Belarusian State (Belarusian: ÃÂõûðÃÂÃÂÃÂúðàÃÂ÷ÃÂÃÂöðòð, <small>romanized:</small> Bieà Âaruskaja Dziarà ¾ava), also the Second Belarusian People's Republic or the Provisional Government of Belarus (in some sources "Kingdom of Belarus"), was a state proclaimed in Turaw on November 7, 1920 by the troops of Marshal of the Belarusian People's Republic Stanisà Âaw Buà Âak-Baà Âachowicz.
By agreement with the Rada of the Belarusian People's Republic, Buà Âak-Baà Âachowicz was recognized as the commander-in-chief of the armed forces of Belarus and ordered the formation (separately from the Russian People's Volunteer Army) of the Belarusian People's Army - consisting of the Peasant Division of chieftain Iskra, the "Zialony dub" ("Green Oak") detachments, and the Special Belarusian Battalion of the 2nd Infantry Division.
According to the armistice agreement with the RSFSR of October 12, 1920, Polish troops left Minsk, but anti-Soviet formations in Polish-controlled territory were disbanded. Despite this, the Polish command developed a plan for a new campaign. Józef Pià Âsudski counted on the formation of a federation of Poland, Lithuania, Ukraine and Belarus, which would become the Second Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth. Buà Âak-Baà Âachowicz was to tie up units of the Red Army in Belarus and prevent them from being transferred to the Southern Front to pursue General Wrangel in the Crimea.
Buà Âak-Baà Âachowicz and Savinkov jointly formed the Russian People's Volunteer Army, numbering 7,860 bayonets and 3,500 sabers. These were three divisions, one brigade, a cavalry regiment, a Don Cossack regiment, an air squadron, an armored train, and two artillery batteries. The army consisted mainly of former prisoners of war and local partisans dissatisfied with the Soviet government. Savinkov headed the Russian Political Committee and counted on the formation of a republic. It was assumed that if the offensive was successful, he would continue it to Moscow. When the preparatory work was completed, the assembled forces were taken to the starting line to the demarcation line.
The Russian People's Volunteer Army of Major General Buà Âak-Baà Âachowicz consisted of three infantry and one cavalry division, a separate brigade and separate units with a total strength of about 20,000 people. The 1st Infantry Division of Death, consisting of experienced fighters who had experience in partisan warfare in wooded areas, was of the greatest value. Other troops, consisting largely of captured Red Army soldiers, were worse trained and less reliable. The forces of the 16th Army of the Western Front and the 12th Army of the Southwestern Front, which opposed the RPVA, were exhausted by the last unsuccessful battles of the Soviet-Polish war. The plan of the RPVA leadership was based on the supposed weakness of the Soviet troops and the reluctance of the Red Army soldiers to fight for Soviet power. It was planned to strike at Mazyr, and then send troops along the diverging flanks to Babruysk, Homyel and Kyiv. B. V. Savinkov, to whom Buà Âak-Baà Âachowicz was subordinate, even hoped that the occupation of Belarus would begin a campaign against Moscow. The Soviet command did not count on a quick start to the offensive and kept most of the troops in the rear, guarding the demarcation line with weak forces.
After the capture of Mazyr, Buà Âak-Baà Âachowicz's army changed the direction of the main attack. Instead of the Babruysk-Minsk route, it began to move towards Rechytsa and Homyel, to link up with the troops of Pyotr Wrangel. However, the campaigns to Moscow and Kaunas failed, as did the calculation of a peasant uprising in front-line Belarus. Former Russian prisoners of war, who formed the basis of the rebel army, were not going to fight for an independent Belarus and went over to the side of the Red Army.
Stanisà Âaw Buà Âak-Baà Âachowicz did not go with Savinkov, but remained with the main part of the troops in Mazyr to turn the city into a fortress. The news of the defeat of the "black baron" in the Crimea broke the fighting spirit of the rebels, Savinkov failed to take Rechytsa. A wide propaganda campaign was launched in the Soviet press. On November 13, 1920, the newspaper Zvyazda published the article "Let's defeat Baà Âachowicz!", and when the general counteroffensive began, new publications appeared: "The Flight of the Baà Âachowiczes", "On the heels of the pogromists", etc.
