and Production Editor: George Fujii
Melissa Jane Taylor. “‘Raging Rumors’: American Diplomats’ Reportage from Latvia and Estonia, 1938-1940.” The International History Review 40:1 (2018): 155-176. DOI: https://doi.org/10.1080/07075332.2017.1309446.
URL: http://tiny.cc/AR770
Review by David M. Crowe, Elon University
Estonia, Latvia, and Lithuania emerged from the ashes of World War I with dreams of creating viable democracies that would flourish in the aftermath of the “war to end all wars.” But, like many of the new nations in Central and Eastern Europe during this period, their dreams soon fell prey to the vicissitudes of the global economy and the immaturity of their political institutions. Internationally, they created a three-state Baltic Entente in the 1930s to coordinate diplomatic efforts to strengthen their tenuous position along the southeastern Baltic Sea littoral between Germany and Soviet Russia. They also hoped it would give them a sense of diplomatic well-being in the face of these regional threats to their independence. Historically, with the exception of Lithuania, which was once part of a joint commonwealth with Poland, each of the Baltic states had little experience with political independence and suffered from centuries of domination by whichever great power dominated the southeastern Baltic Sea region. Each of them had also been dominated by a Baltic German elite for centuries, though this was somewhat tempered in Lithuania, where Polish culture and Catholicism held sway.
The current article under review deals modestly with this deeper historical background and begins with the appointment of John C. Wiley, a seasoned U.S. diplomat, to the post of envoy extraordinary and minister plenipotentiary to Estonia and Latvia in the summer of 1938. Wiley thus becomes the central figure in this discussion of the role that he, and to a much lesser degree, his subordinate American diplomats, played in Estonia and Latvia in one of the tensest regions of Europe from 1938-1940. Wiley, who was based at the U.S. legation in Riga, the Latvian capital, also oversaw American diplomatic interests in Tallinn, the capital of Estonia. Little mention is made of the third Baltic state—Lithuania—which had a separate U.S. presence in its capital, Kaunas.[1]
In some ways, this is a rather uncritical account of Wiley’s views seen through the prism of his diplomatic notes to Washington. The author concludes by praising Wiley for providing the State Department with an in-depth view of how Estonian and Latvian leaders viewed their countries in the larger world, and different facets of his humanitarianism. While there is no doubt that Wiley was a capable diplomat, what is missing in this article and his diplomatic accounts is a discussion of the complexity of the international threats facing Estonia and Latvia. This is particularly the case when it came to providing Washington with the larger historical context of the growing threat of Nazi Germany and Soviet Russia to Baltic independence. Without such context, it is difficult fully to describe the gradual erosion of Baltic independence from the fall of 1939 through the summer of 1940.
To do this, one would need to do research in British Foreign Office records at the National Archives in Kew,[2] which provide a much more sophisticated look at developments in the southeastern Baltic littoral than American diplomatic files in the U.S. National Archives. German and Soviet foreign records are equally important in providing important details about Nazi and Soviet designs on the Baltic States during this dangerous period in Baltic history. Unfortunately, by focusing principally on Wiley’s diplomatic reports to the State Department instead of the larger body of regional State Department reports related to the topic, the author does not bring to life important details about the complex tragedy enveloping the Baltic States. For example, though she mentions briefly the extremely important talks between the British, the French, and the Soviets in the spring and summer of 1939 to develop a three-power alliance that would counter Hitler’s growing threats in Europe, she does not discuss Germany’s offer of nonaggression pacts for each of the Baltic States. This was truly a Scylla and Charybdis moment for Estonia, Latvia, and Lithuania, whose only response to these offers were declarations of neutrality that had little to do with the larger threats they faced. In the end, all of these diplomatic machinations failed. Talks between London, Paris, and the Kremlin fell apart because the British and French refused to consider allowing Soviet leader Joseph Stalin to make preemptive moves against the Baltic States if he perceived a Baltic drift into the German camp. While Wiley certainly was correct in his analysis of Estonia and Latvia’s fear of the threat of Soviet Russia if talks with the British and French succeeded, it is difficult to know from the files selected by the author how seriously he viewed Moscow’s threat to Baltic independence. Much of this, of course, was moot, since extremely secretive talks between Germany and the Soviet Union took place at the same time, and led to the Soviet-German treaty of 23 August 1939, with its secret provisions, which ultimately determined the fate of Estonia, Latvia, and Lithuania over the next elevens months.
