The History of Romania
From 1939 to 1989
Germany was rising and, together with Italy it supported the revisionist states
neighbouring Romania; the force policy was successful on the continent and this was
marked by the Anschluss, the Munich Pact (1938), the break-up of Czechoslovakia
(1939); there was rapprochement between the Soviet Union and the Third Reich; all this
led to Romania's international isolation. The von Ribbentrop-Molotov Pact (August 23,
1939) stipulated in a secret protocol the Soviet 'interest' in the Baltic states, eastern
Poland and the Soviet similar 'interest' in Bessarabia.
When World War II broke out, Romania declared neutrality (September 6, 1939) but she
supported Poland (by facilitating the transit of the National Bank treasure and granting
asylum to the Polish president and government). The defeats suffered by France and
Great Britain in 1940 created a dramatic situation for Romania. The Soviet government
applied Plank 3 of the secret protocol of August 23, 1939 and forced Romania by the
ultimatum notes of June 26 and 28, 1940 to cede not only Bessarabia, but also Northern
Bukovina and the Hertza land (the latter two had never belonged to Russia). Under the
Vienna 'Award' - actually a dictate - (August 30, 1940) Germany and Italy gave to
Hungary the north-eastern part of Transylvania, where the majority population was
Romanian. Following the Romanian-Bulgarian talks in Craiova, a treaty was signed on
September 7, 1940, under which the south of Dobrudja (the Quadrilateral) went to
Bulgaria.
Romania's map with the territorial losses of the '40s
The serious crisis in the summer of 1940 led to the abdication of King Carol II in favour
of his son Michael I (September 6, 1940); equally, it led to General Ion Antonescu's take-
over of the government (he became a Marshal in October 1941). In an effort to win
support from Germany and Italy, Ion Antonescu joined forces in government with the
Iron Guard Movement. The Movement attempted by way of the rebellion of January 21-
23, 1941 to take over the entire government and, as a result, it was eliminated from
politics.
Wishing to get back the territories lost in 1940, Ion Antonescu participated, side by side
with Germany, in the war against the Soviet Union (1941-1944). The defeats suffered by
the Axis powers led after 1942 to enhanced attempts made by Antonescu's regime, as
well as by the democratic opposition (Iuliu Maniu, C.I.C. Bratianu) to take Romania out
of the alliance with Germany. On August 23, 1944, Marshal Ion Antonescu was arrested
under the order of King Michael I. The new government, made up of military men and
technocrats, declared war on Germany (August 24, 1944) and so, Romania brought her
whole economic and military potential into the alliance of the United Nations, until the
end of World War II in Europe. Despite the human and economic efforts Romania had
made for the cause of the United Nations for nine months, the Peace Treaty of Paris
(February 10, 1947) denied Romania the co-belligerent status and forced her to pay huge
war reparation (payments); but the Treaty recognised the come-back of north-eastern
Transylvania to Romania while Bessarabia and Northern Bukovina stayed annexed to the
USSR.
The Monument of Moisei,
dedicated to the victims of the Horthy Hungarian terror in occupied Transylvania
On the territory of Romania Soviet troops were stationed and the country was abandoned
by the Western powers, so the next stage brought a similar evolution to that of the other
satellites of the Soviet Empire. The whole government was forcibly taken over by the
communists, the political parties were banned and their members were persecuted and
arrested; King Michael I was forced to abdicate and the same day the people's republic
was proclaimed (December 30, 1947). The single-party dictatorship was established,
based on an omnipotent and omnipresent surveillance and repression force. The industrial
enterprises, the banks and the transportation means were nationalised (1948), agriculture
was forcibly collectivised (1949-1962), the whole economy was developed according to
five-year plans, the main goal being a Stalinisttype industrialisation. Romania became a
founding member of COMECON (1949) and of the Warsaw Treaty (1955).
At the death of Gheorghe Gheorghiu-Dej (1965), the communist leader of the after-war
epoch, the party leadership, which was later identified with that of the state as well, was
monopolised by Nicolae Ceausescu. In a short period of time he managed to concentrate
into his own hands (and those of a clan headed by his wife, Elena Ceausescu) all the
power levers of the communist party and of the state system. Romania distanced herself
from the USSR (this publicy inaugurated in the 'Statement' of April 1964); the domestic
policy was less rigid and there was some opening in the foreign policy (Romania was the
only Warsaw Treaty member-state that did not intervene in Czechoslovakia in 1968); all
this, as well as the political capital built on such a less Orthodox line were used to
consolidate Ceausescu own position, to take over the whole power within the party and
the state. The dictatorship of the Ceausescu family, one of the most absurd forms of
totalitarian government in the 20th century Europe, with a personality cult that actually
bordered on mental illness, had as a result, among other things, distortions in the
economy, the degradation of the social and moral life, the country's isolation from the
international community. The country's resources were abusively used to build absurdly
giant projects devised by the dictator's megalomania; this also contributed to a dramatic
decline of the population's living standard and the deepening of the regime's crisis. Under
these circumstances, the spark of the revolt that was stirred in Timisoara on December
16, 1989 rapidly spread all over the country and in December 22 the dictatorship was
overthrown owing to the sacrifice of over one thousand lives.
Nicolae Ceausescu The Romanian Revolution of December 22, 1989
The victory of the revolution opened the way for a re-establishment of democracy, of the
pluralist political system, for the return to a market economy and the re-integration of the
country in the European economic, political and cultural space.
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