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:''"Antonescu" redirects here. For other persons with that surname, see [[Antonescu (surname)]].''
{{redirect3|Antonescu|For other persons named Antonescu, see [[Antonescu (surname)]]}}
{{Infobox_Prime Minister
{{Infobox_Prime Minister
| name =Ion Victor Antonescu
| name =Ion Victor Antonescu
| nationality =[[Romania]]n
| nationality =[[Romania]]n
| smallimage =
| smallimage =
| image = Ion Antonescu.jpg
| image =Ion Antonescu.jpg
| imagesize = 180px
| imagesize =180px
| caption = Ion Antonescu, minutes before his execution
| caption =Ion Antonescu, minutes before his execution
| order = [[Prime Minister of Romania]]
| order =[[Prime Minister of Romania]]
| term_start = [[September 4]], [[1940]]
| term_start =September 5, 1940
| term_end = [[August 23]], [[1944]]
| term_end =August 23, 1944
| vicepresident =
| vicepresident =
| deputy =
| deputy =
| predecessor =[[Ion Gigurtu]]
| predecessor =[[Ion Gigurtu]]
| successor =[[Constantin Sănătescu]]
| successor =[[Constantin Sănătescu]]
| order2 =[[Conducător]] of Romania
| order2 =''[[Conducător]]'' of Romania
| term_start2 =[[September 6]], [[1940]]
| term_start2 =September 6, 1940
| term_end2 =[[August 23]], [[1944]]
| term_end2 =August 23, 1944
| predecessor2 =[[Carol II]] (''as [[king of Romania]]'')
| predecessor2 =[[Carol II of Romania|Carol II]] (''as [[King of Romania]]'')
| successor2 =''None''
| successor2 =none
| birth_date =[[June 15]], [[1882]]
| birth_date =June 15, 1882
| birth_place =[[Piteşti]], [[Romania]]
| birth_place =[[Piteşti]]
| death_date ={{death date and age|1946|6|1|1882|6|15}} |
| death_date ={{death date and age|1946|6|1|1882|6|15}} |
| death_place =[[Jilava]], [[Romania]]
| death_place =[[Jilava]]
| constituency =
| constituency =
| party =''None'', formally allied with the [[Iron Guard]].
| party =none*
| spouse =[[Maria Antonescu]]
| spouse =[[Maria Antonescu]]
| profession =Soldier
| profession =soldier
| rank =[[Field Marshal]]
| rank =[[Marshal of Romania]]
| religion =[[Romanian Orthodox Church|Romanian Orthodox]]
| religion =[[Romanian Orthodox Church|Romanian Orthodox]]
| signature =
| signature =
| footnotes =
| footnotes =*formally allied with the [[Iron Guard]] (1940-1941)
|}}
|}}
'''Ion Victor Antonescu''' ([[June 15]] [[1882]], [[Piteşti]] – [[June 1]] [[1946]], executed at [[Jilava|Jilava prison]]), was the prime minister and ''[[conducător]]'' (Leader) of [[Romania]] during [[World War II]] from [[September 4]], [[1940]] to [[August 23]], [[1944]].


'''Ion Victor Antonescu''' (June 15, 1882–June 1, 1946) was a [[Romania]]n soldier, [[Authoritarianism|authoritarian]] politician and convicted [[War crime|war criminal]]. The [[Prime Minister of Romania|Prime Minister]] and ''[[Conducător]]'' during most of [[World War II]], he presided over two successive [[Romania during World War II|wartime dictatorships]]. A [[Romanian Army]] career officer who made his name during the [[1907 Romanian Peasants' Revolt|1907 peasants' revolt]] and the [[World War I]] [[Romania during World War I|Romanian Campaign]], the [[Antisemitism|antisemitic]] Antonescu sympathized with the [[far right]] and [[Fascism|fascist]] [[National Christian Party|National Christian]] and [[Iron Guard]] groups for much of the [[interwar period]]. A [[military attaché]] to [[France]] and later [[Chief of the Romanian General Staff|Chief of the General Staff]], he briefly served as [[Ministry of National Defense (Romania)|Defense Minister]] in the National Christian cabinet of [[Octavian Goga]]. During the late 1930s, his political stance brought him into conflict with [[King of Romania|King]] [[Carol II of Romania|Carol II]] and led to his detainment. Antonescu nevertheless rose to political prominence during the political crisis of 1940, and established the [[National Legionary State]], an uneasy partnership with the Iron Guard's leader [[Horia Sima]]. After entering Romania into an alliance with [[Nazi Germany]] and the [[Axis Powers|Axis]] and ensuring [[Adolf Hitler]]'s confidence, he eliminated the Guard during the [[Legionnaires' rebellion and Bucharest pogrom|Legionary Rebellion]] of 1941. In addition to leadership of the executive, he assumed the offices of [[Ministry of Foreign Affairs (Romania)|Foreign Affairs]] and Defense Minister. Soon after Romania joined the Axis in [[Operation Barbarossa]], recovering [[Bessarabia]] and [[Northern Bukovina]], Antonescu also became [[Marshal of Romania]].
== Early life and military career ==
Antonescu was born into an upper-middle class family with some military tradition. His father, an army officer, wanted Ion to follow his footsteps, and as such, he sent him to attend the Infantry and Cavalry School in [[Craiova]]. After graduation, in 1904, he joined the Romanian Army with the rank of second lieutenant. He spent the following two years attending courses at the ''Ṣcoala Superioară de Cavaleri'' in [[Târgovişte]].<ref name="del37">Deletant, p. 37</ref>


An atypical figure among [[Holocaust]] perpetrators, Antonescu enforced policies independently responsible for the deaths of as many as 400,000 people, most of them [[Bessarabian Jews|Bessarabian]], [[History of the Jews in Ukraine|Ukrainian]] and [[History of the Jews in Romania|Romanian Jews]], as well as [[Roma minority in Romania|Romani Romanians]]. The regime's [[Holocaust in Romania|complicity in the Holocaust]] combined [[pogrom]]s and [[mass murder]]s such as the [[1941 Odessa massacre|Odessa massacre]] with [[ethnic cleansing]], systematic deportations to occupied [[Transnistria (World War II)|Transnistria]] and widespread [[criminal negligence]]. The system in place was nevertheless characterized by singular inconsistencies, prioritizing plunder over killing, showing leniency toward most Jews in the [[Romanian Old Kingdom|Old Kingdom]], and ultimately refusing to endorse the [[Final Solution]] as applied throughout [[Nazi-occupied Europe]].
During the repression of the [[1907 Romanian Peasants' Revolt|1907 peasants' revolt]], he was the head of a cavalry unit in [[Covurlui]], his tact in handling the situation earning him the praise of King [[Carol I of Romania|Carol I]], who sent Crown Prince Ferdinand to congratulate him in front of the whole garrison. The following year, he was promoted to lieutenant.<ref name="del37"/> Between 1911 and 1913, he attended the ''Ṣcoala Superioară de Război'', after its graduation earning the rank of captain.<ref name="del37"/>


Confronted with heavy losses on the [[Eastern Front (World War II)|Eastern Front]], Antonescu embarked on inconclusive negotiations with the [[Allies of World War II|Allies]], just before a political coalition, formed around the young monarch [[Michael I of Romania|Michael I]], toppled him during the [[King Michael's Coup|August 23, 1944 Coup]]. After a brief detention in the [[Soviet Union]], the deposed ''Conducător'' was handed back to Romania, where he was tried by a special [[Romanian People's Tribunals|People's Tribunal]] and executed. This was part of a series of trials, which also passed sentences on his various associates, as well as his wife [[Maria Antonescu|Maria]]. The judicial procedures earned much criticism for responding to the [[Romanian Communist Party]]'s ideological priorities, a matter which fueled [[Nationalism|nationalist]] and far right attempts to have Antonescu posthumously exonerated. While these groups elevated Antonescu to the status of hero, his involvement in the Holocaust was officially reasserted following the 2003 [[Wiesel Commission]] report.
In 1913, during the [[Second Balkan War]] against [[Bulgaria]], Antonescu served as a [[Staff (military)|staff officer]] in the First Cavalry Division.<ref name="del37"/> The Bulgarian army was already deployed against [[Serbia]] and [[Greece]], so Romania's entering the war led to Bulgaria suing for peace. Following the 1913 war (which brought the [[Southern Dobruja|Cadrilater]] into Romania), Antonescu received Romania's highest military decoration: The Order of Michael the Brave (Romanian: Ordinul Mihai Viteazul).{{Fact|date=October 2008}}


==Biography==
During Romania's involvement in [[World War I]] (1916-1918), Antonescu acted as [[chief of staff]] for General [[Constantin Prezan]].<ref name="del37"/> In August 1916, Romanian armies crossed the [[Carpathian Mountains]], attempting to take [[Transylvania]] (then a territory of the Austro-Hungarian Empire, but mainly inhabited by Romanians), but their offensive was later stopped by the [[Austria-Hungary|Austro-Hungarian]] armies, with [[German Empire|German]] help. The disaster at [[Battle of Turtucaia|Turtucaia]] ([[August 24]]) showed that the Romanian army was not ready for the war. With German and Bulgarian troops pushing through [[Dobruja]] and with demoralised Allied [[Russian Empire|Russian]] troops retreating and deserting ''en masse'' in the wake of [[Brusilov Offensive#Results|Brusilov Offensive]]{{Fact|date=July 2007}} (their orders were to defend the [[Danube]] line), the Romanian Army was forced to retreat from Transylvania and defend the Carpathian borders.
===Early life and career===
Born in [[Piteşti]] town, north-west of the capital [[Bucharest]], Antonescu was the scion of an [[upper-middle class]] [[Romanian Orthodox Church|Romanian Orthodox]] family with some military tradition.<ref name="del37">Deletant, p.37</ref> He was especially close to his mother, Liţa Baranga, who survived his death.<ref>Deletant, p.70, 257</ref> His father, an army officer, wanted Ion to follow in his footsteps, and as such, he sent him to attend the Infantry and Cavalry School in [[Craiova]].<ref name="del37"/> According to one account, Ion Antonescu was briefly colleagues with [[Wilhelm Filderman]], the future [[History of the Jews in Romania|Romanian Jewish community]] activist whose interventions with ''Conducător'' Antonescu helped save a number of his coreligionists.<ref>Penkower, p.152-153</ref> After graduation, in 1904, Antonescu joined the Romanian Army with the rank of Second Lieutenant. He spent the following two years attending courses at the Special Cavalry Section in [[Târgovişte]].<ref name="del37"/> Reportedly, he was a zealous and goal-setting student, upset by the slow pace of promotions, and compensating for his diminutive stature through toughness.<ref name="drasum1m">{{ro icon}} Delia Radu, [http://www.bbc.co.uk/romanian/news/story/2008/08/080801_serial_antonescu_episod1.shtml "Serialul 'Ion Antonescu şi asumarea istoriei' (1)"], [[BBC]] Romanian edition, August 1, 2008</ref> In time, the reputation of being a tough and ruthless commander, together with his reddish hair earned him the nickname ''Câinele Roşu'' ("The Red Dog").<ref name="drasum1m"/> Antonescu also developed a reputation for questioning his commanders, and for appealing to higher instances whenever he felt they were wrong.<ref name="drasum1m"/>


During the repression of the [[1907 Romanian Peasants' Revolt|1907 peasants' revolt]], he was the head of a cavalry unit in [[Covurlui County]].<ref name="del37"/><ref name="drasum1m"/> Opinions on his role in the events diverge: while some historians believe Antonescu was a particularly violent participant in the quelling,<ref name="fv301">Veiga, p.301</ref><ref name="drasum1m"/> others equate his participation with that of regular officers<ref name="drasum1m"/> or view it as outstandingly tactful.<ref name="del37"/> In addition to restricting peasant protests, Antonescu's unit subdued [[Socialism|socialist]] activities in [[Galaţi]] port.<ref name="fv301"/> His handling of the situation earned him praise from [[King of Romania|King]] [[Carol I of Romania|Carol I]], who sent Crown Prince (future monarch) [[Ferdinand I of Romania|Ferdinand]] to congratulate him in front of the whole garrison.<ref name="del37"/> The following year, Antonescu was promoted to Lieutenant, and, between 1911 and 1913, he attended the [[Academia de Înalte Studii Militare din Bucureşti|Advanced War School]], receiving the rank of Captain upon graduation.<ref name="del37"/> In 1913, during the [[Second Balkan War]] against [[Bulgaria]], Antonescu served as a [[Staff (military)|staff officer]] in the First Cavalry Division in [[Dobruja]].<ref name="del37"/>
Upon enemy troops crossing the mountains into the [[Wallachia|Old Kingdom]], Antonescu was ordered to design a defense plan for the Romanian capital of [[Bucharest]].<ref name="del37"/> The battle for the capital was lost, due to the capture by enemy troops of an officer carrying the battle plan. The Romanian royal court, army and administration were forced to retreat into [[Moldavia]].


===World War I===
In December, as Prezan became the Chief of the General Staff, Antonescu, who was by now a major, was named the head of operations, being involved in the defense of [[Moldavia]]. He contributed to the tactics used during the [[Battle of Mărăşeşti]] (July-August 1917).<ref name="del37"/>
After 1916, when the [[Kingdom of Romania]] entered [[World War I]] on the [[Allies of World War I|Entente side]], Ion Antonescu acted as [[chief of staff]] for General [[Constantin Prezan]].<ref name="del37"/> In August 1916, upon the start of the [[Romania during World War I|Romanian campaign]], Romanian troops crossed the [[Carpathian Mountains]], marching into the [[Austria-Hungary|Austro-Hungarian]]-ruled region of [[Transylvania]], but their effort was halted when the [[Central Powers]] opened new fronts. Bulgarian and [[German Empire|Imperial German]] armies decisively defeated their ill-equipped and poorly-defended Romanian adversaries in the [[Battle of Turtucaia]] (August 24), and advanced into Dobruja. When enemy troops crossed the mountains from Transylvania into [[Wallachia]], Antonescu was ordered to design a defense plan for Bucharest.<ref name="del37"/>


The Romanian royal court, army and administration were subsequently forced to retreat into [[Moldavia]], the last portion of territory still under Romanian control. Henceforth, he partook in any important decision involving defensive efforts, an unusual promotion which probably complimented his ambition.<ref name="drasum1m"/> In December, as Prezan became the [[Chief of the Romanian General Staff|Chief of the General Staff]], Antonescu, who was by now a major, was named the head of operations, being involved in the defense of Moldavia. He contributed to the tactics used during the [[Battle of Mărăşeşti]] (July-August 1917), when Romanians under General [[Alexandru Averescu]] managed to stop the advance of German forces under the command of Field Marshal [[August von Mackensen]].<ref>Deletant, p.37-38</ref> Antonescu lived in Prezan's proximity for the remainder of the war, and influenced his decisions.<ref name="del38">Deletant, p.38</ref>
The [[Romanian Army]], instructed by the [[France|French]] Mission, and led by General [[Alexandru Averescu]] managed to stop the advance of the German Army headed by Field Marshal [[August von Mackensen|Mackensen]]. He was both observer and coordinator for the [[Battle of Mărăşti]]-Oituz.


