| Soviet-polish Non-aggression Pact |
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Information AboutSoviet-polish Non-aggression Pact |
| CATEGORIES ABOUT SOVIET-POLISH NON-AGGRESSION PACT | |
| 1932 in law | |
| history of poland 1918–1939 | |
| treaties of poland | |
| treaties of the soviet union | |
| world war ii treaties | |
| polish-soviet relations | |
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) was an International Treaty of Non-aggression signed in 1932 by representatives of Poland and the USSR . The pact was unilaterally broken by the Soviet Union on September 17 , 1939 , during the Nazi And Soviet Invasion Of Poland . After the Polish-Bolshevik War , the Polish authorities pursued a policy of "equal distance" between Germany and the Soviet Union. Most of Polish politicians, both leftist and rightist, believed that Poland should rely mostly on the Crucial Alliance With France dating back to World War I and should not support either Germany or the Soviet Union. To normalize the bilateral contacts with the Soviet Union, talks were started in January 1926 to prepare a non-aggression treaty. The treaty was to fortify the Polish gains of the Peace Of Riga and was to be balanced by a similar pact signed with Germany. However, the talks with Germany were not started, and the Polish-Soviet talks were interrupted in June 1927, after Great Britain broke diplomatic relations with the USSR and Soviet plenipotentiary Volkov was murdered. Instead, Poland applied to the Briand-Kellogg Pact of 1928. The Polish-Soviet negotiations were resumed in Moscow, in 1931. The pact was finally signed on July 25 , 1932 , effective for a three-year period. On May 5 , 1934 it was extended to December 31 , 1945 without amendment. Among other topics, both sides agreed to renounce violence in bilateral relations, to resolve their problems through negotiations and to forgo any armed conflict or alliances aimed at the other side. On , 1939 , when the Red Army joined Nazi Germany 's forces in their invasion of Poland, in accordance with the secret protocols of the Ribbentrop-Molotov Treaty . The pact was considered at the time as a major success of the Polish diplomacy, much weakened by the Toll War with Germany, renouncement of parts of the Treaty Of Versailles and loosened links with France. It also reinforced the Polish negotiating position with Germany, which resulted in signing of the German-Polish Non-Aggression Pact eighteen months later. REFERENCE # 1 # 2 # 3 |
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