With the "Die-Hards" in Siberia
The Project Gutenberg eBook, With the Die-Hards in Siberia, by John Ward
E-text prepared by Jonathan Ingram, Steven desJardins, and Project Gutenberg Distributed Proofreaders
C.B., C.M.G., M.P.
With Eight Plates
1920
OFFICERS, N.C.O.s AND MEN OF THE 18th, 19th, 25th AND 26th BATTALIONS OF THE MIDDLESEX REGIMENT
who, on sea and land, in sunshine and snow, so worthily upheld the traditional gallantry and honour of their people and country
Originally written for the private use of my sons in case I did not return, this narrative of events connected with the expedition to Siberia must of necessity lack many of the necessary elements which go to make a history. I wrote of things as they occurred, and recorded the reasons and motives which prompted the participants. Many things have happened since which seem to show that we were not always right in our estimate of the forces at work around us. Things are not always what they seem, and this is probably more evident in the domain of Russian affairs than in any other. It would have been comparatively easy to alter the text and square it with the results, but that would have destroyed the main value of the story.
The statesman and the soldier rarely write history; it is their misfortune to make it. It is quite easy to be a prophet when you know the result. You can, as a rule, judge what a certain set of people will do in a certain set of circumstances, but where you deal with State policy which may be influenced by events and circumstances which have not the remotest connection with the question involved, it is impossible to give any forecast of their conduct on even the most elementary subject.
The recent tragic events played out in the vast domain of Siberia are a case in point. It is certain that Admiral Koltchak would never have gone to Siberia, nor have become the head of the constitutional movement and government of Russia, if he had not been advised and even urged to do so by the Allies. He received the most categorical promises of whole-hearted support and early Allied recognition before he agreed to take up the dangerous duty of head of the Omsk Government. Had these urgings and promises been ungrudgingly performed a Constituent Assembly would be now sitting at Moscow hammering out the details of a Federal Constitution for a mighty Russian Republic or a parliamentary system similar to our own.
John Ward
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With the "Die-Hards" in Siberia
TO MY COMRADES
FORWARD
CONTENTS
LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS
WITH THE "DIE-HARDS" IN SIBERIA
CHAPTER I
FROM HONG-KONG TO SIBERIA
CHAPTER II
BOLSHEVIK SUCCESSES
CHAPTER III
JAPAN INTERVENES
CHAPTER IV
THE BATTLE OF DUKOVESKOIE AND KRAEVESK
CHAPTER V
JAPANESE METHODS AND ALLIED FAR-EASTERN POLICY
CHAPTER VI
ADMINISTRATION
CHAPTER VII
FURTHER INCIDENTS OF OUR JOURNEY
CHAPTER VIII
BEYOND THE BAIKAL
CHAPTER IX
OMSK
CHAPTER X
ALONG THE URALS
CHAPTER XI
WHAT HAPPENED AT OMSK
CHAPTER XII
THE CAPTURE OF PERM: THE CZECHS RETIRE FROM THE FIGHTING
CHAPTER XIII
THE DECEMBER ROYALIST AND BOLSHEVIST CONSPIRACY
CHAPTER XIV
A BOMBSHELL FROM PARIS AND THE EFFECT
CHAPTER XV
MORE INTRIGUES
CHAPTER XVI
RUSSIAN LABOUR
CHAPTER XVII
MY CAMPAIGN
CHAPTER XVIII
OMSK RE-VISITED
CHAPTER XIX
IN EUROPEAN RUSSIA
CHAPTER XX
MAKING AN ATAMAN
CHAPTER XXI
HOMEWARD BOUND
CHAPTER XXII
AMERICAN POLICY AND ITS RESULTS
CHAPTER XXIII
JAPANESE POLICY AND ITS RESULTS
CHAPTER XXIV
GENERAL CONCLUSIONS
Index