That autumn, the [[Russian Revolution of 1917|October Revolution]] took place, taking Romania's main ally, the [[Russian Provisional Government]], out of the conflict. Its successor, [[Russian Soviet Federative Socialist Republic|Bolshevik Russia]] made peace with the Central Powers by the [[Treaty of Brest-Litovsk]], leaving Romania the only enemy of the Central Powers on the [[Eastern Front (World War I)|Eastern Front]]. In these conditions, the Romanian government signed, and the [[Parliament of Romania|Parliament]] ratified, Romania's own [[Treaty of Bucharest, 1918|peace treaty with the Central Powers]]. Romania broke the treaty later in the year, on grounds that King Ferdinand I had not signed it. During the interval, Antonescu, who viewed the [[separate peace]] as "the most rational solution", was assigned command over a cavalry regiment.<ref name="del38"/> The renewed offensive played a part in ensuring the [[union of Transylvania with Romania]]. After the war, Antonescu's merits as an operations officer were noticed by among others, politician [[Ion G. Duca]], who wrote that "his intelligence, skill and activity, brought credit on himself and invaluable service to the country".<ref name="del38"/> Another event occurring late in the war is also credited with having played a major part in Antonescu's life: in 1918, Crown Prince [[Carol II of Romania|Carol]] (the future King Carol II) eloped and technically [[Desertion|deserted]] his army posting, to marry the commoner [[Zizi Lambrino]].<ref name="drasum1m"/> This outraged Antonescu, who developed enduring contempt for the royal.<ref name="drasum1m"/>
However, in late 1917 the [[Russian Revolution of 1917|Russian revolution]] took place. Soviet Russia soon made peace with Germany, leaving Romania the only enemy of the [[Central Powers]] on the [[Eastern Front (World War I)|Eastern Front]]. In these conditions, the Romanian government signed, and the parliament ratified the [[Treaty of Bucharest, 1918]] with Germany and her allies.


===Diplomatic assignments and General Staff positions===
In 1918, however, Romania broke the treaty, on the grounds that the King, [[Ferdinand I of Romania]], did not sign the treaty. Re-entering the war with a re-organized army, Romania was able to support the decisions of the National Romanian Council which ultimately result in the [[Union of Transylvania with Romania]]. Upon reaching the river [[Tisza|Tisa]], King Ferdinand took his own decoration and gave it to lieutenant-colonel Antonescu saying: "Antonescu, no one in this country knows better than the King how much they owe you."{{Fact|date=July 2007}}
Lieutenant Colonel Ion Antonescu retained his notoriety during the [[interwar period]]. He participated in the political campaign to make Romania's gains in Transylvania recognized at the [[Paris Peace Conference, 1919|Paris Peace Conference]] of 1919. His [[Nationalism|nationalist]] argument about a future state of the [[Romanians]] was published as the essay ''Românii. Origina<!-- sic -->, trecutul, sacrificiile şi drepturile lor'' ("The Romanians. Their Origin, Their Past, Their Sacrifices and Their Rights"). The booklet claimed extension of Romanian rule beyond the confines of [[Greater Romania]], and recommended, at the risk of war with the emerging [[Kingdom of Yugoslavia]], the annexation of all [[Banat]] areas and the [[Timočka Krajina|Timok Valley]].<ref>Haynes, p.113, 115</ref> In March 1920, Antonescu was one of three people nominated by the new Averescu executive to be a [[military attaché]] of Romania in [[France]], but a report issued by the French military observer in Romania, General [[Victor Pétin]], was negative enough to make the French side choose a certain Colonel Şuţu instead (the text referred to Antonescu as "extremely vain", "[[Chauvinism|chauvinistic]]" and "[[Xenophobia|xenophobic]]", while acknowledging his "great military worth").<ref name="del38"/>


Nevertheless, in 1922, Şuţu had to leave [[Paris]], and when the Romanian government nominated Antonescu again, the French government felt obliged to accept his nomination, despite renewed criticism from Pétin's part.<ref>Deletant, p.38-39</ref> At the moment of his reassignment, Antonescu was handling military instruction in the Transylvanian city of [[Sibiu]], where his rebellious attitude was causing irritation among his commanders.<ref name="del39">Deletant, p.39</ref> From 1923, Antonescu was also the Romanian attaché in the [[United Kingdom]] and [[Belgium]].<ref name="del39"/> After embarking on his mission, he negotiated a credit worth 100 million [[French franc]]s to be placed in Romania's purchase of French weaponry, and worked together with Romanian [[League of Nations]] diplomat [[Nicolae Titulescu]], whose personal friend he became.<ref name="del39"/> According to one account, he was also in contact with the Romanian-born [[Conservatism|conservative]] aristocrat and writer [[Marthe Bibesco]], who is reported to have introduced Antonescu to the ideas of [[Gustave Le Bon]], a researcher of [[crowd psychology]] who had an influence on [[Fascism|fascist]] leaders.<ref name="jvg186">Jaap van Ginneken, ''Crowds, Psychology, and Politics, 1871-1899'', [[Cambridge University Press]], Cambridge, 1992, p.186. ISBN 0-521-40418-5</ref> The same story has it that Bibesco saw the Romanian officer as a new version of 19th century nationalist rebel [[Georges Boulanger]], introducing him as such to Le Bon.<ref name="jvg186"/> In 1923, he made the acquaintance of lawyer [[Mihai Antonescu]], who was to become his close friend, legal representative and political associate.<ref>Deletant, p.301-302</ref>
After the war, Antonescu's merits as an operations officer were noticed by among others, [[Ion Duca]], who wrote that "his intelligence, skill and activity, brought credit on himself and invaluable service to the country".<ref name="del38">Deletant, p. 38</ref> The reputation of being a tough and ruthless commander, together with his red hair made him gain the nickname ''Câinele Roşu'' (''The Red Dog'').<ref>[http://www.bbc.co.uk/romanian/news/story/2006/06/060603_antonescu_serie_1.shtml "Ion Antonescu şi asumarea istoriei"], ''BBC Romanian'', 3 June 2006</ref>


After returning to Romania in 1926, Antonescu returned to his teaching position in Sibiu, and, in autumn 1928, was Secretary-General of the [[Ministry of National Defense (Romania)|Defense Ministry]] in the [[Vintilă Brătianu]] cabinet.<ref name="del39"/> He married [[Maria Antonescu|Maria Niculescu]], for long a resident of France, who had been married twice before: to a [[Romanian Police]] officer, with whom she had a son, Gheorghe (died 1944), and to Frenchman of Jewish origin.<ref>Deletant, p.39, 45, 290</ref> After a period as Deputy Chief of the General Staff,<ref name="del39"/> he was appointed its Chief (1933-1934). These assignments coincided with the rule of Carol's underage son [[Michael I of Romania|Michael I]] and his [[regent]]s, and with Carol's seizure of power in 1930. At the time, Antonescu first grew interested in the [[Iron Guard]], an [[Antisemitism|antisemitic]] and fascist-related movement headed by [[Corneliu Zelea Codreanu]]. In his capacity as Deputy Chief of Staff, he ordered the Army's intelligence unit to compile a report on the faction, and made a series of critical notes on Codreanu's various statements.<ref name="del39"/>
In March 1920, Antonescu was one of the three people to be nominated by the Romanian Government to be a [[military attaché]] of Romania in France, but the military attaché in Romania, General [[Victor Pétin]]'s report about him was negative enough (referring to Antonescu as "chauvinistic" and "xenophobic") to make the French side choose a certain Colonel Ṣuţu instead.<ref name="del38"/>


As Chief of Staff, Antonescu reportedly had his first confrontation with the political class and the monarch. His projects for weapon modernization were questioned by Defense Minister [[Paul Angelescu]], leading Antonescu to present his resignation.<ref name="del39"/> According to another account, he completed an official report on the [[embezzlement]] of Army funds, which indirectly implicated Carol and his ''[[camarilla]]'' (''see [[Škoda Affair]]'').<ref>Veiga, p.281</ref><ref name="drasum1m"/> The king consequently ordered him out of office, provoking indignation among sections of the political mainstream.<ref name="drasum1m"/> On Carol's orders, Antonescu was placed under surveillance by the ''[[Siguranţa Statului]]'' intelligence service, and closely monitored by the [[Ministry of Administration and Interior (Romania)|Interior Ministry]] Undersecretary [[Armand Călinescu]].<ref name="del40">Deletant, p.40</ref> The officer's political credentials were on the rise, and he had contacts with all sides of the political spectrum, while support for Carol plummeted. Antonescu maintained contacts with the two main democratic groups, the [[National Liberal Party (Romania)|National Liberal]] and the [[National Peasants' Party|National Peasants']] parties (known respectively as PNL and PNŢ).<ref name="drasum1m"/> He was also engaged in discussions with the rising [[far right]], antisemitic and fascist movements: although in competition with each other, both the [[National Christian Party]] (PNC) of [[Octavian Goga]] and the Iron Guard sought to attract Antonescu to their side.<ref>Deletant, p.34, 40-41; Veiga, p.281</ref><ref name="drasum1m"/> In 1936, to the authorities' alarm, Army General and Iron Guard member [[Gheorghe Cantacuzino-Grănicerul]] arranged a meeting between Ion Antonescu and the movement's leader: Antonescu is reported to have found Codreanu arrogant, but to have welcomed his intention to revolutionize politics.<ref name="del40"/>
Nevertheless, in 1922, Ṣuţu had to leave Paris and the Romanian government nominated Antonescu again, the French government felt obliged to accept his nomination, despite Pétin's negative report about him:


===Defense portfolio and the Codreanu trials===
{{quote|A well-tried intelligence, brutal, duplicitous, very vain, a ferocious will to succeed – these are, together with an extreme xenophobia, the striking characteristics of this strange figure.|Victor Pétin, military attaché of France in Romania, July 1922}}
In late 1937, after the [[Romanian general election, 1937|December general election]] came to an inconclusive result, Carol appointed Goga [[Prime Minister of Romania|Prime Minister]] over a far right cabinet meant to curb Codreanu's rise, which was also the first executive to impose [[racial discrimination]] in its treatment of the [[History of the Jews in Romania|Jewish community]]. Initially designated the [[Ministry of Communications and Information Society (Romania)|Communications portfolio]] by his former rival, Interior Minister Armand Călinescu, Antonescu repeatedly demanded the office of Defense Minister, which he was eventually granted.<ref>Deletant, p.40-41</ref> His mandate coincided with a troubled period, and saw Romania having to chose between its traditional alliance with France, Britain, the crumbling [[Little Entente]] and the League of Nations or moving closer to [[Nazi Germany]] and its [[Anti-Comintern Pact]]. Antonescu's own contribution is disputed by historians, who see him as either an Anglo-French alliance supporter or, like the PNC itself, more favorable to cooperation with [[Adolf Hitler]]'s Germany.<ref name="drasum1m"/> At the time, Antonescu viewed Romania's alliance with the Entente core as insurance against Hungarian and [[Soviet Union|Soviet]] [[revanchism]], but, as an [[Anti-communism|anti-communist]], he was suspicious of the [[Franco-Soviet Treaty of Mutual Assistance|Franco-Soviet rapprochement]].<ref>Veiga, p.281, 296</ref> Particularly concerned about Hungarian demands in Transylvania, he ordered the General Staff to prepare for a western attack.<ref>Deletant, p.42-43</ref> However, his major contribution in office was in relation to an internal crisis: Antonescu extended the already imposed [[martial law]] as a response to violent clashes between the Iron Guard and the PNC's own fascist militia, the ''[[Lăncieri]]''.<ref>Deletant, p.41</ref>


The Goga cabinet ended when the tentative rapprochement between Goga and Codreanu<ref>''Final Report'', p.43; Deletant, p.34, 42; Veiga, p.246-247</ref> prompted Carol to overthrow the democratic system and proclaim his own authoritarian regime (''see [[1938 Constitution of Romania]], [[National Renaissance Front]]''). The deposed Premier died in 1938, and Antonescu remained close friend of his widow, [[Veturia Goga]].<ref name="del70">Deletant, p.70</ref> By that time, revising his earlier stance, Antonescu had also built a close relationship with Codreanu, and was even said to have become his confidant.<ref name="del42">Deletant, p.42</ref><ref name="itrelatiile">{{ro icon}} Ilarion Ţiu, [http://www.revistaerasmus.go.ro/numarul_14/tiu_i2.html "Relaţiile regimului autoritar al lui Carol al II-lea cu opoziţia. Studiu de caz: arestarea conducerii Mişcării Legionare"], in [http://www.revistaerasmus.go.ro/ ''Revista Erasmus''], 14/2003-2005, at the [[University of Bucharest]] Faculty of History</ref> On Carol's request, he had earlier asked the Guard's leader to consider an alliance with the king, which Codreanu promptly refused in favor of negotiations with Goga, coupled with claims that he was not interested in political battles (an attitude supposedly induced by Antonescu himself).<ref>Deletant, p.41-43</ref>
From 1923, he was also the Romanian attaché in London and Brussels. In Paris, Antonescu negotiated a credit worth 100 million francs in order to buy French weaponry. In London, he worked together with [[Nicolae Titulescu]] and became a personal friend of his.<ref>Deletant, p. 39</ref>


Soon afterward, Călinescu, acting on indications from the monarch, arrested Codreanu and prosecuted him in two successive trials. Antonescu, whose mandate of Defense Minister had been prolonged under the premiership of [[Miron Cristea]], resigned in protest to Codreanu's arrest.<ref name="del44">Deletant, p.44</ref> He was a celebrity defense witness at the latter's first<ref name="itrelatiile"/> and second trials.<ref name="del44"/> During the latter, which saw Codreanu's conviction for [[treason]], Antonescu vouched for his friend's honesty while shaking his hand in front of the jury.<ref name="del44"/> Upon the end of procedures, the king ordered his former minister [[Internment|interned]] at [[Predeal]], before assigning him to command the [[Third Army (Romania)|Third Army]] in the remote eastern region of [[Bessarabia]] (and later removing him after Antonescu expressed sympathy for Guardists imprisoned in [[Chişinău]]).<ref>Deletant, p.45, 293</ref> Attempting to discredit his rival, Carol also ordered his wife's trial for [[bigamy]], based on a false claim that her divorce had not been finalized. Defended by Mihai Antonescu, the officer was able to prove his detractors wrong.<ref>Deletant, p.45, 58, 302</ref> Codreanu himself was taken into custody and discreetly killed by the [[Jandarmeria Română|Gendarmes]] acting on Carol's orders (November 1938).<ref>Cioroianu, p.54; Deletant, p.35, 50; Ornea, p.320-321; Veiga, p.257</ref>
After returning to Romania, he was the commander of the "Şcoala Superioară de Război" (''Higher School of War'') between 1927 and 1930, Chief of the General Staff between 1933 and 1934, and Defense Minister between 1937 and 1938.


