Ostensibly exploring the practice of law before the internet. Heck, before good highways for that matter.
Wednesday, March 20, 2019
March 20, 1919. Pershing has visitors, Villa let's his unwilling guests go, the 148th FA set to return home, Red Army seeking to be unwelcome guests.
King Albert and Queen Victoria of Belgium visited Gen. Pershing on this day in 1919.
In Mexico, Poncho Villa, who had taken a part of Mormon figures prisoner a few days prior, let them go. The released prisoners were residents of Colnia Dublan and still had a ways to go to get home, as he didn't return them to their town.
And news arrived that the 148th Field Artillery was soon to sail home.
The same news was printed in Cheyenne, along with a photo that appeared here sometime ago of a teenage plowgirl.
Both papers printed distressing news that the Soviets appeared set to invade Germany. That news was not merely a rumor. As the fronts swung wildly in the Russian Civil War it seems that those who saw the Russian Revolution as a global revolution to occur immediately were indeed planning just that.
From the vantage point of a century later, that goal seems insane, and there were those with in the Soviet power circles who disagreed with it then, such as one Josef Stalin. Those who backed it, such as Trotsky, were not without their own logic however.
The Reds were in fact gaining in the far north and were about to push the Allied mission in Northern Russia out of the country. At the same time, however, the White offensive in the east was meeting with huge success and observed from there, there were reasons to hope that the Whites would prevail. In the west, however, the Soviets were now fighting the Poles, who were doing well, but who also formed a wall between Red Russia and a Germany which seemed to be on the brink of falling into the hands of German Communists any day.
The really amazing thing, in retrospect, is that the Allies were rushing home their forces in Europe in the face of all of this. A Red victory in Germany, which was a possibility at the time, would have resulted in the spread of Communism throughout Europe fairly rapidly, with other countries teetering on the brink of Communist revolution. Even seemingly stable countries, such as the UK, were having some problems at this point.
Of course, long term, the Reds would prevail in Russia but not in Poland, although they nearly did. Their failure to win there meant that they were not able to proceed into Germany. It also meant that Stalin's star rose while Trotsky's fell.
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