Abstract

This article examines Allied intervention in the Russian Civil War from the perspective of the Whites. Allied actions and inaction, as well as the question of supply to the White armies, appeared significantly different to the Whites than they did to the intervening powers. Information from the archives of White institutions and leaders makes it possible to shed new light on certain aspects of intervention and present others in a different shade than that presented by Western contemporaries and historians relying on memoirs of foreign participants and the records of Western governments and officials.

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