The Warsaw Uprising reference article from the English Wikipedia on 24-Apr-2004
(provided by Fixed Reference: snapshots of Wikipedia from wikipedia.org)

Warsaw Uprising

For people who check facts
The Warsaw Uprising was the armed struggle started by the Home Army (Armia Krajowa) resistance against the the Nazi occupiers of Warsaw, capital of Poland during World War II. It started August 1 1944 as a part of a nationwide uprising, Operation Tempest and lasted until October 2.

As well as a direct operation against German occupiers it was intended as a political manifestation of the influences of Polish Government in Exile. The fear was that in the aftermath of the war the allies would omit the legal London-based government. The Soviet Union was not recognising the Government-in-Exile and it was clear that Poland would be liberated by the Red Army).

The uprising failed due to limited Soviet assistance. Soviet assistance to the Home Army was limited to collaboration only on a tactical level and then shooting or sending the Home Army soldiers to Siberia.

There were many different opinions as to what should have been the Polish response but it became clear that the nationwide uprising would be too costly and would end the same way as the Lwow Uprising and the Wilno Uprising ended. However, on July 29 1944 Soviet Radio Moscow called on the Poles in Warsaw to revolt. The underground civil and military authorities decided that it would be better to start the Uprising in Warsaw on a fixed date than to let separate groups start it on their own. There was also huge pressure to prove the Soviet propaganda stating that the Poles do not fight wrong. Moreover, for the last several days before the start of the Uprising, large German units were retreating westwards through Warsaw. This gave an impression that the city will be abandoned soon.

There were approximately 50,000 AK soldiers in Warsaw, of which 10% were properly armed, almost exclusively in hand arms. But the order to start the uprising reached only 23,000 of them in time, mostly due to organisational problems.

Eighteen thousand of them were killed, 8,000-25,000 were heavily wounded, about 15,000 went into captivity. About 180,000-250,000 Polish civilians died as well, mostly as result of mass executions - e.g after taking Wola (one of Warsaw districts) German soldiers executed approximately 40,000 civilian inhabitants.

Before the Warsaw Uprising it is believed that some 25,000 Jews were hiding in Warsaw. The vast majority of them died together with other Polish civilians. Many Jews (maybe as many as 1000), including those released by AK from Warsaw concentration camp (Gęsiówka), joined the Home Army.

Initial German garrison was about 20,000 ill-equipped soldiers, not enough to break through Polish lines, 'though there were at least 90,000 soldiers in the area at the start of hostilities. However, when the Uprising started, Heinrich Himmler ordered the city to be recaptured and burnt to the ground, probably for ideological reasons. By mid-September German troops were reinforced up to 50,000 men under SS general Erich von Bach-Zelewski. German losses were about 10,000-17,000 killed, 6,000 MIA and 9,000 wounded plus 300 armoured cars and tanks.

Until mid September Germans were shooting in place all caught insurgents. The main protagonists of the drama were Oskar Dirlewanger and Bronislaw Kaminski, who committed the most cruel atrocities. After von dem Bachs arrived to Warsaw (September 7), it became clear that atrocities only stiffened the resistance and that some political solution should be found due to the small forces at the disposal of the German commander. The basic idea was to gain a significant victory to show the Home Army the futility of further fighting and make them surrender. This did not succeed, but from the end of September on, some of the captured Polish soldiers were treated as PoWs.

After the uprising the Germans systematically razed most of Warsaw to the ground. Eighty five percent of buildings were destroyed: 25% as a result of the uprising, 35% as result of systematic German actions after the uprising, the rest as result of the earlier Warsaw Ghetto uprising and other combat including the September 1939 campaign.

Controversial is the role of Soviet Red Army, which stood on the other bank of the Vistula River, and had not allowed pilots from the RAF and Polish Airforces to use Soviet landing strips. After the initial radio and leaflet propaganda campaign, the Moscow-backed Wanda radio station remained silent until the very end of the fighting. It has been argued that the Soviets deliberately allowed the Germans defeat the AK in order to eliminate a force in Poland which would oppose the communist puppet government which the Soviets planned to install in Poland.

Warsaw Ghetto Uprising

Sometimes the name Warsaw Uprising is attributed to earlier struggle of Jews in 1943. If you are looking information about that event, see Warsaw Ghetto Uprising.