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SOVIET- ARMENIAN WAR & COLLAPSE OF THE 1ST
REPUBLIC:
NOV.-DEC., 1920

The
Armenian-turkish
war of September-December/1920, ended with total collapse of the
First Republic. Facing Armenian armies defeated and half of
Armenian territory occupied, the government in Yerevan was left
with no other choice but begging the enemy for peace no matter
how harsh and humiliating its conditions could be. After short
talks with the turkish command, the cease-fire agreement between
turkey and Armenia was concluded on November 18 1920.
Several
days later, following the orders from Moscow and baku, Armenian
communist groups started armed uprising in the towns of Dilijan
and Caravan-Seray in
northern Armenia. Following the orchestrated request for help
sent by the rebels to the Soviet government on November 28, 1920
and blaming Armenia for the invasion of Sharur (20.11.1920) and
Artsakh "Karabakh" (21.11.1920) the 11th Red Army under the
command of Anatoliy Hekker, crossed the demarcation line between
Armenia and Soviet azerbaijan.
From
Armenian perspective, the troops of the First Republic had legal
right to invade Sharur due to the fact that the «Soviet
Socialist Republic of Naxcivan» proclaimed there on
July 29 1920 under Soviet-turkish protection, was officially not
a part of Soviet Russia or Soviet azerbaijan and could thus be
considered as a breakaway part of Armenian Republic.
The
situation in Artsakh "Karabakh" was even more complicated due to
the fact that local Armenian warlords continued guerilla warfare
against the Soviets even after the cease-fire agreement was
signed on August 10 1920, by Armenia and the Soviet Republics of
Russia and azerbaijan leaving Artsakh "Karabakh within Soviet
azerbaijan. Armenian partisans of Artsakh "Karabakh" were
getting random support from Armenia but that support was of
rather private than official nature.
The
second Soviet-Armenian war lasted only a week. Exhausted by the
6 years of permanent wars and conflicts, Armenian army and
population were incapable of any further active resistance. Some
desperate fight was taking place only in the areas where militia
and army units believed that they were facing the azerbaijani
coming to wipe out the rest of Armenian population but they
surrendered almost immediately after realizing that they were
fighting predominantly Russians. The government in Yerevan also
realized that abandoned by most of her Western allies, Armenia
had no chances for survival and had to choose between either
turkish or Soviet Russian domination. The final decision was
made on December 4 1920, in favour of Russia when the 11th red
Army was entering the capital.
This
was the end of the First Republic. Next morning, on November 30
1920, Armenian premier Simeon Vratsian and the Soviet envoy
Boris LeGrand transferred formal power to the
communist-dominated “Revolutionary Committee of Armenia”. Two
days later, the “Revolutionary Committee” declared Armenia an
“Independent Soviet Socialist Republic”.
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