Lwów — Langner between 2 occupiers
, 42, has been Army Inspector at Lwów since 1937. Lwów (in Ukrainian Lviv) is the principal city of Eastern Galicia — 320,000 inhabitants, of whom 50 percent are Poles, 33 percent Jews, 16 percent Ukrainians. A cultural and university capital (Jan Kazimierz University, the Polytechnic). An industrial centre for the east (the Drohobycz oil refineries are close by).
By 7 September, the German advance from Slovakia reaches the outskirts. Langner organises the defence: 32,000 men (remnants of the , the regular garrison, civilian volunteers), 150 guns, 11 light tanks, 2 armoured trains (Bartosz Głowacki, Pierwszy Marszałek). From 12 to 18 September, the German (General ) attacks from the west and the south. The Polish defenders hold.
On 17 September, the Soviet invasion changes everything. On 19 September, the Soviet (General ) reaches the eastern outskirts of Lwów. For the first time in history, 2 belligerent armies are besieging the same city at once. On 20 September a chance armed clash between German and Soviet patrols (Winniki) leaves 3 Soviets and 2 Germans dead.
On 21 September 2 envoys present themselves to Langner: the German Colonel von Schobert and the Soviet kombrig Yakovlev. The Reich offers an honourable evacuation toward Hungary through German lines. The Soviets demand surrender to them, threatening to attack if Langner gives way to the Germans.
Lwów, September 1939, caught between Germans and Soviets, you command the defence: to whom to surrender the city?
Langner surrenders to the Soviets to save the inhabitants (300,000 civilians), trusting the promise of soldierly treatment. On 22 September at 10:00 he signs the surrender to the Soviets. The terms promised by Yakovlev: officers free, soldiers released on parole, humane treatment. None of these promises is kept. All the officers are arrested. About 10,000 of them would end up in the mass graves of Katyn, Starobielsk and Kharkov in the spring of 1940 — including almost the entirety of Langner's staff. Langner himself is imprisoned but escapes in November 1939, crosses into Hungary, joins Sikorski in France. He commands the Polish division in Scotland, then serves in British air defence. After the war, exile in the United Kingdom. He dies at Newark in 1972. Lwów passes to the USSR, becomes Lviv in 1991 (independent Ukraine). Langner's decision remains one of the most controversial of September 1939 — founded on a misplaced trust in international law against a power that did not respect it.
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