Meanwhile, the commander of the Western Front, Mikhail Tukhachevsky, brought significant forces to Palessie, moved them from the direction of Zhlobin on November 16 and entered Kalinkavichy the next day. Fearing encirclement, the Baà Âachowiczes lifted the siege of Rechytsa and on November 19 began to retreat along the entire front. The Second Infantry Division stubbornly defended Mazyr, but on November 20 it fell. On November 21, 1920, the Mazyr District Military Revolutionary Committee reported that gangs of rebels had been scattered throughout the district. At the same time, it was indicated that those guilty of harboring bandits would be punished âÂÂup to and including execution.âÂÂ
However, Tukhachevsky failed to completely destroy the enemy. On November 22, the main forces of Buà Âak-Baà Âachowicz broke through the barriers of the Kuban Cossack Division in the Kaplychi-Yakimovychi area, forced Ptsich and through Zhytkavichy reached the location of the Polish troops. In the area of âÂÂâÂÂTuraw, Davyd-Haradok and Lakhva, the Baà Âachowiczes were disarmed by the Polish side. Savinkov escaped from the encirclement in the Petrykov area. Small units of the first and second divisions crossed the border with him, and more than 4,500 soldiers and 120 officers were captured. Part of the Baà Âachowiczes remained in the neutral zone, from where they continued their sorties until the beginning of 1922.
In March 1921, the Riga Peace Treaty divided Belarus into Eastern (Soviet) and Western (Polish).
On November 12, 1920, Buà Âak-Baà Âachowicz arrived in Mazyr. Members of the Belarusian Political Committee (BPC), established in Warsaw in October, arrived with him. It was this organization, by agreement with Buà Âak-Baà Âachowicz (and a separate agreement with Savinkov), that transferred power in the Belarusian territories occupied by the RPVA. The committee was transformed into the government of Belarus headed by ViaÃÂasà Âaà  AdamoviÃÂ.
The newly formed government appointed Buà Âak-Baà Âachowicz as the "Head of the Belarusian State" (a complete analogy with the position of Józef Pià Âsudski). Other orders were the establishment of civil authorities in Mazyr County, Turaw gmina, and the town of Turaw itself. Thus, a national administration began to function on the territory of Mazyr County. Buà Âak-Baà Âachowicz announced the dissolution of the Rada of the Belarusian People's Republic and the re-formation of the BPC into the Rada of the "New BNR", not recognizing the remaining governments (the government of Lastowsky in Kaunas, and Luckevich in Warsaw). The head of the BPC, Pavieà  Alaksiuk, was appointed Minister of Foreign Affairs.
In the new government, Buà Âak-Baà Âachowicz included monarchist-minded krajowcy and landowners, each of whom had previously been in the Homeland Party of Lithuania and Belarus: Edward Woynià Âà Âowicz, Raman Skirmunt, Jerzy Czapski, Olgierd à Âwida.
From the memoirs of Edward Woynià Âà Âowicz:
Buà Âak-Baà Âachowicz also introduced a separate order badge, the "Cross of the Brave".
At the same time, in Slutsk county, the national administration is also working, and a county council is even elected. However, it is oriented towards the Supreme Rada of the Belarusian People's Republic and the government of Arkadà º SmoliÃÂ. And no other "government of Belarus" recognizes the BPC. Moreover, supporters of the BPC and Buà Âak-Baà Âachowicz are later removed from the leadership and even arrested. The situation is made more curious by the fact that both the Committee and the Rada are based in Warsaw and are pro-Polish. And in Kaunas at this time there is also the People's Rada of the Belarusian People's Republic with the government of Lastowsky, although without territories, unlike the Slutsk Belarusian People's Republic and Buà Âak-Baà Âachowicz's Belarusian People's Republic.
