Government of South Russia s and members of the
Government of South Russia, July 1920 In March 1920, following the disastrous defeat of the Volunteer Army and its chaotic evacuation from
Novorossiysk, Denikin resigned. On 4 April, a military council elected Wrangel as the new Commander-in-Chief of the
Armed Forces of Southern Russia. He took command of a demoralized and shattered force, now confined to the Crimean peninsula, at a time when many, including the British, considered the White cause lost. Admiral
John de Robeck, the British High Commissioner, informed him that British aid would cease. Wrangel's response was resolute: "If I am chosen, it is my duty to accept the command." Wrangel reorganized the remnants into a disciplined fighting force, which he renamed the "
Russian Army" to distance it from the now-unpopular Volunteer Army and emphasize its national character. He established a new civilian government, the
Government of South Russia, bringing in experienced administrators like
Alexander Krivoshein, a former minister under Stolypin, and the liberal intellectual
Peter Struve. His government embarked on an ambitious program of reforms, described by his foreign minister Struve as an attempt "to make leftist policy with rightist hands". This program included a sweeping land reform, which recognized the peasants' ownership of land they had seized in 1917 while providing for compensation to the original landowners. It was the most radical land reform ever proposed by a White leader. He also implemented policies to address workers' grievances, combat corruption, and grant autonomy to the Cossacks. Unlike his predecessors, he did not believe that the people would support the Whites out of a sense of duty, but rather that the Whites had to create conditions that would generate such support. Despite these measures, the land reform was too complex and was implemented too late to win over the peasantry, who remained deeply distrustful of the White government and expected the land for free from the Bolsheviks.
Defeat and evacuation In June 1920, Wrangel launched his last major offensive, the
Northern Taurida Operation. His forces broke out of the Crimean bottleneck and captured a large territory to the north. This success was aided by the diversion of Red Army forces to the
Polish–Soviet War. However, after Poland signed an armistice with the Soviets in October, the Red Army concentrated overwhelming forces against Wrangel. An amphibious landing in the
Kuban in August to raise a Cossack uprising failed disastrously. In late October, the vastly outnumbered Russian Army was forced back into Crimea after a fierce fighting retreat across the Taurida. from Crimea, 1920 Facing certain defeat, Wrangel organized
a mass evacuation, for which he had been preparing since August. In a final proclamation before leaving, he stated, "The Army, which has shed its blood in great torrents in fighting, not only for the Russian cause, but for the whole world, is now leaving its native shores, abandoned by everybody...We have the right to claim help from those who owe their continued freedom and even their continued existence to us; we have sacrificed much for their cause." On 14 November 1920, 126 ships evacuated 145,693 soldiers and civilians from the ports of Crimea, without a single casualty. The evacuation was far more successful than Denikin's from Novorossiysk. This fleet, later known as
Wrangel's fleet, sailed to
Constantinople, marking the end of the White struggle in Southern Russia. ==Life in exile==