Carol's regime slowly dissolved into crisis, the process being enhanced after the start of [[World War II]], when the military success of the core [[Axis Powers]] and the [[Molotov–Ribbentrop Pact|non-aggression pact]] signed by Germany and the [[Soviet Union]] saw Romania isolated and threatened (''see [[Romania during World War II]]''). In 1940, two of Romania's regions, Bessarabia and [[Northern Bukovina]], were lost to a [[Soviet occupation of Bessarabia and Northern Bukovina|Soviet occupation]] consented to by the king. This came as Romania, exposed by the [[Fall of France]], was seeking to align its policies with those of Germany.<ref>Deletant, p.3, 10-27, 45-47; Ornea, p.323-325; Veiga, p.256-257, 266-269</ref> Ion Antonescu himself had come to value a pro-Axis alternative after the 1938 [[Munich Agreement]], when Germany imposed demands on [[Czechoslovak Republic (1918–1938)|Czechoslovakia]] with the acquiescence of France and the United Kingdom, leaving locals to fear that, unless reoriented, Romania would follow.<ref>Deletant, p.45-46</ref> Angered by the territorial losses of 1940, General Antonescu sent Carol a general note of protest, and, as a result, was arrested and interned at [[Bistriţa Monastery]].<ref>Deletant, p.46-47. Deletant notes the determining factor for this decision was Antonescu's link to the Iron Guard.</ref><ref name="drasum1m"/> While there, he commissioned Mihai Antonescu to establish contacts with Nazi German officials, promising to advance German economic interest, particularly in respect to the [[Oil industry in Romania|local oil industry]], in exchange for endorsement.<ref>Deletant, p.47, 293</ref> Commenting on Ion Antonescu's ambivalent stance, Hitler's Ambassador to Romania, [[Wilhelm Fabricius]], wrote to his superiors: "I am not convinced that he is a safe man."<ref>Deletant, p.47. Cf. ''Final Report'', p.57, 60</ref>
== Career in Power ==
{{main|Romania during World War II}}
=== Rise to power ===
[[Image:Standard of Marshal Ion Antonescu.svg|thumb|left|Standard of Marshal Ion Antonescu as [[Conducător]]]]


===Rise to power===
General Antonescu was appointed Prime Minister by King [[Carol II of Romania|Carol II]] on [[September 4]] [[1940]], after Romania was forced to surrender [[Bessarabia]] and northern [[Bukovina]] to the [[Soviet Union|USSR]] ([[June 28]] [[1940]]) and the northern half of [[Transylvania]] to [[Hungary]] ([[August 30]] [[1940]]), and three days before the [[Southern Dobruja|Cadrilater]] was transferred to [[Bulgaria]] ([[September 7]] [[1940]]). On September 5, following Antonescu's demand, King Carol suspended the [[1938 Constitution of Romania|Constitution of 1938]], dissolved [[Parliament of Romania|Parliament]], and gave Antonescu full powers. That evening, he forced King Carol to abdicate and leave the country, which he did on September 6. Carol's son, [[Michael of Romania|Crown Prince Michael]] (Mihai), was proclaimed the new King, although his powers were essentially ceremonial duties such as supreme Head of the Army. Antonescu named himself ''Conducător'' (''Leader'') and assumed dictatorial powers.
[[Image:Standard of Marshal Ion Antonescu.svg|thumb|200px|Banner of Ion Antonescu as ''[[Conducător]]'']]
His internment ended in August, during which interval Romania had signed off the regions of Southern Dobruja—to Bulgaria, and [[Northern Transylvania]]—under Axis pressures, to [[Hungary]] (''see [[Treaty of Craiova]], [[Second Vienna Award]]''). The latter grant caused consternation among large sections of Romania's population, causing Carol's popularity to fall to a record low and provoking large-scale protests in Bucharest. These movements were organized in competition by the pro-[[Allies of World War II|Allied]] PNŢ, headed by [[Iuliu Maniu]], and the pro-Nazi Iron Guard, revived under the leadership of [[Horia Sima]].<ref name="drasum1m"/> The latter was organizing a ''[[coup d'état]]''.<ref>Deletant, p.48-51, 66; Griffin (1993), p.126; Ornea, p.325-327</ref> Antonescu simply left his assigned residence. He may have been secretly helped in this by German intercession,<ref>Browning, p.211</ref> but was more directly aided to escape by socialite [[Alice Sturdza]], who was acting on Maniu's request.<ref name="del48">Deletant, p.48</ref> Antonescu subsequently met with Maniu in [[Ploieşti]], where they discussed how best to manage the political situation.<ref>Deletant, p.48; Ornea, p.325-326. According to Deletant, also present were Maniu's assistants [[Corneliu Coposu]] and [[Aurel Leucuţia]].</ref><ref name="drasum1m"/> While these negotiations were carried out, the monarch himself was being advised by his entourage to recover legitimacy by governing in tandem with the increasingly popular Antonescu, while creating a new political majority from the existing forces.<ref name="del48"/><ref name="drasum1m"/> Carol and Antonescu accepted the proposal, Antonescu being mandated to approach political party leaders Maniu of the PNŢ, [[Dinu Brătianu]] of the PNL.<ref>Deletant, p.48; Kelso, p.96</ref><ref name="drasum1m"/> They all called for Carol's [[abdication]] as a preliminary measure,<ref>Deletant, p.48; Ornea, p.325-327; Roper, p.8</ref><ref name="drasum1m"/> while Sima, another leader sought after for negotiations, could not be found in time to express his opinion.<ref name="del48"/> Antonescu partly complied with the request but also asked Carol to bestow upon him the [[reserve power]]s for Romanian heads of state.<ref>Deletant, p.48-49; Ornea, p.326-327</ref><ref name="drasum1m"/> Carol yielded and, on September 5, 1940, the general became Prime Minister with full powers as head of state.<ref>''Final Report'', p.320; Morgan, p.85; Ornea, p.326</ref><ref name="drasum1m"/> The latter's first measure was to curtail potential resistance within the Army by relieving Bucharest garrison chief [[Gheorghe Argeşanu]] of his position and replacing him with [[Dumitru Coroamă]].<ref>Ornea, p.327</ref> Shortly afterward, Antonescu was informed that two of Carol's loyalist generals [[Gheorghe Mihail]] and [[Paul Teodorescu]] were allegedly planning to have him killed.<ref>Deletant, p.49-50, 52, 194</ref> In reaction, he imposed formal abdication on the monarch, while General Coroamă was refusing to carry out the royal order of shooting down Iron Guardist protesters.<ref>Deletant, p.49-50</ref>


The king eventually left the throne and Michael I inaugurated his second rule, while Antonescu's effective powers as dictatorial Premier were confirmed and extended.<ref>Cioroianu, p.54; Deletant, p.52-55; Griffin (1993), p.126; Kelso, p.96; Roper, p.8</ref><ref name="drasum1m"/> He was formally declared ''[[Conducător]]'' of the state on September 6, by a royal decree which consecrated a ceremonial role for the monarch.<ref>Deletant, p.52-55</ref> Among his subsequent measures was ensuring the safe departure into self-exile of Carol and his lover [[Elena Lupescu]], granting protection to the royal train which found itself attacked by armed members of the Iron Guard.<ref name="drasum1m"/> Horia Sima's subsequent cooperation with Antonescu was endorsed by high-ranking Nazi German officials, many of whom feared the Iron Guard was too weak on its own.<ref>Deletant, p.49-51; Veiga, p.279-280. Veiga mentions in particular [[Heinrich Himmler]], head of the ''[[Schutzstaffel]]'' organization, who, although inclined to support Sima, advised the latter to let the general take hold of government.</ref> Antonescu therefore received the approval of Ambassador Fabricius.<ref>Deletant, p.49; Ornea, p.326-327, 339</ref> Despite early promises, Antonescu abandoned projects for the creation of a [[national government]],<ref>Deletant, p.55-56; Ornea, p.326</ref><ref name="drasum1m"/> and opted instead for a [[Coalition government|coalition]] between a [[military dictatorship]] lobby and the Iron Guard.<ref>Deletant, p.52-68; Gella, p.171; Geran Pilon, p.59; Kelso, p.96-97; Kenney, p.92-93; Morgan, p.85; Ornea, p.326-327; Veiga, p.281-282, 296, 327. According to Kelso and Ornea, Antonescu was turned down by all political forces except the Iron Guard. Deletant (p.55-56) notes that this refusal was motivated by Sima's requests, which Maniu perceived as excessive.</ref><ref name="drasum1m"/> He later justified his choice by stating that the Iron Guard "represented the political base of the country at the time."<ref>Deletant, p.55</ref>
After the traditional, democratic, parties of Romania refused to send competent members into the Government, Antonescu approached the [[Nationalist]] [[Iron Guard]] party and offered them seats in the Government ([[September 15]] [[1940]]). Antonescu desired to bring the Iron Guard under his direct control, because their paramilitary activities were undermining the authority of the state. The ensuing period was known as the '[[National Legionary State]]' (''Statul naţional-legionar''). Eventually, after their demands for extended powers were repeatedly turned down by Antonescu, the Iron Guard [[The Legionnaires Rebellion and the Bucharest Pogrom|rebelled]] ([[January 21]] [[1941]]). Antonescu quickly crushed the rebellion (with the consent of Germany, whose economic and military interests demanded stability in Romania), outlawed the Iron Guard and had their top leaders imprisoned or expelled from the country.


===Antonescu-Sima partnership===
=== Alliance with Germany ===
The resulting regime, deemed ''[[National Legionary State]]'' and officially proclaimed on September 14, had Antonescu as Premier and ''Conducător'', with Sima as Deputy Premier and leader of the Iron Guard, the latter being remodeled into a [[Single-party state|single official party]].<ref>''Final Report'', p.43, 46, 54, 62, 109-112; Browning, p.211; Deletant, p.1-2, 57-68; Gella, p.171; Geran Pilon, p.59; Griffin (1993), p.126; Ioanid, p.231-232; Kelso, p.96-97; Nicholls, p.6; Ornea, p.58, 215-216, 327-329; Veiga, p.281-283</ref><ref name="pddlroutl">Peter Davies, Derek Lynch, ''The Routledge Companion to Fascism and the Far Right'', [[Routledge]], London, 2002, p.196. ISBN 0-415-21494-7</ref><ref name="drasum1m"/> Antonescu subsequently ordered Carol's Iron Guardist prisoners to be set free.<ref>Ornea, p.215</ref> On October 6, he presided over the Iron Guard's mass rally in Bucharest, one in a series of major celebratory and commemorative events organized by the movement during the late months of 1940.<ref>Deletant, p.59; Ornea, p.333</ref> However, he tolerated the PNŢ and PNL's informal existence, allowing them to preserve much of their political support.<ref>Deletant, p.74-75; Veiga, p.280-281, 304</ref>
<!-- Image with unknown copyright status removed: [[Image:Antonescu_and_hitler.jpg|right|thumb|250px|Antonescu and Hitler.]] -->


There followed a short-lived and always uneasy partnership between Antonescu and Sima. In late September, the new regime denounced all pacts, accords and diplomatic agreements signed under Carol, which brought the regime in Germany's orbit while subverting its relationship with a former [[Balkans|Balkan]] ally, the [[Kingdom of Yugoslavia]].<ref>Haynes, p.102</ref> Germans troops entered the country in stages, in order to defend the local oil industry<ref>Deletant, p.61; Browning, p.211</ref> and help instruct their Romanian counterparts on ''[[Blitzkrieg]]'' tactics.<ref>''Final Report'', p.62; Deletant, p.61; Veiga, p.295-296</ref> On November 23, Antonescu was in [[Berlin]], where his signature sealed Romania's commitment to the main Axis instrument, the [[Tripartite Pact]].<ref>Deletant, p.1, 2-3, 61-62, 280; Haynes, p.102, 107; Nicholls, p.225; Veiga, p.296</ref><ref name="drasum1m"/> Two days later, the country also adhered to the Nazi-led [[Anti-Comintern Pact]].<ref>Nicholls, p.225</ref> Other than these generic commitments, Romania had no treaty binding it to Germany, and the Romanian-German alliance functioned informally.<ref>Cioroianu, p.54; Deletant, p.62, 92, 275</ref> Speaking in 1946, Antonescu claimed to have followed the pro-German path in continuation of earlier policies, and for fear of a Nazi [[protectorate]] in Romania.<ref>Deletant, p.51</ref>
Antonescu formed an alliance with [[Nazi Germany]], thereby ensuring stability and strategic material, such as the extensive Romanian [[oil reserves]], could be used by the Axis Powers. Further, Antonescu was delighted with the prospect of war against the [[Soviet Union|USSR]], because of his hatred of [[Bolshevik|Bolshevism]], and hoped this would guarantee the reconquest of [[Bessarabia]] and northern [[Bukovina]]. Also, by participating in the war on the Eastern front, Antonescu hoped to persuade Hitler to give back the northern half of [[Transylvania]] to Romania after the hostilities were over. He was informed by Hitler himself about [[Operation Barbarossa]] ten days before its launch.
Romanian troops joined the German [[Wehrmacht]] in their attack against the Soviet Union ([[June 22]] [[1941]]) and reoccupied the lost territories of [[Bessarabia]] and northern [[Bukovina]]. For retaking these territories, he was later made ''Mareşal'' (as a self nomination). The province of [[Transnistria (World War II)|Transnistria]] also came under Romanian administration. Soon after the capture of the city of [[Odessa]], Soviet agents blew up the Romanian headquarters, killing 61 people, including General [[Ioan Glogojeanu]].<ref>Deletant, p. 171</ref> Antonescu ordered retaliation, which culminated in the [[Odessa Massacre]].


