MUTUAL RELATIONS BETWEEN GREAT BRITAIN AND POLAND AT THE BEGINNING OF THE SECOND WORLD WAR THROUGH THE PRYSM OF THE WAR CABINET ACTIVITY (BASED ON THE OFFICIAL DOCUMENTS OF THE BRITISH NATIONAL ARCHIVES)

Authors

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.29038/2524-2679-2021-03-6-16

Keywords:

Great Britain, Poland, Germany, Diplomacy, Second World War, foreign policy, national interests, combat presence

Abstract

The article reveals mutual relationships between Great Britain and Poland on the verge of the Second World War based on the British National Archives documents. The authors acknowledge principles of the British foreign policy towards Poland and the activity of its diplomatic corps along with the War Cabinet. The paper determines that diplomatic and military-political relations between Great Britain and Poland have been multidimensional with deep historical roots.

The article represents the analysis of the main misunderstandings and challenges that determined British-Polish relations before and at the beginning of the Second World War. Sequentially, the British position and interest regarding the establishment of the strategic military partnership with Poland are shown. The authors examined British-Polish agreements that were signed during the spring-summer period of 1939 in order to designate the nature of the negotiation process between the states.

The publication also reveals the reasons for a weak practical element of the negotiation process, emphasising the difficulties concerning the Royal force on the European continent deployed on the Polish border. Also, the authors analyse scenarios of the counteractions towards the aggressive steps of Germany and search for the mechanisms of the aggression deterrence considering different dynamics of the events. It is stated that along with the British influence regarding the situation in Poland, either France took an active part in the decision-making process.

Based on the documents from the British National Archives, the authors established that diplomatic commentaries and reports written by ambassadors and state officials with regards to German actions on the Polish territories on the verge of the Second World War. Emphasising the cruel legacy of the Nazi regime, the rapid nature of German army attacks and brutal treatment towards the Polish population in the first days of September 1939 are described.

The authors concluded that actions of the British political and military circuits concerning aid to Poland at the start of the Second World War seem to have been inconsistent, unconfident and did not bring strategic effect.

After the Nazi occupation of Poland, British authorities had to change their approaches to the realisation of British-Polish relations. London accepted the idea of recognition of Polish emigrated government officials headed by V. Sikorsky, providing them with substantial empowerment to the Non-Aligned Movement.

References

Gerhard L. (2005). Weinberg, World at arms: a global history of World War II. Cambridge : Cambridge University Press

Arnold H. (2000). The allied convoy system 1939—1945: its organization, defence and operation Naval Institute Press 200 р.

Zashkilniak L. Krykun L. (2002) Polish history. Lviv: Lviv University. 752 р. (in Ukrainian).

Mazur W. (2012). “Traitors from London. The British Army and Conceptions of Military Aid for Poland in 1939. Przegląd historyczno-wojskowy. Vol. XIII (LXIV). No. 2 (240). Warsaw. 43–74. [“Zdrajcy z Londynu”. Armia brytyjska a koncepcje wojskowej pomocy dla Polski we wrześniu 1939 roku]. (in Polish).

Mraka I. (2011). The Opinion of British Authorities About Poland’s Future (September-November 1939). Scientific Notebooks of Historical Faculty at Lviv University. Lviv. Vol. 12. 109–119. [Brytanski pravliachi kola schodo maibutnioyi Polskoyi derzhavy (veresen-lystopad 1939)]. (in Ukrainian).

Greenhalgh J. (2017). The Threshold of the State: Civil Defence, the Blackout and the Home in Second World War Britain. Twentieth Century British History. Vol. 28. No. 2. Oxford University Press. Р. 186-208

National Archives of the United Kingdom, War Cabinet CAB/66/1/2, Anglo-Polish Staff Conversations. Report by the United Kingdom Delegation, 12 VI 1939.

National Archives САВ 63; CAB/66; САВ 79.

National Archives CAB/66/1/1. 24 VII 1939.

Snyder Т. (2010) «Bloodlands: Europe Between Hitler and Stalin».

National Archives САВ 63/128.

National Archives САВ 79/1/87.

Ironside Е. (1962) The Ironside Diaries 1937–1940, London Oxford, United Kingdom, 328 р.

Gerd F. (1997) Die Generalobersten des Heeres, Inhaber Höchster Kommandostellen 1933-1945. [Dokumentationen zur Geschichte der Kriege] Rastatt: Pabel-Moewig Verlag GmbH, 1997, 224 p.

National Archives САВ 65-56-30. Report dated 14 IX 1939.

Downloads

Published

2021-10-27