Paul
Goble
Staunton, April 8 – Despite the widespread
view that the Soviet government drew on the entire population of the USSR to
defeat the German invaders, in fact, Yaroslav Butakov says, “the Soviet
government divided peoples into those who were more loyal and those who were
less so” both among indigenous peoples and immigrants.
In addition, it divided them
according to its judgment of their level of readiness to take part in the war because
of differences in their level of cultural and civilizational development with
those judged too far behind not drafted although sometimes allowed to serve as
volunteers (russian7.ru/post/kakie-sovetskie-narody-ne-prizyvali-n/).
During the war, the Soviet
government did not draft USSR citizens of nationalities which had their own
states outside the borders of the Soviet Union, including but not limited to
the Germans, Japanese, Romanians, Hungarians, Finns, Bulgarians, Turks, Greeks,
Koreans and Chinese.
Such people were sometime impressed
into service in rear units but not in the frontlines, Butakov says. “It is curious,” he continues, “that in this
list do not figure Slovaks, Croatians, Italians and Spaniards” apparently because
the Kremlin judged that any of these who had become Soviet citizens were going
to be loyal.
But more interesting that this
division of those with possible links to foreign states was the one Moscow made
among nationalities without such links but that were judged for one reason or
another potentially or actually disloyal or generally unprepared for active
military service.
On October 13, 1943, the State
Defense Committee announced that the Soviet Army would not draft young people born
in 1926 who were members of “the indigenous nationalities of all the union
republics of the Trans-Caucasus and Central Asia, Kazakhstan and also all the
autonomous republics and oblasts of the North Caucasus.”
The next day,
Butakov continues, the State Defense committee said that in the following draft
in 1944, it would take such people into the reserves but not into the standing army.
However, that order was interpreted in many localities as the end of the draft
of nationalities in general even though it was restricted to a particular year
of birth.
Moscow took a special approach to
the numerically small nationalities of the North, Siberia, and the Far East,
exempting them from service not so much because of questions of loyalty but
because of their lack of education and ability to speak Russian, the Russian
analyst continues.
Until the adoption of the Soviet law
on universal military service in September 1939, representatives of these groups
were not drafted. But the experience of their
first draft in the fall of that year was not a happy one. Many who were drafted deserted after proving
incapable of living with military discipline.
During the first weeks of the war,
there reportedly was an order issued by the State Defense Council freeing these
nationalities from the draft, although no copy of this order has surfaced in
the archives now open. But it is
possible that it exists and was never disseminated in public form. Far from all
orders at that time were ever published, Butakov says.
Some members of these groups did
volunteer and even served in “ethnic” units. But the conclusion seems
inescapable that “a general obligatory draft into the standing army among the
numerically small peoples of het North, Siberia and the Far East … did not take
place,” although there were some exceptions as a result of decisions by local
officials.
Members of these nationalities were included
in rear units; but even these were carefully screened. Those who wanted to volunteer for the
frontlines had to show that they spoke Russian, had at least primary education,
and were in good health, qualities seldom found altogether in any one of the
representatives of these people at that time.
That Soviet
leaders had what American political scientist Cynthia Enloe has called “an ethnic
security map” has long been assumed, but Butakov’s investigation provides fresh
evidence that it really existed and that Moscow viewed as disloyal or
unprepared for national service a large fraction of the non-Russian population
of the Soviet Union.
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