During the National Legionary State period, earlier antisemitic legislation was upheld and strengthened, while the "[[Romanianization]]" of Jewish-owned enterprises became standard official practice.<ref>''Final Report'', p.19-20, 31, 103, 109-113, 181-183, 185-190, 202-208, 382-385; Achim, p.163, 167; Browning, p.211; Deletant, p.59, 62-63, 103-108, 251-252; Ornea, p.331, 393-394; Veiga, p.289-290, 296, 301. Cf. Kelso, p.100-101</ref><ref name="drasum1m"/> Immediately after coming into office, Antonescu himself expanded the anti-Jewish and [[Nuremberg Laws|Nuremberg law]]-inspired legislation passed by his predecessors Goga and [[Ion Gigurtu]],<ref>''Final Report'', p.19-20, 31, 43, 87, 116-117, 183-199, 320, 384; Deletant, p.103-108, 131, 308-314; Ioanid, p.231-232; Ornea, p.391; Weber, p.160</ref> while tens of new anti-Jewish regulations were passed in 1941-1942.<ref>''Final Report'', p.183-203, 320; Deletant, p.103-107, 131, 308-314</ref> This was done despite his formal pledge to [[Wilhelm Filderman]] and the [[Federation of Jewish Communities of Romania|Jewish Communities Federation]] that, unless engaged in "sabotage", "the Jewish population will not suffer."<ref>Deletant, p.58, 104. Cf. ''Final Report'', p.206-207</ref> Antonescu did not reject the application of Legionary policies, but was offended by Sima's advocacy of [[Paramilitary|paramilitarism]] and the Guard's frequent recourse to street violence.<ref>''Final Report'', p.46, 109-113, 117-118, 181-182, 186; Ancel (2005 a), p.32-33, 317; Deletant, p.55-57, 58-68, 104-105; Gella, p.171; Griffin (1993), p.126-127; Ornea, p.332-341; Veiga, p.282. Cf. Roper, p.8</ref><ref name="drasum1m"/> He arose much hostility from his partners by extending some protection to former dignitaries whom the Iron Guard had arrested.<ref>Deletant, p.60</ref> One early incident opposed Antonescu to the Guard's magazine ''[[Buna Vestire]]'', who accused him of leniency and was subsequently forced to change its editorial board.<ref>Ornea, p.334-335</ref> By then, the Legionary press was routinely claiming that he was obstructing revolution and aiming to take control of the Iron Guard, and that he had been transformed into a tool of the [[Freemasonry in Romania|Freemasonry]] (''see [[Anti-Masonry]]'').<ref>Ornea, p.338-339, 341-343; Veiga, p.291, 297</ref> The political conflict coincided with major social challenges, including the influx of refugees from areas lost earlier in the year and the [[1940 Bucharest earthquake|large-scale Bucharest earthquake]].<ref>Deletant, p.21, 24, 26, 131, 139-140, 318; Veiga, p.282-283, 290-291, 300-301, 305</ref>
After the recapture of Bessarabia and northern Bukovina, Antonescu took the Romanian army deeper into Soviet territory, determined to follow the German troops until the complete destruction of the Soviet army. As he stated during his trial:


Disorder peaked in the last days of November 1940, when, after uncovering the circumstances of Codreanu's death, the fascist movement ordered retaliations against political figures previously associated with Carol, carrying out the [[Jilava Massacre]], the assassinations of [[Nicolae Iorga]] and [[Virgil Madgearu]], and several other acts of violence.<ref>''Final Report'', p.46, 110-111; Deletant, p.60-61, 297-298, 302; Ornea, p.335-341, 347; Veiga, p.291-294, 311-312</ref><ref name="drasum1m"/> As retaliation for this insubordination, Antonescu ordered the Army to resume control of the streets,<ref>''Final Report'', p.110-111; Veiga, p.293-295</ref> unsuccessfully pressured Sima to have the assassins detained, ousted the Iron Guardist prefect of Bucharest [[Romanian Police|Police]] [[Ştefan Zăvoianu]], and ordered Legionary ministers to swear an oath to the ''Conducător''.<ref>Ornea, p.341</ref> His condemnation of the killings was nevertheless limited and discreet, and, the same month, he joined Sima at a burial ceremony for Codreanu's newly-discovered remains.<ref>Ornea, p.341; Veiga, p.294-295</ref> The widening gap between the dictator and Sima's party resonated in Berlin. When, in December, Legionary [[Ministry of Foreign Affairs (Romania)|Foreign Minister]] [[Mihail R. Sturdza]] obtained the replacement of Fabricius with [[Manfred Freiherr von Killinger]], perceived as more sympathetic to the Iron Guard, Antonescu promptly took over leadership of the ministry, which the compliant diplomat [[Constantin Greceanu]] as his right hand.<ref>Deletant, p.63, 301</ref> In Germany, leaders of the [[National Socialist German Workers' Party|National Socialist Party]] such as [[Heinrich Himmler]], [[Baldur von Schirach]] and [[Joseph Goebbels]]<ref>''Final Report'', p.62-63; Veiga, p.280, 296</ref><ref name="drasum1m"/> threw their support behind the Legionaries, whereas [[List of German foreign ministers|Foreign Affairs Minister]] [[Joachim von Ribbentrop]] and the [[Wehrmacht]] stood by Antonescu.<ref name="drasum1m"/> The latter were concerned that any internal conflict would threaten Romania's oil industry, vital to the German war effort.<ref>Deletant, p.25-27, 47, 61, 287</ref><ref name="drasum1m"/> The German leadership was by then secretly organizing ''[[Operation Barbarossa]]'', the attack on the Soviet Union.<ref>''Final Report'', p.63; Deletant, p.61-62, 76-78</ref><ref name="drasum2m">{{ro icon}} Delia Radu, [http://www.bbc.co.uk/romanian/news/story/2008/08/080801_serial_antonescu_episod2.shtml "Serialul 'Ion Antonescu şi asumarea istoriei' (2)"], [[BBC]] Romanian edition, August 1, 2008</ref>
<blockquote>When a country is in a war, the army of this country must go to the end of the earth to win the war. It's one of the basic principles of war, that has been applied from the time of the Romans to this very day. Search into the history of wars, any nation, any century, and you will see that no one stops with the army at the borders, but goes farther, aiming to destroy the enemy army. So did [[Scipio Africanus]] who took his army to the destruction of [[Carthage]], so did [[Napoleon]], who went to the center of Russia, so did [[Alexander I of Russia|Alexander of Russia]], who went all the way to Paris.</blockquote>


===Legionary Rebellion and Operation Barbarossa===
This decision was met with disapproval both by Romanian politicians (of the traditional parties) and by the [[Allied powers]]. Although Antonescu devoted most of his time to military affairs he failed to prepare the Romanian army for the protracted campaign. To satisfy Hitler, Antonescu sent to the front entire divisions with limited weaponry; Germans armed them only prior to combat. After German and Romanian armies suffered huge losses in the [[Battle of Stalingrad]] and the Soviets started to regain their territory, Antonescu's popularity declined sharply.
[[File:Bundesarchiv Bild 183-B03212, München, Staatsbesuch Jon Antonescu bei Hitler.jpg|thumb|250px|Antonescu and [[Adolf Hitler]] at the ''[[Hochschule für Musik und Theater München|Führerbau]]'' in [[Munich]] (June 1941). [[List of German foreign ministers|Foreign Minister]] [[Joachim von Ribbentrop]] and ''[[Generalfeldmarschall]]'' [[Wilhelm Keitel]] in the background]]
Antonescu's plan to act against his coalition partners in the event of further disorder hinged on Hitler's approval,<ref>''Final Report'', p.62-63, 113; Browning, p.211; Deletant, p.62-68; Griffin (1993), p.127; Harvey, p.497; Morgan, p.85-86, 188; Nicholls, p.225; Ornea, p.338-339, 342, 345; Roper, p.8; Veiga, p.295-297, 327</ref><ref name="pddlroutl"/><ref name="dslill228">D. S. Lewis, ''Illusions of Grandeur: Mosley, Fascism and British Society, 1931-81'', [[Manchester University Press]], Manchester, 1987, p.228. ISBN 0-7190-2355-6</ref><ref name="drasum1m"/> a vague signal of which had been given during ceremonies confirming Romania's adherence to the Tripartite Pact.<ref>Veiga, p.296</ref><ref name="drasum1m"/> A decisive turn occurred when Hitler invited Antonescu and Sima both over for discussions: whereas Antonescu agreed, Sima stayed behind in Romania, probably plotting a ''coup d'état''.<ref>Deletant, p.63-65; Ornea, p.342-343; Veiga, p.296-297</ref><ref name="drasum1m"/> While Hitler did not produce a clear endorsement for clamping down on Sima's party, he made remarks interpreted by their recipient as oblique blessings.<ref>Deletant, p.64, 299; Veiga, p.297</ref>


The Antonescu-Sima dispute erupted into violence in January 1941, when the Iron Guard instigated a series of attacks on public institutions and a [[pogrom]], incidents collectively known as the "[[Legionnaires' rebellion and Bucharest pogrom|Legionary Rebellion]]".<ref>''Final Report'', p.43, 46, 62-63, 103, 112-115, 181, 208, 382; Ancel (2005 a), p.33, 402-403, 408; Browning, p.211-212; Deletant, p.64-68, 71-72; Ioanid, p.232, 236; Ornea, p.219, 250, 284, 343-348; Veiga, p.297-304, 312-313. Cf. Penkower, p.148-149</ref><ref name="drasum1m"/> This came after the mysterious assassination of Major Döring, a German agent in Bucharest, which was used by the Iron Guard as a pretext to accuse the ''Conducător'' of having a secret anti-German agenda,<ref>Deletant, p.64-65, 299; Ornea, p.343</ref> and made Antonescu oust the Legionary [[Ministry of Administration and Interior (Romania)|Interior Minister]], [[Constantin Petrovicescu]], while closing down all of the Legionary-controlled "Romanianization" offices.<ref>Deletant, p.64-65, 105-106; Ornea, p.343; Veiga, p.297-298. Cf. ''Final Report'', p.186</ref> Various other clashes prompted him to demand the resignation of all Police commanders who sympathized with the movement.<ref>Deletant, p.64-65; Ornea, p.343; Veiga, p.298</ref> After two days of widespread violence, which resulted in some 120 deaths among Bucharest's Jewish community,<ref>''Final Report'', p.43, 46, 103, 112-115, 208, 382; Browning, p.211-212; Deletant, p.66, 71-72, 299-300; Ioanid, p.232; Veiga, p.298-299, 301. Cf. Ancel (2005 a), p.402-403</ref><ref name="drasum1m"/> Antonescu sent in the Army, under the command of General [[Constantin Sănătescu]].<ref name="drasum1m"/> German officials acting on Hitler's orders, including the new Ambassador [[Manfred Freiherr von Killinger]], helped Antonescu eliminate the Iron Guardists, but several of their lower-level colleagues actively aided Sima's subordinates.<ref>''Final Report'', p.62-63, 125; Harvey, p.497; Veiga, p.301-302, 313</ref> Goebbels was especially upset by the decision to support Antonescu, believing it to have been advantageous to "the Freemasons".<ref>Harvey, p.497-498. Cf. ''Final Report'', p.63</ref>
=== Fall ===
In 1943, representatives of Antonescu (members of the traditional parties) twice approached representatives of the [[United States]] and [[Great Britain]] (in [[Cairo]] and [[Istanbul]]) asking for separate peace. The British and the Americans approved the idea of the clandestine [[National Democratic Bloc]] coup, but it met the resistence of the Soviet Union, which refused the discussions as premature.<ref>Deletant, p. 239</ref> Antonescu refused unconditional surrender to the Soviets, but continued negotiating with them through his representatives in [[Stockholm]]. In August 1944, when the Soviets had already entered Romanian territory, Antonescu received an armistice proposal from [[Alexandra Kollontai]] (Stalin's agent in Stockholm).<ref>Miruna Munteanu, [http://www.ziua.net/display.php?data=2006-08-19&id=205698&ziua=b0eeac541a1869e8774134602b305c5a "A vrut Antonescu sa negocieze cu rusii?"], ''[[Ziua]]'', [[August 19]], [[2006]]</ref> This armistice proposed that German armies had 15 days to leave the country, the Soviets would only pass through the north of the country (the south and the capital were to remain Soviet-free), and offered recognition of Romanian claims to Hungarian-occupied [[Northern Transylvania]]. Considering the overwhelming superiority of the Soviet forces, this seemingly generous offer was interpreted as either allowing the Soviet troops to maintain its push against the German army or as a bluff.


After the events, Hitler kept open an alternative by granting [[political asylum]] to Sima, whom Antonescu's courts [[Capital punishment in Romania|sentenced to death]], and to other Legionaries in similar situations.<ref>''Final Report'', p.63, 382; Harvey, p.498. Cf. Browning, p.211-212</ref> They were detained in special conditions at [[Buchenwald concentration camp|Buchenwald]] and [[Dachau concentration camp|Dachau]] [[Nazi concentration camps|concentration camps]].<ref>Harvey, p.498; Veiga, p.301-302. Cf.: Browning, p.212; Deletant, p.87; Morgan, p.188</ref> In parallel, Antonescu publicly obtained the cooperation of ''Codrenists'', members of an Iron Guardist wing which had virulently opposed Sima, and whose leader was Codreanu's father [[Ion Zelea Codreanu|Ion Zelea]].<ref>Ornea, p.329-331, 346-348</ref> Antonescu again sought backing from the PNŢ and PNL to form a national cabinet, but his rejection of [[Parliamentary system|parliamentarism]] made the two groups refuse him.<ref>Deletant, p.68, 301</ref>
On [[August 22]] [[1944]] Soviet armies attacked the [[Iaşi]]-[[Chişinău]]-[[Cetatea Albă]] line, determined to occupy the Romanian capital before any armistice could be signed. Antonescu had prepared 9 elite divisions at the [[Focşani]]-[[Nămoloasa]]-[[Galaţi]] line which he hoped could hold out against the Soviets for several weeks until the treaty's approval by both parties. The telegram from Stockholm arrived on [[August 22]], but was intercepted by opposition leader [[Iuliu Maniu]],{{Fact|date=July 2007}} who was plotting together with King Michael, other opposition members from the historical parties, and even the [[Romanian Communist Party]], to overthrow Antonescu's regime.