What came next, a series of developments that really underscores the true focus of the Soviets and their long-range plans for the Baltic States, also deserves more attention. The author refers to only three diplomatic sources for the brief discussion of these extremely dangerous moves by the Soviets, whereas Wiley and other American diplomats in the region provided Washington with a detailed account of Stalin’s decision to force Estonia, Latvia, and Lithuania to accept mutual assistance pacts that allowed Moscow to station troops in each state.[3] And, as a sop to Lithuania, the Soviets returned Vilnius, which had been under Polish control since the end of World War I.[4]
The article also does not say enough about the dramatic forced transfer of the Baltic Germans from the Baltic States in October and November of 1939, and the underlying reasons for this move by German leader Adolf Hitler. It should not be forgotten that since the mid-1920s, Hitler had ideologically linked the Jews with the Soviet Union and used the concept of ‘Jewish Bolshevism’ as a cornerstone of his ideological thinking about everything Soviet and Jewish. The sudden decision to force the large Baltic German populations, particularly in Estonia and Latvia, to flee to the Reich underscores Hitler’s deep suspicion of Soviet intentions and reminds us of his lingering hatred and distrust of the country he saw as the bastion of “Jewish Bolshevism.” In making this move, Hitler was acting out his most basic racial fears and signaling to Stalin his lack of faith in their long term relationship.
Hitler’s move spurred Stalin to make one of his own - to try to force Finland, whose citizens were ethnic and linguistic first cousins of the Estonians—to accept a Baltic-style mutual assistance pact. The Finns, who warily watched Stalin’s moves against the Baltic States just across the Gulf of Finland, were prepared to fight any such moves. When it became apparent to Stalin that Finland would not succumb to his diplomatic threats, he launched air raids on Helsinki, the capital, and other Finnish cities. What followed was the Winter War, which saw the Finnish military stop the Red Army dead in its tracks. In what would be the last meetings of the Baltic Entente, Baltic leaders again declared their neutrality.
As the war continued, Baltic capitals were filled with rumors that Moscow would soon demand more from the Baltic States including military bases and related issues. The author notes that Karlis Ulmanis, Latvia’s president, addressed the nation on radio in early 1940 about this and “encouraged Latvians to prepare for war” (165). In reality, his speech dealt principally with preparing his people for uncertain times in the future. But when some interpreted it as a warning to the Soviets, he went back on the air and said that relations with Moscow were “‘very satisfactory.’” He also criticized foreign reports that his country was being Sovietized.[5] There were also some modest discussions between Estonia and Latvia’s military leaders about a possible Soviet attack, though they never bore fruit.[6]
What triggered Moscow’s next moves was the end of the Winter War in early March and Hitler’s dramatic conquest of much of Western Europe in the spring and early summer of 1940. Stalin, who watched in dismay as the Wehrmacht swept through Western Europe, was now determined to follow suit and create a buffer along his western borders. On June 17, his Foreign Minister, Vyacheslav Molotov, congratulated Count Friedrich von Schulenberg, Germany’s Ambassador, for the victory in the West, and added that three days earlier Soviet forces had moved into the Baltic states. [7]
The takeover was swift. On June 14, during a meeting in Moscow, Molotov told his Lithuanian counterpart, Juozas Urbšys, that his government demanded a change in government accompanied by a rapid move of Red Army into his country. Two days later, Estonia and Latvia received the same demands. The reasons for these moves were the formation of an anti-Soviet military alliance with Lithuania, shared pro-British sympathies, and the failure to believe “in the strength of the German-Soviet friendship.”[8] The subsequent takeover was harsh and brutal, no surprise given that Stalin had ordered the murder of almost 22,000 Polish officers and others in Katyn and other former Polish cities under Soviet control months earlier.[9]
Stalin sent some of the most prominent members of his government to oversee the takeover of the Baltic States, including Andrei Zhdanov (Estonia) and Andrei Vyshinsky (Latvia). They orchestrated Soviet-style elections in mid-July, followed by requests from the new puppet legislatures for inclusion as republics in the U.S.S.R. From 1-6 August 1940, Estonia, Latvia, and Lithuania became the 14th, 15th, and 16th Soviet Socialist Republics.
Wiley’s reports to the State Department were quite accurate and captured the crisis that was sweeping the Baltic States. He also understood the helplessness of his position and that of the United States. At this point, all that Washington could do was to condemn Soviet actions and take concrete actions to protest Stalin’s move. The author discussed the statement by Under Secretary of State Sumner Welles on July 23 but does not mention that ten days earlier the U.S. government, responding to a request from the three Baltic legations in Washington and New York, froze all Baltic assets in the U.S. Some of these funds would be used to keep the Baltic diplomatic missions afloat until the collapse of the Soviet Union in early 1991 and the reemergence of Baltic independence soon afterwards.
