Miejsce II Rzeczypospolitej w sowieckiej polityce zagranicznej (1918-1939)
Streszczenie
This article attempts an assessment of the Soviet Policy towards Poland in all
the inter-war period. On the basis of a detailed analysis it demonstrates radical
changes in this policy which in turn resulted from the changes within the Soviet
Empire. In the years 1918-1939 'The New State' underwent three phases: ideological,
pragmatic and imperial. Respectively, Poland was in turn: an obstacle, an ally-to-be
and an object of some wider political designs aiming at Paris, Berlin or Geneva.
Up until the mid-twenties the Bolsheviks had their active policy towards Poland
which ended when 'The Rapallo Line' was finally established. Nevertheless, after
Locarno and the Berlin Treaty Poland grew unimportant and secondary: therefore,
to understand the policy of this period one should concentrate on the Soviet activity
in all Europe, especially along the lines Moscow-Paris and Moscow-Berlin. In the
1930-s Poland was for the Soviet Empire only a part of these two political triangles
and its importance kept decreasing.
Finally, the question of Poland in the Soviet policy was settled in the Soviet-German
Agreement of September 28, 1939 which is generally and justly viewed as a founding
stone of 'The Fourth Partition of Poland'.
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