Antonescu traveled to Germany and met Hitler on eight more occasions between June 1941 and August 1944.<ref>Deletant, p.280</ref> Such close contacts helped cement an enduring relationship between the two dictators, and Hitler reportedly came to see Antonescu as the only trustworthy person in Romania,<ref name="del62">Deletant, p.62</ref><ref name="drasum1m"/> and the only foreigner to consult on military matters.<ref>''Final Report'', p.65, 168; Deletant, p.1, 280; Harvey, p.498</ref> In later statements, he offered praise to Antonescu's "breadth of vision" and "real personality."<ref name="adh498">Harvey, p.498</ref> The German military presence increased significantly in early 1941, when, using Romania as a base, Hitler invaded the rebellious Kingdom of Yugoslavia and the [[Kingdom of Greece]] (''see [[Balkans Campaign]]'').<ref>Deletant, p.61-63, 75-76, 304. Cf.''Final Report'', p.63-64</ref> In parallel, Romania's relationship with the United Kingdom (at the time the only major adversary of Nazi Germany) aggravated into conflict: on February 10, 1941, [[Prime Minister of the United Kingdom|British Premier]] [[Winston Churchill]] recalled [[List of diplomats from the United Kingdom to Romania|His Majesty's Ambassador]] [[Reginald Hoare]], and approved the [[blockade]] of Romanian ships in British-controlled ports.<ref>Deletant, p.26-27, 75</ref>
On [[August 23]] [[1944]], Michael invited Antonescu to his Royal Palace. After Antonescu had explained the situation on the warfront, the king asked him if he would sign unconditional surrender to the Russians. Antonescu told the young king about the armistice he was about to sign, although he had no proof (such as the telegram). He also stated that "signing unconditional surrender to the Russians is like jumping out of a plane without a parachute". The King dismissed Antonescu and his cabinet. At the same time, soldiers rushed in and arrested Ion Antonescu and his Minister of Foreign Affairs, [[Mihai Antonescu]], then locked them up in the Palace safe. Later, they were taken by a group of communists, led by [[Emil Bodnăraş]], who took them to a safe house, before handing them over to the Soviets.


In June of that year, Romania joined the attack on the Soviet Union, led by Germany in coalition with Hungary, [[Finland]], the [[Slovak Republic (1939–1945)|State of Slovakia]], the [[Kingdom of Italy (1861–1946)|Kingdom of Italy]] and the [[Independent State of Croatia]]. Antonescu had been made aware of the plan by German envoys, and supported it enthusiastically even before Hitler extended Romania an offer to participate.<ref>Deletant, p.78-80, 83</ref> The Romanian force engaged formed a ''General Antonescu Army Group'' under the effective command of German general [[Eugen Ritter von Schobert]].<ref>Deletant, p.80, 83. Cf. ''Final Report'', p.253</ref> Romania's campaign on the [[Eastern Front (World War II)|Eastern Front]] began without a formal declaration of war, and was consecrated by Antonescu's statement: "Soldiers, I order you, cross the [[Prut River]]."<ref>Deletant, p.80</ref> A few days after this, the city of [[Iaşi]] witnessed a large-scale pogrom, which killed thousands and was carried out with Antonescu's agreement (''see [[Iaşi pogrom]]'').<ref>''Final Report'', p.120-126, 200, 204, 208-209, 243-244, 285-286, 315, 321, 323, 327-329; Ancel (2005 a), ''passim''; Deletant, p.130-140, 316-317; Ioanid, p.233; Traşcă, p.398-399; Weber, p.167</ref><ref name="drasum2m"/>
At the same time, King Mihai declared a ceasefire on the Romanian side. In absence of an armistice, the Soviet continued to consider Romanians as enemies. The Soviets broke the frontline and took prisoner 114,000 Romanian soldiers. The Germans did not recognize the authority of the new [[Constantin Sănătescu|Sănătescu]] Government and attacked the capital. The Romanian army however managed to hold on to it. A few days later, the Soviets entered Bucharest. The armistice was signed only on [[September 12]], [[1944]].


The first Romanian to be granted the [[Knight's Cross of the Iron Cross]], which he received from Hitler at their August 6 meeting in the [[Ukraine|Ukrainian]] city of [[Berdychiv]], Ion Antonescu was promoted to [[Marshal of Romania]] by royal decree on August 22, in recognition for his role in restoring the eastern frontiers of [[Greater Romania]].<ref>Deletant, p.83, 86, 280, 305</ref> He took one of his most debated decisions when, with Bessarabia's conquest almost complete, he committed Romania to Hitler's war effort over the [[Dniester]] and thrust deeper into Soviet territory, thus waging a [[war of aggression]].<ref>''Final Report'', p.320; Boia, p.270-271; Deletant, p.51, 84-87, 90-91, 254; King, p.93-94; Traşcă, p.377-380</ref><ref name="drasum2m"/> On August 30, Romania occupied a territory it deemed "[[Transnistria (World War II)|Transnistria]]", formerly a part of the [[Ukrainian SSR]] (and including the entire [[Moldavian ASSR]]).<ref>Achim, p.171, 184; Deletant, p.86-87; Browning, p.277; King, p.93-94; Traşcă, p.380sqq</ref><ref name="drasum2m"/> Like the decision to continue the war beyond Bessarabia, this earned Antonescu much criticism from the semi-clandestine PNL and PNŢ.<ref name="drasum2m"/> Soon after the takeover, the area was assigned to a civil administration apparatus headed by [[Gheorghe Alexianu]] and became the site for the main component of the [[Holocaust in Romania]]: a mass deportation of the [[Bessarabian Jews|Bessarabian]] and [[History of the Jews in Ukraine|Ukrainian Jews]], followed later by transports of [[Roma minority in Romania|Romani Romanians]] and Jews from Moldavia proper. The accord over Transnistria's administration, signed in [[Tighina]], also placed areas between the Dniester and the [[Dnieper]] under Romanian military occupation, while granting control over all resources to Germany.<ref>Deletant, p.166; Traşcă, p.384</ref>
=== Condemnation and death ===
[[Image:Ion Antonescu during his trial.jpg|thumb|right|Ion Antonescu during his trial.]]
After returning from the [[Soviet Union]] on [[April 9]], [[1946]], Antonescu was [[interrogated]] the following month by the [[Romanian People's Tribunals|Bucharest People's Tribunal]] and found guilty of betraying the Romanian people for the benefits of [[Nazi Germany]], the economic and political subjugation of Romania to Germany, cooperation with the Iron Guard, the murder of his political opponents, the mass murder of civilians and [[crimes against peace]], and for participation in the German invasion of the USSR. He was sentenced to death and executed by firing squad on [[June 1]] at [[Jilava|Jilava prison]]. He asked to be shot by a military firing squad, but instead he was executed by prison guards.


===Reversal of fortunes===
===2007 Court decision and 2008 nullification===
[[File:Bundesarchiv Bild 183-B23201, Joachim von Ribbentrop und Ion Antonescu.jpg|thumb|320px|Ribbentrop greeting Antonescu during the latter's return to Germany (1943)]]
The Romanian Army's inferior arms, insufficient armor and lack of training had been major concerns for the German commanders since before the start of the operation.<ref>Deletant, p.77-78, 83, 94-96</ref> One of the earliest major obstacles Antonescu encountered on the Eastern Front was the resistance of [[Odessa]], a Soviet port on the [[Black Sea]]. Refusing any German assistance, he ordered the Romanian Army to maintain a [[Siege of Odessa (1941)|two-month siege]] on heavily-fortified and well-defended positions.<ref>Traşcă, p.385-389</ref><ref name="drasum2m"/> The ill-equipped [[4th Infantry Division (Romania)|4th Army]] suffered losses of some 100,000 people.<ref>Deletant, p.87-88; Traşcă, p.385-387</ref> Antonescu's popularity again rose in October, when the fall of Odessa was celebrated triumphantly with a parade through Bucharest's ''[[Arcul de Triumf]]'', and when many Romanians reportedly believed the war was as good as won.<ref name="drasum2m"/> In Odessa itself, the aftermath included a [[1941 Odessa massacre|large-scale massacre]] of the Jewish population, ordered by the Marshal as retaliation for an explosion which killed some 60 Romanian soldiers (General [[Ioan Glogojeanu]] among them).<ref>''Final Report'', p.150-157, 245, 321, 323; Ancel (2005 a), p.291; Deletant, p.171-177, 248-253, 261, 276-277, 328-329; Traşcă, p.389sqq</ref><ref name="drasum2m"/> The city subsequently became the administrative capital of Transnistria.<ref>Deletant, p.167-168; Gella, p.171</ref><ref name="drasum2m"/> According to one account, the Romanian administration planned changing Odessa's name to ''Antonescu''.<ref>Nicholls, p.6; White, p.175</ref>


As the Soviet Union recovered from the initial shock and slowed down the Axis offensive at the [[Battle of Moscow]] (October 1941-January 1942), Romania was asked by its allies to contribute a larger number of troops.<ref name="drasum3m">{{ro icon}} Delia Radu, [http://www.bbc.co.uk/romanian/news/story/2008/08/080801_serial_antonescu_episod3.shtml "Serialul 'Ion Antonescu şi asumarea istoriei' (3)"], [[BBC]] Romanian edition, August 1, 2008</ref> A decisive factor in Antonescu's compliance with the request appears to have been a special visit to Bucharest by Wehrmacht commander [[Wilhelm Keitel]], who introduced the ''Conducător'' to Hitler's plan for attacking the [[Caucasus]] (''see [[Battle of the Caucasus]]'').<ref name="drasum3m"/> The Romanian force engaged in the war reportedly exceeded German demands.<ref name="drasum3m"/> It came to around 500,000 people<ref name="del2">Deletant, p.2</ref><ref name="drasum3m"/> and thirty actively-involved divisions.<ref>Nicholls, p.6</ref> As a sign of his satisfaction, Hitler presented his Romanian counterpart with a luxury car.<ref name="drasum3m"/> On December 7, 1941, after reflecting on the possibility for Romania, Hungary and Finland to change their stance, the British government responded to repeated Soviet requests and declared war on all three countries.<ref>Deletant, p.90-92</ref> Following [[Japan]]'s [[attack on Pearl Harbor]] and in compliance with its Axis commitment, Romania declared war on the [[United States]] five days later. These developments contrasted Antonescu's own statement of December 7: "I am an ally of the [German] Reich against [the Soviet Union], I am neutral in the conflict between Great Britain and Germany. I am for America against the Japanese."<ref name="del92">Deletant, p.92</ref>
On [[December 5]], [[2006]], the Bucharest Court of Appeals overturned Antonescu's conviction for certain crimes against peace, on the grounds that the objective conditions of 1940 justified a preventive war against the Soviet Union, so that article 3 of the 1933 Convention defining aggression does not apply to his case. <ref>"[http://www.ziua.ro/display.php?data=2007-02-20&id=216243&ziua=fb713611e9fc56de542262b59168ca42 Războiul anti-URSS a fost legitim]" ("The War against the USSR was Legitimate", ''[[Ziua]]'', [[20 February]] [[2007]].</ref> This decision was however overturned by the Romanian [[High Court of Cassation and Justice (Romania)|supreme court]] in May 2008.<ref>"[http://www.mediafax.ro/justitie/reabilitarea-numelui-maresalului-antonescu-respinsa.html?4727;2616337 Reabilitarea numelui mareşalului Antonescu, respinsă]" ("The rehabilitation of the name of marshall Antonescu, denied",''[[Mediafax]]'',[[06 May]] [[2008]].</ref>


A crucial change in the war came with the [[Battle of Stalingrad]] in June 1942-February 1943, a major defeat for the Axis. [[Romanian Armies in the Battle of Stalingrad|Romania's armies]] alone lost some 150,000 men (either dead, wounded or captured)<ref name="drasum3m"/> and more than half of the country's divisions were wiped out.<ref>Deletant, p.96-97, 99; Gella, p.171; Penkower, p.161</ref> For part of that interval, the Marshal had been withdrawn from public life, owing to an unknown affliction, which is rumored to have been either a [[mental breakdown]], a [[foodborne illness]] or a symptom of the [[syphilis]] he had allegedly contracted earlier in life.<ref>Deletant, p.209-210, 335</ref> Upon his return, Antonescu blamed the Romanian losses on German overseer [[Arthur Hauffe]], whom Hitler agreed to replace.<ref>Deletant, p.98-99</ref> In parallel with the military losses, Romania was confronted with large-scale economic problems. While Germany [[Monopoly|monopolized]] Romania's exports,<ref>''Final Report'', p.63, 117, 168; Deletant, p.26-27, 75; Harvey, p.545</ref> it defaulted on most of its payments.<ref>Harvey, p.545</ref> Like all countries whose exports to Germany, particularly in oil, exceeded imports from that country, [[Economy of Romania|Romania's economy]] suffered from Nazi control of the ''[[German Reichsmark|German Reichsmark]]''-[[Romanian leu|leu]] [[exchange rate]] (''see [[Economy of Nazi Germany]]'').<ref>Deletant, p.26; Harvey, p.544-545</ref> On the German side, those directly involved in harnessing Romania's economic output for German goals were economic planners [[Hermann Göring]] and [[Walther Funk]], together with [[Hermann Neubacher]], the Special Representative for Economic Problems.<ref>Deletant, p.26-27</ref> The situation was further aggravated in 1942, as [[United States Air Force|USAF]] and [[Royal Air Force|RAF]] were able to bomb the oil fields in [[Prahova County]] (''see [[Bombing of Romania in World War II]], [[Operation Tidal Wave]]'').<ref>Chant, p.75; Deletant, p.27; Gella, p.171</ref> Official sources from the following period amalgamate military and civilian losses of all kinds, which produces a total of 554,000 victims of the war.<ref>Gella, p.173. Cf. Weber, p.164</ref>


In this context, the Romanian leader acknowledged that Germany was losing the war, and he therefore authorized his Deputy Premier and new Foreign Minister Mihai Antonescu to set up contacts with the Allies.<ref>''Final Report'', p.252; Cioroianu, p.51; Deletant, p.230-240, 341-344; Penkower, p.153, 161</ref><ref name="drasum3m"/> In parallel, he allowed the PNŢ and the PNL to engage in parallel talks with the Allies at various locations in neutral countries.<ref>Deletant, p.75, 231-240, 341-344; Roper, p.8, 14</ref><ref name="drasum3m"/> The discussions were strained by the [[Western Allies]]' call for an [[unconditional surrender]], over which the Romanian envoys bargained with Allied diplomats in [[Sweden]] and [[Egypt]] (among them the Soviet representatives [[Nikolai Vasilevich Novikov]] and [[Alexandra Kollontai]]).<ref>Deletant, p.231, 233-234, 236-239, 342-345</ref> Antonescu was also alarmed by the possibility of war being carried on Romanian territory, as had happened in Italy after [[Allied invasion of Italy|Operation Avalanche]].<ref>Deletant, p.234-236</ref> The events also prompted hostile negotiations aimed at toppling Antonescu, and involving the two political parties, the young monarch, diplomats and soldiers.<ref>Deletant, p.237-240, 343-344; Roper, p.14</ref><ref name="drasum3m"/> A major clash between Michael and Antonescu took place during the first days of 1943, when the 21-year old monarch used his New Year's address on [[Romanian Radio Broadcasting Company|national radio]] to part with the Axis war effort.<ref>Deletant, p.236, 337</ref>
== Antonescu and the Holocaust ==
{{see also|Romania during World War II#Romania and the Holocaust}}


