Sunday, October 1, 2023

Guarding the Siberian Railroads



The military intervention into Siberia can be divided into three stages. These divisions are based more on official clarifications of duties, rather than any changes in military policy. A continuity, a consistency is present throughout the entire period of U.S. intervention, primarily to facilitate counterrevolution. The first stage is the period between the landing of U.S. troops and the acceptance by Washington of the Inter-Allied Railway Agreement (IARA) on 9 February 1919. The IARA imposed military control on the Siberian railways by clearly defining the respective responsibilities of the intervening forces on various sectors of the railway. For the Americans, this would confirm duties already assumed and create new ones.

The Railway Agreement of February formalized some of these winter arrangements and added others. Although finalized in February, it took an additional two months to sort out which Allied force would protect each specific sector. (See map above.) Some 550 U.S. troops became responsible for the line running immediately out of Vladivostok to the town of Nikolsk-Ussuri, 68 miles north. Nikolsk-Ussuri, a town of 52,000 inhabitants, served as the juncture of the Ussuri line continuing to Khabarovsk and the Chinese Eastern Railroad, which crossed Manchuria, later to reenter Siberia. At Spasskoe, continuing north, 1,700 troops were responsible for the length of line leading to the town of Ussuri and the 40-foot-long bridge crossing the river Ussuri 217 miles from Vladivostok. Another 1,900 troops were assigned to guard a branch line from Ulgonaya to the coal mines at Suchan. Two thousand men were also stationed 1,700 miles west to maintain the stretch of line between Verkhe-Udinsk and Mysovaya, where the Trans-Siberian reached the network of 38 tunnels linking eastern and western Siberia.


U.S. Railroad Guard Detail


With the railway agreement practicably enacted, U.S. troops were immediately confronted by the dilemma of professed "non-interference" while participating in counterrevolution. Graves continued to maintain his "neutrality" regardless, which in essence was to keep his expeditionary force as disentangled from the mire of civil war as long as possible. In a proclamation given to his troops to distribute in their sectors he outlined that:

The sole object and purpose of the armed forces of the United States of America. . . is to protect the railroad and railway property and ensure the operation of passenger and freight trains through such sector without obstruction or interruption.


Hospital Car on American Train


The proclamation initially left the partisan guerrillas wondering just who the "Amerikanskij soldat" was. They soon made up their minds. As such order on the railroad only benefited one side, the U.S. soldiers soon became justifiable targets of the partisans. Just as it allowed supplies to roll to counterrevolution forces in western Siberia, Allied control of the railways made White control of the east possible. White representatives in eastern Siberia used order on the railroad to either starve or attack "Bolshevist" areas. "We are making this condition possible," Graves wired Washington, "by our presence here."

Even before U.S. sectors were chosen, U.S. troops north of Vladivostok were preparing for "anticipated...guerrilla warfare or general revolution with the recession of winter" due to the "unsettled political and economic conditions in eastern Siberia." As early as 14 March, partisans fired upon trains and "information was received that the partisans were recruiting for a vigorous spring drive against the Kolchak government." By late spring, U.S. forces finally settled in their allotted sectors, became swept up in that vigorous drive. Throughout March and April, attacks on rail freight, tack, and bridges increased. In May, Graves decided that to properly maintain "order" on the railways, U.S. troops would have to follow the attacking partisans into the surrounding countryside. 

The first active campaign began on 21 May in the vicinity of Maihe in the Ulgonaya-Suchan sector. Throughout the summer of 1919, the history of the AEF in eastern Siberia is one of skirmishes, attacks, and forays into the surrounding hills and valleys. On numerous occasions American combat patrols fought in conjunction with White Russian and Japanese forces. Thirty-five U.S. soldiers were to fall in this partisan war and an additional 52 were wounded. Eighteen died on the morning of 25 June near the village of Romanovka during a dawn raid on their encampment. [Figures corrected 8 October 2023.]

Source:  St. Mihiel Trip-Wire, June 2020



3 comments:

  1. America's involvement in protecting the Siberian railways was for various reasons, such as opening the Eastern Front so that Germany would fight on two fronts instead of concentrating all its forces on the Western Front. The Czechoslovak Legion was stranded in Russia, and the Allies needed them back to help win the war. Resources and supplies should be protected instead of falling into Bolshevik hands where they could be used against the Allies.

    ReplyDelete
  2. I have really serious doubts on the casualties figure reported in this article. I have never found in any source of Allied operations in Siberia that the US lost 200 soldiers and 25 in a single attack by bolsheviks. Gary Mead's "The Doughboys" doesn't report such casualties. The CIEO (Italian Army Corp in Siberia) that operated along the Trans-Siberia railway just like the US reported 2 soldiers killed in action (actually they drowned crossing a river) and a few more dead of diseases. British and French troops did not report such causalties. Don't know about the Japanese who were the most numerous corps sent to Siberia.
    The only Corps that did suffer remarkable casualties was the Czechoslovak Legion that was directly involved in several clashes with the Red Army and the bolsheviks partisans.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Yes, I have conducted a little more research on the casualties for AEF Siberia and found the most recent work on the mission, "The Russian Exepeditions, 1917-1920" produced by the US. Army Center of Military History gives the following figures: "In combat, despite their lack of artillery, American troops held their own as a regional peacekeeping force for nineteen months, losing thirty-five men killed and fifty-two wounded." The same source states that the partisan attack on Romanovka resutlted in 18 deaths for the Doughboys and 24 wounded. I've corrected the text accordingly. Thanks for bringing this to my attention.

      Delete