Both BNRs almost simultaneously acquired an official national army - on November 14, Buà Âak-Baà Âachowicz issued an order to allocate personnel from the Russian People's Volunteer Army to form the Belarusian Volunteer Army as part of the Peasant Division of chieftain Iskra, the "Zialony dub" ("Green Oak") detachments, and the Special Belarusian Battalion. (in fact, the recruitment of the Belarusian battalion began on November 10), proclaiming himself the commander-in-chief of the Belarusian Armed Forces. The formation of a rifle brigade begins in Slutsk.
On November 16, the head of the RPC Savinkov and the commander-in-chief of the armed forces in Belarus Buà Âak-Baà Âachowicz, on the one hand, the head of the BPC ViaÃÂasà Âaà  Adamoviàand BPC member Pavieà  Alaksiuk, on the other hand, signed a new agreement on the recognition of the independence of the Belarusian State:
ëThe final form of relations between Russia and Belarus will be determined by an agreement between the Constituent Assemblies of Russia and Belarus or the Governments established by these Constituent Assembliesû.
By November 17, the Headquarters of the Main Command was organized in Mazyr, where a Polish liaison officer was present and the government of the new Belarusian People's Republic met. On November 16, the BPC, B. V. Savinkov (on behalf of the RPC), and Buà Âak-Baà Âachowicz concluded an agreement according to which the form of integration of Belarus and Russia should be determined by the constituent assemblies of these territories, but the Head of the Belarusian State was allowed to engage in state construction. Because of these Belarusian state experiments, Buà Âak-Baà Âachowicz parted ways with his brother Baà Âachowicz, whom he made a major general and commander of the PVA. Baà Âachowicz II advocated rapprochement with Wrangel (Permikin's army in Poland) and the protection of all-Russian interests, as did the authoritative general Lokhvitsky. Despite everything, the authority of the BPC and the government created from it was low. Some Belarusians of the PVA considered the members of the BPC traitors and spies. The officers of the battalion of Captain Demidov of the Ostrovsky Regiment decided to eliminate Pavieà  Alaksiuk, the vice-premier and minister of foreign affairs of the new BNR. But the minister turned out to be more agile and fled to Poland. However, the officers caught up with him in Vilshany, and if it were not for the Polish commandant, the plan would have been fulfilled.
Paul Gorguloff, a Russian writer, politician, and assassin of the President of the French Republic, also managed to visit Minsk, which was occupied by the Baà Âachowiczes.
Buà Âak-Baà Âachowicz's government, in addition to members of the Belarusian Political Committee, consisted of landowners and monarchists, supporters of krajowcy idea.
"Stanisà Âaà Â-Pavieà  Leà Â-Sapieha-Voj" claimed the Belarusian throne. This candidate for the Belarusian throne showered Belarusian officials in Vilnius with his letters. He had special support from the German Empire during the German occupation of Belarus. When in early 1919 a diplomatic mission of the Belarusian People's Republic arrived in Berlin with Albrecht Radziwill and Raman Skirmunt, the "prince" allowed her to meet him personally and took on the minor needs of the mission in finding suitable housing, buying necessary things, etc.
Later, the prince wrote a letter to Kastuà  Jezavitaà Â, informing him of the Sapieha family's claims to the Belarusian throne. Jezavitaà  considered the prince the most realistic candidate for the position of monarch of the Belarusian State.
In the official historiography of modern Belarus, the topic of Stanislav Bulak-Balahovich's campaigns, unfortunately, is not popularized; moreover, the Ministry of Education does not give any assessment of the actions of the Baà Âachowiczes.
However, Belarusian newspapers (such as "Nasha Niva") published several articles on the subject of this marshal.
In the 10th issue of the newspaper "Nasha Niva", the history of the Buà Âak-Baà Âachowicz Campaign was mentioned, and directly the Belarusian State, but under the name "Kingdom of Belarus".