===Ouster and arrest===
Antonescu{{Fact|date=February 2009}} and his government were directly responsible for the killing of between 280,000 and 380,000 Jews and over 10,000 [[Romani people|Roma]] in Romania and the Soviet territories it occupied. Romania's share in the Holocaust, i.e. its contribution as an independent, not occupied country, is thus the second biggest after that of Nazi Germany.<ref>Deletant, p. 127</ref> Despite ample evidence, for a long time these genocidal crimes and Antonescu's responsibility were denied not only by revisionist historians, but also at an official level.{{Fact|date=March 2009}} However, in 2004 the Romanian government under [[Ion Iliescu]] officially acknowledged the Romanian and Antonescu's responsibility, as outlined in a report produced by an expert commission appointed by Iliescu and led by [[Nobel Prize|Nobel]] laureate [[Elie Wiesel]]. {{Fact|date=March 2009}} A Holocaust Memorial Day was installed.
{{main|King Michael's Coup}}
In March 1944, the Soviet [[Red Army]] broke the [[Southern Bug]] and Dniester fronts, advancing on Bessarabia. This came just as [[Henry Maitland Wilson, 1st Baron Wilson|Henry Maitland Wilson]], Allied commander of the [[Mediterranean, Middle East and African theatres of World War II|Mediterranean theater]], presented Antonescu with an [[ultimatum]].<ref name="drasum3m"/> After a new visit to Germany and a meeting with Hitler, Antonescu opted to continue fighting alongside the remaining Axis states, a decision which he later claimed was motivated by Hitler's promise to allow Romania possession of [[Northern Transylvania]] in the event of an Axis victory.<ref name="drasum3m"/> Upon his return, the ''Conducător'' oversaw a counteroffensive which stabilized the front on a line between Iaşi and [[Chişinău]] to the north and the lower Dniester to the east.<ref name="drasum3m"/> This normalized his relations with Nazi German officials, whose alarm over the possible loss of an ally had resulted in the ''Margarethe II'' plan, an adapted version of the [[Operation Margarethe|Nazi takeover in Hungary]].<ref>Chant, p.124; Deletant, p.234-235, 342</ref><ref name="drasum3m"/>


However, Antonescu's non-compliance with the terms of Wilson's ultimatum also had drastic effects on Romania's ability to exit the war.<ref name="drasum3m"/> By then, Antonescu was conceiving of a [[separate peace]] with the Western Allies,<ref>Deletant, p.231; White, p.158</ref><ref name="drasum3m"/> while maintaining contacts with the Soviets.<ref>Deletant, p.233-234, 238-239; Kelso, p.129</ref> In parallel, the mainstream opposition movement came to establish contacts with the [[Romanian Communist Party]] (PCR), which, although minor numerically, gained importance for being the only political group to be favored by Soviet leader [[Joseph Stalin]].<ref>Cioroianu, p.51-52; Deletant, p.237-240, 343-344; Gella, p.172; Roper, p.8-9, 13-14</ref> On the PCR side, the discussions involved [[Lucreţiu Pătrăşcanu]] and later [[Emil Bodnăraş]].<ref>Deletant, p.238-240, 343-344</ref><ref name="drasum3m"/> Another participating group at this stage was the old [[Romanian Social Democratic Party (defunct)|Romanian Social Democratic Party]].<ref>Cioroianu, p.51; Deletant, p.238-239, 344; Roper, p.14; Weber, p.156</ref>
Immediately after coming into office, Antonescu expanded the anti-Jewish laws passed by [[Octavian Goga]] and [[Ion Gigurtu]].<ref>Deletant, p. 103-105</ref> During 1941 and 1942, 80 anti-Jewish regulations were passed. Jewish property was expropriated, Jews were banned from performing a wide range of occupations, they had to do community work for the state (''muncă de interes obştesc''), mixed Romanian-Jewish marriages were forbidden and Jews from strategic areas, such as [[Ploieşti]], were confined to [[Internment|internment camps]].<ref>Deletant, p. 103; 115</ref>


Large-scale [[Bombing of Bucharest in World War II|Allied bombings of Bucharest]] took place in spring 1944, while the Soviet [[Red Army]] approached Romanian borders.<ref>Deletant, p.240, 344; Kelso, p.129; Nicholls, p.6</ref> The [[Second Jassy–Kishinev Offensive|Battle for Romania]] began in late summer: while German commanders [[Johannes Frießner]] and [[Otto Wöhler]] of the [[Army Group South Ukraine]] attempted to hold [[Bukovina]], Soviet [[Steppe Front]] leader [[Rodion Malinovsky]] stormed into the areas of Moldavia defended by [[Petre Dumitrescu]]'s troops.<ref>Chant, p.84, 303</ref> In reaction, Antonescu attempted to stabilize the front on a line between [[Focşani]], [[Nămoloasa, Galaţi|Nămoloasa]] and [[Brăila]], deep inside Romanian territory.<ref name="drasum3m"/> On August 5, he visited Hitler one final time in [[Kętrzyn]]. On this occasion, the German leader reportedly explained that the his people had betrayed the Nazi cause, and asked him if Romania would go on fighting (to which Antonescu reportedly answered in vague terms).<ref>Deletant, p.239-240</ref> After the statements of [[List of Russian foreign ministers|Soviet Foreign Minister]] [[Vyacheslav Molotov]], according to which Romanian subservience was not going to be a requirement,<ref>Chant, p.124; Deletant, p.237</ref> the factions opposing Antonescu agreed that the moment had come to overthrow him, by carrying out the [[King Michael's Coup|Royal Coup of August 23]].<ref>Cioroianu, p.50-55; Chant, p.84-85, 124-125, 303; Deletant, p.3-4, 241-246, 265-266, 343-346; Gella, p.172; Guran & Ştefan, p.112; Ioanid, p.235-236; Kelso, p.129; Kenney, p.93; Kent, p.52; King, p.94; Morgan, p.188; Nicholls, p.6, 166-167; Roper, p.13-15; Weber, p.152-154, 158-159; White, p.158. Cf. Ancel (2005 a), p.321; Bucur (2004), p.173-176</ref><ref name="drasum3m"/> On that day, the sovereign asked Antonescu to meet him in the [[National Museum of Art of Romania|royal palace building]], where he presented him with a request to take Romania out of its Axis alliance.<ref>Deletant, p.241-242; Roper, p.14</ref><ref name="drasum3m"/> The ''Conducător'' refused, and was promptly arrested by soldiers of the guard, being replaced as Premier with General [[Constantin Sănătescu]], who presided over a [[national government]].<ref>Cioroianu, p.55; Deletant, p.242-243; Roper, p.14</ref><ref name="drasum3m"/>
Starting at the end of October, 1940, the Iron Guard began a massive anti-Semitic campaign, torturing and beating Jews and looting their shops, culminating in the failed coup and a [[pogrom]] in Bucharest in which 120 Jews were massacred.{{Fact|date=March 2009}} Aided by German troops, Antonescu suppressed the rebellion, and thus, indirectly,{{Fact|date=February 2009}} the violence against the Jews. In the course of 1941 Antonescu's own violence against the Jewish population was to take a more systematic course,{{Fact|date=March 2009}} reaching its peak when Romania entered the "holy war" against the Soviet Union, a war that he considered, like Hitler, to have a metaphysical and apocalyptic character; the Jews were considered the demonic driving force behind the greatest enemy Romania ever faced - Bolshevism. This connection between the Jews, Bolshevism and the attack on the Soviet Union is apparent in declarations he made in summer 1941:


The new Romanian authorities declared peace with the Allies and advised the population to greet Soviet troops.<ref name="drasum3m"/> On August 25, as Bucharest was successfully defending itself against German retaliations, Romania declared war on Nazi Germany.<ref>Chant, p.84-85, 124-125, 303; Gella, p.172; Kelso, p.129</ref> The events disrupted German domination in the Balkans, putting a stop to the ''Maibaum'' offensive against [[Yugoslav Partisans]].<ref>Chant, p.122</ref> The coup was nevertheless a unilateral move, and, until the signature of an [[armistice]] on September 12,<ref>''Final Report'', p.316; Cioroianu, p.51; Deletant, p.247-248; Kelso, p.130; Nicholls, p.167, 225</ref><ref name="drasum3m"/> the country was still perceived as an enemy by the Soviets, who continued to take Romanian soldiers as [[Prisoner of war|prisoners of war]].<ref name="drasum3m"/> In parallel, Hitler reactivated the Iron Guardist exile, creating a Sima-led [[government in exile]] which did not survive the [[End of World War II in Europe|war's end in Europe]].<ref>Harvey, p.498; Morgan, p.188; Veiga, p.302-303, 313-314</ref>
<blockquote>The Satan is the Jew. It is a battle of life and death. Either we win and the world will be purified, either they win (the Jews) and we will become their slaves" (to the Council of the Ministers). "I confirm that I will pursue operations in the east to the end against that great enemy of civilization, of Europe, and of my country: Russian bolshevism [...] I will not be swayed by anyone not to extend this military cooperation into new territory.'<ref>Deletant, p. 85</ref></blockquote>


Placed in the custody of PCR militants, Ion Antonescu spent the interval at a house in Bucharest's [[Vatra Luminoasă]] quarter.<ref>Deletant, p.243-244, 345-346</ref><ref name="drasum3m"/> He was afterward handed in to the [[Soviet occupation of Romania|Soviet occupation forces]], and transported to [[Moscow]], together with his deputy Mihai Antonescu, Governor of Transnistria [[Gheorghe Alexianu]], [[Ministry of National Defense (Romania)|Defense Minister]] [[Constantin Pantazi]], [[Jandarmeria Română|Gendarmerie]] commander [[Constantin Vasiliu]] and Bucharest [[Romanian Police|Police]] chief [[Mircea Elefterescu]].<ref name="del244">Deletant, p.244</ref><ref name="drasum3m"/> They was subsequently kept in luxurious detention at a mansion nearby the city,<ref>Deletant, p.244, 246. Cf. Cioroianu, p.296</ref><ref name="drasum3m"/> and guarded by [[SMERSH]], a special [[counter-intelligence]] body answering directly to Stalin.<ref name="drasum3m"/> Shortly after the [[surrender of Germany]] in May 1945, the group was moved to [[Lubyanka (KGB)|Lubyanka prison]]. There, Antonescu was interrogated and reputedly pressured by SMERSH operatives, among them [[Viktor Semyonovich Abakumov]], but transcripts of their conversations were never sent back to Romania by the Soviet authorities.<ref>Deletant, p.246, 346</ref><ref name="drasum3m"/> Later research noted that the main issues discussed were the German-Romanian alliance, the war on the Soviet Union, the economic toll on both countries, and [[Holocaust in Romania|Romania's participation]] in the [[Holocaust]] (defined specifically as crimes against "peaceful Soviet citizens").<ref name="drasum3m"/> At some point during this period, Antonescu attempted suicide in his quarters.<ref name="del244"/><ref name="drasum3m"/> He was returned to Bucharest in spring 1946, being held in [[Jilava prison]]. He was subsequently interrogated by prosecutor [[Avram Bunaciu]], to whom he complained about the conditions of his detainment, contrasting them with those in Moscow, while explaining that he was a [[vegetarian]] and demanding a special diet.<ref>Deletant, p.249</ref>
This ideology explains the subsequent atrocities ordered by Antonescu,{{Fact|date=February 2009}} of which the [[Iaşi pogrom]] was the first. Here, over 10,000 Jews were killed in July 1941. In the same year, following the advancing Romanian Army and reports of alleged attacks by Jewish "Resistance groups", Antonescu ordered{{Fact|date=February 2009}} the deportation to [[Transnistria (World War II)|Transnistria]] of Jews from Bessarabia and Bukovina (between 80,000 and 150,000) who were considered, falsely, "Communist agents" by the Romanian administration. {{Fact|date=March 2009}} These deportations took place by means of so-called "trains of death", which were specifically designed to let as few survivors as possible reach their destinations{{Fact|date=March 2009}} - labor camps set up in Transnistria where many more Jews were to die under appalling circumstances. Further killings perpetrated by Antonescu's soldiers targeted the Jewish population that the Romanian army managed to round up during the occupation of Transnistria. Over 100,000 of these were killed in massacres perpetrated in [[Odessa Massacre|Odessa]], [[Bogdanovka]] and [[Akmecetka]] in 1941 and 1942.{{Fact|date=March 2009}} Some of this killing operations were seconded by SS units of the Einsatzgruppe D.{{Fact|date=March 2009}}


===Trial and execution===
Despite German pressure, in 1943 Antonescu halted deportations to Transnistria and cancelled plans to deport the entire Jewish population from the remaining parts of the country to the death camps in German occupied Poland.{{Fact|date=March 2009}} This is not evidence that he recanted his anti-Semitism, but only that he began to realise that the war is lost and that he needed to find means to reconcile with the Allies. {{Fact|date=March 2009}} At the same time he levied heavy taxes and forced labor on the remaining Jewish communities. {{Fact|date=March 2009}} In fact, Antonescu never gave up his ultra-nationalist policy of ethnic cleansing. As he himself put it, his aim was a:
[[Image:Ion Antonescu during his trial.jpg|thumb|180px|Ion Antonescu during his trial]]
In May 1946, Ion Antonescu was prosecuted at the first in a series of [[Romanian People's Tribunals|People's Tribunals]], on charges of [[war crime]]s, [[crimes against the peace]] and [[treason]].<ref>''Final Report'', p.317-331; Cioroianu, p.295-296; Deletant, p.245-261, 346-350; Frankowski, p.218-219</ref><ref name="drasum3m"/> The idea of organizing it had first been proposed by the PNŢ,<ref name="drasum3m"/> and was compatible with the [[Nuremberg Trials]] in [[Allied Occupation Zones in Germany|Allied-occupied Germany]].<ref>''Final Report'', p.316, 319-320, 331; Deletant, p.247-248, 261</ref><ref name="drasum3m"/> The Romanian legislative framework was drafted by coup participant Pătrăşcanu, who had been granted leadership of the [[Ministry of Justice and Citizenship Freedoms (Romania)|Justice Ministry]] as a PCR member.<ref>Ioanid, p.235. Cf. ''Final Report'', p.316-317; Frankowski, p.219</ref> Despite the idea having earned support from several sides of the political spectrum, the procedures were politicized in a sense favorable to the PCR and the Soviet Union,<ref>''Final Report'', p.313-331; Cioroianu, p.295-296; Deletant, p.245-261; Frankowski, p.218-219</ref><ref name="drasum3m"/> and posed a legal problem for being based on ''[[Ex post facto law|ex post facto]]'' decisions.<ref>Deletant, p.248, 255</ref> The first such local trial took place in 1945, resulting in the sentencing of [[Iosif Iacobici]], [[Nicolae Macici]], [[Constantin Trestioreanu]] and other soldiers commanders directly involved in planning or carrying out the [[1941 Odessa massacre|Odessa massacre]].<ref>Deletant, p.172, 248-249, 328. ''Final Report'', p.314</ref>