The British government followed suit, which the Kremlin constantly challenged. After the German invasion of the Soviet Union in 1941, Moscow intensified these protests, generally to no avail. The U.S. did agree to tone down some of the language in the 1940 statement about the Soviet takeover of the Baltic States, but did nothing further to cater to Soviet objections.
I had occasion to visit the Estonian and Latvian legations in Washington in the 1980s and it was a step back in time. After the war, many Baltic emigres fled to the U.S., and after the UN adopted the Genocide Convention in late 1948, they aggressively promoted the charge of Soviet genocide in Estonia, Latvia, and Lithuania. The Baltic legations quietly and diplomatically promoted this idea along with the idea of Baltic independence. This theme was also promoted by various Baltic emigre groups as well as a major Baltic scholarly association. For many, Soviet control over Russia and Eastern Europe seemed eternal, though the former Baltic States found ways to create a way of life unknown to many in other parts of the Soviet Union. When Mikhail Gorbachev came to power in the mid-1980s, Baltic activists, driven by the disaster at Chernobyl, formed a human environmental chain that provided an impetus for similar activists in the Soviet Union. So this thin thread or dream of independence, in a modest way, helped pave the way for the revival of Estonian, Latvian, and Lithuanian nationhood. Today, they are shining examples of the fruits of democracy in the Baltic region of the former Soviet Union.
David M. Crowe is a Presidential Fellow at Chapman University and a Professor Emeritus of History at Elon University. He is currently writing Raphael Lemkin: The Life of a Visionary, while his Stalin’s Soviet Justice: ‘Show’ Trials, War Crimes Trials, and Nuremberg will be published by Bloomsbury in late 2018. His other recent works include “The German Plunder and Theft of Jewish Property in the General Government,” in John J. Michalczyk’s Nazi Law: From Nuremberg to Nuremberg (Bloomsbury, 2018), “The Allied Occupation of Germany and Japan,” in Joanne Cho’s Transnational Encounters between Germany and East Asia since 1900 (Routledge, 2018), and “MacArthur, Keenan and the American Quest for Justice at the IMFTE,” in Kirsten von Lingen’s Transcultural Justice at the Tokyo Tribunal (Brill 2018).
© 2018 The Authors | Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs 3.0 United States License
Notes
[1] Estonia had a legation in New York City while Latvia and Lithuania had their legations in Washington, D.C.
[2] FO 371. Political Departments. General Correspondence from 1906-1966.
[3] Wiley, who detested the Soviets, wrote Loy Henderson, vice director of the State Department’s European division, in the fall of 1939, “I must say that, having been utterly convinced that the Kremlin was populated by apes and the Narkomindel [Soviet foreign office] by their lowly parasites, I have been taken aback with awesome admirations by the brilliance of Soviet diplomatic manoeuvring.” Kaarel Piirimäe, Roosevelt, Churchill, and the Baltic Question: Allied Relations during the Second World War (New York: Palgrave Macmillan, 2014), 33.
[4] Vilnius was seized by the Soviets as they moved into their zone of occupation in Poland as an active German ally in September 1939. The Poles had seized it in the early 1920s from newly independent Lithuania; see, for example, David M. Crowe, The Baltic States and the Great Powers: Foreign Relations, 1938-1940 (Boulder: West Press, 1993), 215- 222, n1-67. One of the most detailed early studies of the Soviet takeover of the Baltic States in 1939-1940 is a Congressional investigation, Baltic States; A Study of their Origin and National Development; Their Seizure and Incorporation into the U.S.S.R. Third Interim Report of the Select Committee on Communist Aggression, House of Representatives, Eighty-Third Congress, Second Session 1954. Under the Authority of H. Res. 346 and H. Res. 438, edited by Igor Kavass and Adolph Sprudzs (Buffalo: William S. Hein, 1972).
[5] Crowe, The Baltic States, 139-140.
[6] Estonian and Latvian officials decided at the Tallinn meeting not to include Lithuania in these discussions for fear of antagonizing the Soviets, though there are some indications that there were military talks between the three neighbors.
[7] Stephen Kotkin, Stalin: Waiting for Hitler, 1929-1941 (New York: Penguin Press, 2017), 768-770.
[8] Piirimä, Roosevelt, Churchill, and the Baltic Question, 7.
[9] Monika Komaniecka, Krystyna Samonowska, Mateusz Szpytma, and Anna Zechenter, “Katyn Massacre—Basic Facts,” The Person and the Challenges 3:2 (2013): 65-92. Three of the four authors are members of Poland’s Institute of National Remembrance, which is responsible for the investigation of crimes against the people of Poland over the last century.
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