Antonescu was represented by [[Constantin Paraschivescu-Bălăceanu]] and [[Titus Stoica]], two [[public defender]]s whom he had first consulted with a day before the procedures were initiated.<ref>Deletant, p.251</ref> The prosecution team, led by [[Vasile Stoican]], and the panel of judges, presided over by [[Alexandru Voitinovici]], were infiltrated by PCR supporters.<ref>''Final Report'', p.313, 322; Deletant, p.250-251</ref> Both consistently failed to admit that Antonescu's foreign policies were overall dictated by Romania's positioning between Germany and the Soviet Union.<ref>''Final Report'', p.320-321; Deletant, p.248</ref><ref name="drasum3m"/> Nevertheless, and although references to the mass murders formed just 23% of the indictment and corpus of evidence (ranking below charges of anti-Soviet aggression),<ref>''Final Report'', p.321</ref> the procedures also included Antonescu's admission of and self-exculpating take on war crimes, including the deportations to Transnistria.<ref>''Final Report'', p.240-241, 252, 321-322; Achim, p.168; Deletant, p.73, 252-255, 261, 276-277; Kelso, p.97</ref><ref name="drasum3m"/>They also show his awareness of the Odessa massacre, accompanied by his claim that few of the deaths were his direct responsibility.<ref>''Final Report'', p.245; Deletant, p.173-174, 252-253, 261, 276-277, 329</ref> One notable event at the trial was a testimony by PNŢ leader [[Iuliu Maniu]]. Reacting against the aggressive tone of other accusers, Maniu went on record saying: "We [Maniu and Antonescu] were political adversaries, not [[Cannibalism|cannibals]]."<ref name="drasum3m"/> Upon leaving the bench, Maniu walked toward Antonescu and shook his hand.<ref>Deletant, p.255-256, 348</ref><ref name="drasum3m"/>
<blockquote>policy of purification of the Romanian race, and I will not give way before any obstacle in achieving this historical goal of our nation. If we do not take advantage of the situation which presents itself today ... we shall miss the last chance that history offers to us. And I do not wish to miss it, because if I do so further generations will blame me.<ref>Deletant, p. 155</ref></blockquote>


Ion Antonescu was found guilty of the charges. This verdict was followed by two sets of [[appeal]]s, which claimed that the restored and amended [[1923 Constitution of Romania|1923 Constitution]] did not offer a framework for the People's Tribunals and prevented [[Capital punishment in Romania|capital punishment]] during peacetime, while noting that, contrary to the armistice agreement, only one power represented within the [[Allied Commission]] had supervised the tribunal.<ref>Deletant, p.248, 255</ref> They were both rejected within six days, in compliance with a legal deadline on the completion of trials by the People's Tribunals.<ref>Deletant, p.248, 261</ref> King Michael subsequently received pleas for [[Pardon|clemency]] from Antonescu's lawyer and his mother, and reputedly considered asking the Allies to reassess the case as part of the actual Nuremberg Trials, taking Romanian war criminals into foreign custody.<ref>Deletant, p.255-257, 349-350</ref> Subjected to pressures by the new Soviet-backed [[Petru Groza]] executive, he issued a decree in favor of execution.<ref>Deletant, p.256-259, 349-350</ref> Together with his co-defendants Mihai Antonescu, Alexianu and Vasiliu, the former ''Conducător'' was executed by a military [[firing squad]] on June 1, 1946. Ion Antonescu's supporters circulated false rumors that regular soldiers had refused to fire at their commander, and that the squad was mostly composed of Jewish policemen.<ref>Deletant, p.259, 350</ref> Another apologetic claim insists that he himself ordered the squad to shoot, but footage of the event has proven it false.<ref>Deletant, p.5, 259</ref> It is however attested that he refused a blindfold and raised his hat in salute once the order was given.<ref>Deletant, p.259</ref> The execution site, some distance away from the locality of [[Jilava]] and the prison fort, was known as ''Valea Piersicilor'' ("Valley of the Peach Trees").<ref>Cioroianu, p.296; Deletant, p.259</ref><ref name="drasum3m"/> His final written statement was a letter to his wife, urging her to withdraw into a convent, while stating the belief that posterity would reconsider his deeds and accusing Romanians of being "ungrateful".<ref>Deletant, p.260</ref>
With the turn of the war, he only changed the method of implementation, offering the Allies the emigration of the Romanian Jews in return for currency.{{Fact|date=March 2009}}


==Ideology==
This policy of ethnic cleansing also explains why about 25,000 [[Romani people|Roma]] (approximately 11,500 [[nomad]]ic and 13,000 non-nomadic Romas) were deported to Transnistria where an estimated 11,000 perished. These deportations were presented as a "solution" to maintain safety in the country while most of the men were at the frontline.{{Fact|date=March 2009}}
===Nationalism and expansionism===
[[File:Rom1942.png|thumb|300px|Romania in 1942. [[Northern Transylvania]] to [[Hungary]] and [[Transnistria (World War II)|Transnistria]] under Romanian administration]]
[[Nationalism]] was a main motivator behind Antonescu's policies. A firm believer in the restoration of [[Greater Romania]] as the union of lands inhabited by [[Romanians|Romanian ethnics]], he permanently objected to [[Northern Transylvania]]'s incorporation into Hungary. Although both countries were technically allied through the Axis system, their relationship was always tense, and marked by serious diplomatic incidents.<ref>''Final Report'', p.171-172; Deletant, p.61-62, 75-76, 79, 167; Haynes, p.106-110, 120; Ioanid, p.245; Traşcă, p.380-385</ref> The Romanian leader kept contacts with representatives of ethnic Romanian communities directly affected by the [[Second Vienna Award]], including [[Romanian Church United with Rome, Greek-Catholic|Transylvanian Greek-Catholic]] clergy.<ref>Kent, p.224</ref> Another aspect of Antonescu's nationalist policies was evidenced after the [[Balkans Campaign]]. Antonescu's Romania did not partake in the military action, but laid a claim to the territories in eastern [[Vojvodina]] (western [[Banat]]) and the [[Timočka Krajina|Timok Valley]], home to a sizable [[Romanians of Serbia|Romanian community]]. Reportedly, Germany's initial designs of attributing Vojvodina to Hungary enhanced the tensions between Antonescu and [[Miklós Horthy]] to the point where war between the two countries became a possibility.<ref>Deletant, p.76; Haynes, p.99-100, 102-109</ref> Such incidents made Germany indefinitely prolong its occupation of the region.<ref>Deletant, p.76; Haynes, p.99-100, 108-110, 120</ref> The Romanian authorities issued projects for an independent [[Macedonia (region)|Macedonia]] with autonomy for its [[Aromanians|Aromanian]] communities,<ref>Deletant, p.76, 326</ref> while an official memorandum on the Timok region, approved by Antonescu, made mention of "Romanian" areas "from Timok [...] to [[Thessaloniki|Salonika]]".<ref>Haynes, p.119</ref> The ''Conducător'' also maintained contacts with Aromanian fascists in [[Axis occupation of Greece during World War II|Axis-occupied Greece]], awarding refuge to [[Principality of Pindus]] leaders [[Alchiviad Diamandi di Samarina]] and [[Nicola Matushi]], whose pro-Romanian policies had brought them into conflict with other Macedonian factions.<ref>[[John S. Koliopoulos]], ''Plundered Loyalties: Axis Occupation and Civil Strife in Greek West Macedonia, 1941-1949'', [[C. Hurst & Co. Publishers]], London, 1999, p.87-88. ISBN 1-85065-381-X</ref>


''Conducător'' Antonescu thought Hitler willing to revise his stance on Northern Transylvania, and claimed to have obtained the German leader's agreement, using it to justify participation on the [[Eastern Front (World War II)|Eastern Front]] after the recovery of Bessarabia.<ref>''Final Report'', p.253; Deletant, p.62, 85-87, 93; Traşcă, p.379-380. Cf. ''Final Report'', p.171-172</ref><ref name="drasum3m"/> However, transcripts of the Hitler-Antonescu conversations do not validate his interpretation.<ref name="del62"/><ref name="drasum3m"/> Another version has it that Hitler sent Antonescu a letter informing him that Bessarabia's political status was ultimately depending on German decisions.<ref name="drasum3m"/> In one of his letters to Hitler, Antonescu himself stated an [[Anti-communism|anti-communist]] ideological motivation: "I confirm that I will pursue operations in the east to the end against that great enemy of civilization, of Europe, and of my country: [[Russia]]n [[Bolshevik|Bolshevism]] [...] I will not be swayed by anyone not to extend this military cooperation into new territory."<ref>Deletant, p.85. Partly rendered in Traşcă, p.378</ref> Antonescu's ideological perspective blended national sentiment with generically [[Christianity|Christian]] and particularly [[Romanian Orthodox Church|Romanian Orthodox]] traits. This identity issue is confronted by British historian Arnold D. Harvey with [[Nazism|Nazi doctrine]] and its [[religion in Nazi Germany|anti-religious elements]]: "It seems that Hitler was not even perturbed by the militant Christian orientation of the Antonescu regime".<ref name="adh498"/>
==Notes==
{{reflist}}


It is also possible that, contrary to Antonescu's own will, Hitler viewed the transfer of [[Transnistria (World War II)|Transnistria]] as compensation for the Transylvanian areas, and that he therefore considered the matter closed.<ref>Achim, p.184; Boia, p.270; Deletant, p.167, 326; Traşcă, p.380-385; White, p.157-158</ref> According to the Romanian representative in Berlin, [[Raoul Bossy]], various German and Hungarian officials recommended the extension of permanent Romanian rule into Transnistria, as well as into [[Podolia]], [[Galicia (Central Europe)|Galicia]] and [[Pokuttya]], in exchange for delivering the whole of Transylvania to Hungary (and relocating its ethnic Romanian majority to the new provinces).<ref>Traşcă, p.380-382</ref> American political scientist [[Charles King (author)|Charles King]] writes: "There was never any attempt to annex the occupied territory [of Transnistria], for it was generally considered by the Romanian government to be a temporary [[buffer zone]] between Greater Romania and the Soviet front line."<ref>King, p.93</ref> At his 1946 trial, Antonescu claimed that Transnistria had been occupied to prevent Romania being caught in a "pincer" by Germany, "the question of ''[[Drang nach Osten]]''", and the ''[[Volksdeutsche]]'' communities, while denying charges of having exploited the region for Romania's benefit.<ref>Deletant, p.253-254</ref>
==References==
* [[Antony Beevor]], ''[[Stalingrad (book)|Stalingrad]]'' (Viking Press, New York, 1999). ISBN 0140249850
* Jean Ancel, ''Transnistria, 1941-1942, The Romanian Mass Murder Campaigns'' (Tel Aviv, 2003), Vol. I, (English); Vol. II, (Romanian); Vol. III, (Romanian)
* [[Randolph L. Braham]], ''The Destruction of Romanian and Ukrainian Jews during the Antonescu Era'' (New York, 1997). ISBN 0880333804
* I. C. Butnaru, ''The Silent Holocaust: Romania and its Jews'', (New York/London, 1992). ISBN 0313279853
* Matatias Carp, ''Holocaust in Romania. Facts and Documents on the Annihilation of Romania's Jews'' (Safety Harbor, Fla., 2000)
* Dennis Deletant, ''Hitler's Forgotten Ally: Ion Antonescu and his Regime, Romania, 1940-1944'' (London, 2006). ISBN 1403993416
* Radu Ioanid, ''The Holocaust in Romania: The Destruction of Jews and Gypsies Under the Antonescu Regime'', 1940-1944 (Washington, 2000)
*Mariana Hausleitner, ''Die Rumänisierung der Bukowina. Die Durchsetzung des nationalstaatlichen Anspruchs Großrumäniens 1918-1944'' (Oldenbourg, 2001)
* Mariana Hausleitner, ''Deutsche und Juden in Bessarabien 1814-1941. Zur Minderheitenpolitik Russlands und Großrumäniens'' (Munich, 2005)


Romanian historian [[Lucian Boia]] believes that Ion Antonescu may have nevertheless had [[Expansionism|expansionist]] goals to the east, and that he implicitly understood [[Operation Barbarossa]] as a tool for containing [[Slavic peoples]].<ref>Boia, p.270-271</ref> Similar verdicts are provided by other researchers.<ref>''Final Report'', p.253; Gella, p.171</ref> Another Romanian historian, Ottmar Traşcă, argues that Antonescu did not wish to annex the region "at least until the end of the war", but notes that Antonescu's own statements make reference to its incorporation in the event of a victory.<ref name="ot383">Traşcă, p.383</ref> In addition to early annexation plans to the [[Southern Bug]] (reportedly confessed to Bossy in June 1941),<ref>Deletant, p.79</ref> the ''Conducător'' is known to have presented his ministers with plans for the region's [[colonization]].<ref>Deletant, p.152-153; Traşcă, p.383</ref> The motivation he cited for this was alleged [[malnutrition]] among Romanian peasants: "I'll take this population, I'll lead it into Transnistria, where I shall give it all the land it requires".<ref name="ot383"/> Several nationalists sympathetic to Antonescu acclaimed the extension of Romanian rule into Transnistria, which they understood as permanent.<ref>Deletant, p.325-326; Haynes, p.119-120; White, p.175</ref>
== External links ==
* [http://www.worldwar2.ro/generali/?article=96 Marshal Ion Antonescu @ Romanian Armed Forces in the Second World War]
* [http://www1.yadvashem.org/about_yad/what_new/data_whats_new/report1.html#romania The report of the International Commission on the Holocaust in Romania was submitted to President Ion Iliescu in Bucharest on November 11, 2004]
* [http://video.google.com/videoplay?docid=63931722483983059&q=ion+antonescu Video - Ion Antonescu and Horia Sima - 1940]
* [http://video.google.com/videoplay?docid=-8093664066671587742 Actual footage of Antonescu's death before a firing squad] (May be unsuitable for sensitive viewers)
* {{ro icon}} [http://www.bbc.co.uk/romanian/news/story/2007/02/070223_moldova_antonescu_critici.shtml "Moldova critică reabilitarea parţială a lui Antonescu"], ''[[BBC News]]'', [[February 23]], [[2007]].


===Antisemitism and antiziganism===
{{start box}}
A recurring element in Antonescu's doctrines is [[racism]], and in particular [[antisemitism]]. This was linked to his sympathy for [[Ethnocracy|ethnocratic]] ideals, and complimented by his statements in favor of "[[integral nationalism]]" and "Romanianism".<ref>''Final Report'', p.116, 181</ref> Like other [[far right]] Romanians, he saw a Jewish presence behind [[liberal democracy]], and believed in the existence of [[Judeo-Masonry]].<ref>''Final Report'', p.246-247, 248, 322-323</ref> His earliest thoughts on Codreanu's ideology criticize the Legionary leader for advocating "brutal measures" in dealing with the "invasion of Jews", and instead propose "the organization of Romanian classes" as a method for reaching the same objective.<ref name="del39"/> Politician [[Aureliu Weiss]] recalled that, although antisemitic "to the core", the emerging leader Antonescu was capable of restrain in public.<ref name="fr243">''Final Report'', p.243</ref> According to historian [[Mihail Ionescu]], the ''Conducător'' was not averse to the Iron Guard's "Legionary principles", but wanted antisemitism to be "applied in an orderly fashion", as opposed to [[Horia Sima]]'s revolutionary ways.<ref name="drasum1m"/> Historian [[Ioan Scurtu]] believes that, during the [[Legionnaires' rebellion and Bucharest pogrom|Legionary Rebellion]], Antonescu deliberately waited before stepping in, in order for the Guard to be "profoundly discredited" and for himself to be perceived as a "savior".<ref name="drasum1m"/> In April 1941, he let his ministers know that he was considering letting "the mob" deal with the Jews, "and after the slaughter, I will restore order."<ref name="fr243"/> Lucian Boia notes that the Romanian leader was indeed motivated by antisemitic beliefs, but that these need to be contextualized in order to understand what separates Antonescu from Hitler in terms of radicalism.<ref>Boia, p.260</ref> However, various other researchers assess that, by aligning himself with Hitler before and during [[Operation Barbarossa]], Antonescu implicitly agreed with his thoughts on the "[[Jewish Question]]", choosing [[Racial antisemitism|racial]] over [[religious antisemitism]].<ref>''Final Report'', p.116, 127-128, 181-182, 184, 202-203, 323, 325, 383, 385; Deletant, p.1, 128-129; Traşcă, p.388-389</ref><ref name="drasum2m"/> According to Harvey, the [[Iaşi pogrom]] made the Germans "evidently willing to accept that organized Christianity in Romania was very different from what it was in Germany".<ref name="adh498"/>
{{s-off}}
{{succession box|
before=[[Ion Gigurtu]]|
title=[[List of Prime Ministers of Romania|Prime Minister of Romania]]|
years=[[1940]] [[September 4]] &ndash; [[1944]] [[August 23]]|
after=[[Constantin Sănătescu]]
}}
{{end box}}


Antonescu was a firm believer in the [[conspiracy theory]] of "[[Jewish Bolshevism]]", according to which all Jews were supporters of [[communism]] and the Soviet Union.<ref>''Final Report'', p.101, 209-211, 243-247, 384; Deletant, p.15-20, 116-120, 128-129, 138, 140-141, 210-211, 259, 276-277, 318; Ioanid, p.232-233; Traşcă, p.387-389. Cf. Penkower, p.182</ref><ref name="drasum2m"/> His arguments on the matter involved a spurious claim that, during the [[Soviet occupation of Bessarabia and Northern Bukovina|1940 retreat from Bessarabia]], the Jews had organized themselves and attacked Romanian soldiers.<ref>''Final Report'', p.82-86, 247, 285; Deletant, p.15-20, 140-142, 318; Ioanid, p.232; Traşcă, p.387. Several researchers mention violence committed by retreating Romanian troops against the [[Bessarabian Jews]] (Browning, p.275-276; Deletant, p.18; King p.93) or the retaliatory [[Dorohoi pogrom]] (''Final Report'', p.84-86).</ref><ref name="drasum2m"/> In part, this notion exaggerated unilateral reports of enthusiasm among the marginalized Jews upon the arrival of [[Red Army]] troops.<ref>Boia, p.258-259; Deletant, p.15-20; Ornea, p.394</ref> In a summer 1941 address to his ministers, Antonescu stated: "The Satan is the Jew. [Ours] is a battle of life and death. Either we win and the world will be purified, either they win and we will become their slaves."<ref>Deletant, p.85. Partly rendered in ''Final Report'', p.244 and Traşcă, p.388</ref> At around the same time, he envisaged the [[ethnic cleansing]] ("cleaning out") of Jews from the eastern Romanian-held territories.<ref>''Final Report'', p.120-122, 127-142, 169, 175-177, 321; Ancel (2005 a), p.15-19, 291, 402; Deletant, p.79, 116-118, 127-130, 142-150, 155-156, 319; Polonsky & Michlic, p.27. The term used by [[Mihai Antonescu]] in his recommendations to the Romanian administrators is "ethnic purification", as confinement to "labor camps, where Jews and other foreigners with doubtful attitudes will not be able to exercise their prejudicial influences" (Ioanid, p.232). Cf.: Achim, p.167; Browning, p.276; Traşcă, p.387-389</ref><ref name="drasum2m"/> However, as early as February 1941, Antonescu was also contemplating the [[ghetto]]ization of all Jewish Romanians, as an early step toward their expulsion.<ref>Deletant, p.129</ref> In this context, Antonescu frequently depicted Jews as a disease or a poison.<ref>''Final Report'', p.133-134; Deletant, p.118, 206</ref> After the [[Battle of Stalingrad]], he encouraged the army commanders to resist the counteroffensive, as otherwise the Soviets "will bring Bolshevism to the country, wipe out the entire leadership stratum, impose the Jews on us, and deport masses of our people."<ref>Ancel (2005 b), p.234</ref>
{{RomanianPrimeMinisters}}
{{First Cristea Cabinet}}
{{Marshals of Romania}}
{{Combined Pilots-Observation Badge with Diamonds}}


Ion Antonescu's [[antiziganism]] manifested itself as the claim that some or all [[Romani people]], specifically [[Nomadic peoples of Europe|nomadic]] ones, were given to criminal behavior.<ref>''Final Report'', p.225-228, 240-241; Achim, p.168-169; Deletant, p.189-190; Ioanid, p.234; Kelso, p.97-98</ref> Such a view was contrasted by the regime's own actions: in various cases, those deported had close relatives drafted into the Romanian Army.<ref>''Final Report'', p.229; Achim, p.169; Deletant, p.192; Ioanid, p.234; Kelso, p.101, 105, 124-127</ref> Although racist slogans targeting Romani people had been popularized by the Iron Guard, it was only under Antonescu's unchallenged rule that solving the "Gypsy problem" became official policy and antiziganist measures were enforced.<ref>''Final Report'', p.225-226; Achim, p.166-167; Deletant, p.187-189</ref> After a February 1941 inspection, Antonescu singled out Bucharest's Romani community for alleged offenses committed during the [[Blackout (wartime)|blackout]], and called on his ministers to present him with solutions.<ref>''Final Report'', p.227, 240-241; Achim, p.168, 171; Deletant, p.188-189, 254</ref> Initially, he contemplated sending all Romani people he considered undesirable to the inhospitable [[Bărăgan Plain]], to join the ranks of a local community of manual laborers.<ref>''Final Report'', p.225-226; Achim, p.168, 171; Deletant, p.188</ref> In 1942, he commissioned the Romanian Central Institute for Statistics to compile a report on Romani [[demography]], which, in its edited form, provided [[Scientific racism|scientifically racist]] conclusions, warning the ''Conducător'' about alleged Romani-Romanian [[miscegenation]] in rural Romania.<ref>Kelso, p.98</ref> In doing so, Antonescu offered some credit to a marginal and [[Pseudoscience|pseudoscientific]] trend in Romanian sociology, which, basing itself on [[Eugenics|eugenic]] theories, recommended the marginalization, deportation or [[compulsory sterilization]] of the Romani people, whose numeric presence it usually exaggerated.<ref>''Final Report'', p.223-228; Achim, p.164-168</ref> Among those who signed the report was demographer [[Sabin Manuilă]], who saw the Romani presence as a major racial problem.<ref>''Final Report'', p.227; Achim, p.168; Deletant, p.187-188</ref> The exact effect of the report's claims on Antonescu is uncertain.<ref>According to Achim (p.167-170, 179, 182-183, 185) and Deletant (p.189-190), the measures reflected Antonescu's views on "social problems" more than a racist perspective. However, Kelso (p.99-100) believes the report was a notable factor in the decision to deport the Romani people.</ref>
<!-- Metadata: see [[Wikipedia:Persondata]] -->


===Fascism and conservatism===
{{Persondata
|NAME= Antonescu, Ion Victor
|ALTERNATIVE NAMES=
|SHORT DESCRIPTION= prime minister and ''conducător'' (Leader) of Romania during World War II
|DATE OF BIRTH=[[June 15]], [[1882]]
|PLACE OF BIRTH=[[Piteşti]], [[Romania]]
|DATE OF DEATH=[[June 1]], [[1946]]
|PLACE OF DEATH=[[Jilava]], [[Romania]]
}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Antonescu, Ion}}
[[Category:Prime Ministers of Romania]]
[[Category:Romanian Ministers of Defense]]
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[[Category:Romanian Eastern Orthodox Christians]]
[[Category:Romanian Orthodox Christians]]
[[Category:Romanian fascists]]
[[Category:Field Marshals of Romania]]
[[Category:Romanian military personnel of World War I]]
[[Category:Romanian people of World War II]]
[[Category:Recipients of the Knight's Cross]]
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[[Category:Order of Michael the Brave recipients]]
[[Category:People convicted by the Romanian People's Tribunals]]
[[Category:People from Piteşti]]
[[Category:Holocaust perpetrators]]
[[Category:Romanian Nazi collaborators]]
[[Category:People executed by firing squad]]
[[Category:Executed politicians]]
[[Category:Deaths by firearm in Romania]]
[[Category:1882 births]]
[[Category:1946 deaths]]
[[Category:Romanian people convicted of war crimes]]
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[[Category:Executed Romanian people]]
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[[Category:Filmed executions]]

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Revision as of 09:38, 4 April 2009

Ion Victor Antonescu
File:Ion Antonescu.jpg
Ion Antonescu, minutes before his execution
Prime Minister of Romania
In office
September 5, 1940 – August 23, 1944
Preceded byIon Gigurtu
Succeeded byConstantin Sănătescu
Conducător of Romania
In office
September 6, 1940 – August 23, 1944
Preceded byCarol II (as King of Romania)
Succeeded bynone
Personal details
BornJune 15, 1882
Piteşti
DiedJune 1, 1946(1946-06-01) (aged 63)
Jilava
NationalityRomanian
Political partynone*
SpouseMaria Antonescu
Professionsoldier
Military service
RankMarshal of Romania

Ion Victor Antonescu (June 15, 1882–June 1, 1946) was a Romanian soldier, authoritarian politician and convicted war criminal. The Prime Minister and Conducător during most of World War II, he presided over two successive wartime dictatorships. A Romanian Army career officer who made his name during the 1907 peasants' revolt and the World War I Romanian Campaign, the antisemitic Antonescu sympathized with the far right and fascist National Christian and Iron Guard groups for much of the interwar period. A military attaché to France and later Chief of the General Staff, he briefly served as Defense Minister in the National Christian cabinet of Octavian Goga. During the late 1930s, his political stance brought him into conflict with King Carol II and led to his detainment. Antonescu nevertheless rose to political prominence during the political crisis of 1940, and established the National Legionary State, an uneasy partnership with the Iron Guard's leader Horia Sima. After entering Romania into an alliance with Nazi Germany and the Axis and ensuring Adolf Hitler's confidence, he eliminated the Guard during the Legionary Rebellion of 1941. In addition to leadership of the executive, he assumed the offices of Foreign Affairs and Defense Minister. Soon after Romania joined the Axis in Operation Barbarossa, recovering Bessarabia and Northern Bukovina, Antonescu also became Marshal of Romania.

An atypical figure among Holocaust perpetrators, Antonescu enforced policies independently responsible for the deaths of as many as 400,000 people, most of them Bessarabian, Ukrainian and Romanian Jews, as well as Romani Romanians. The regime's complicity in the Holocaust combined pogroms and mass murders such as the Odessa massacre with ethnic cleansing, systematic deportations to occupied Transnistria and widespread criminal negligence. The system in place was nevertheless characterized by singular inconsistencies, prioritizing plunder over killing, showing leniency toward most Jews in the Old Kingdom, and ultimately refusing to endorse the Final Solution as applied throughout Nazi-occupied Europe.

Confronted with heavy losses on the Eastern Front, Antonescu embarked on inconclusive negotiations with the Allies, just before a political coalition, formed around the young monarch Michael I, toppled him during the August 23, 1944 Coup. After a brief detention in the Soviet Union, the deposed Conducător was handed back to Romania, where he was tried by a special People's Tribunal and executed. This was part of a series of trials, which also passed sentences on his various associates, as well as his wife Maria. The judicial procedures earned much criticism for responding to the Romanian Communist Party's ideological priorities, a matter which fueled nationalist and far right attempts to have Antonescu posthumously exonerated. While these groups elevated Antonescu to the status of hero, his involvement in the Holocaust was officially reasserted following the 2003 Wiesel Commission report.

Biography

Early life and career

Born in Piteşti town, north-west of the capital Bucharest, Antonescu was the scion of an upper-middle class Romanian Orthodox family with some military tradition.[1] He was especially close to his mother, Liţa Baranga, who survived his death.[2] His father, an army officer, wanted Ion to follow in his footsteps, and as such, he sent him to attend the Infantry and Cavalry School in Craiova.[1] According to one account, Ion Antonescu was briefly colleagues with Wilhelm Filderman, the future Romanian Jewish community activist whose interventions with Conducător Antonescu helped save a number of his coreligionists.[3] After graduation, in 1904, Antonescu joined the Romanian Army with the rank of Second Lieutenant. He spent the following two years attending courses at the Special Cavalry Section in Târgovişte.[1] Reportedly, he was a zealous and goal-setting student, upset by the slow pace of promotions, and compensating for his diminutive stature through toughness.[4] In time, the reputation of being a tough and ruthless commander, together with his reddish hair earned him the nickname Câinele Roşu ("The Red Dog").[4] Antonescu also developed a reputation for questioning his commanders, and for appealing to higher instances whenever he felt they were wrong.[4]

During the repression of the 1907 peasants' revolt, he was the head of a cavalry unit in Covurlui County.[1][4] Opinions on his role in the events diverge: while some historians believe Antonescu was a particularly violent participant in the quelling,[5][4] others equate his participation with that of regular officers[4] or view it as outstandingly tactful.[1] In addition to restricting peasant protests, Antonescu's unit subdued socialist activities in Galaţi port.[5] His handling of the situation earned him praise from King Carol I, who sent Crown Prince (future monarch) Ferdinand to congratulate him in front of the whole garrison.[1] The following year, Antonescu was promoted to Lieutenant, and, between 1911 and 1913, he attended the Advanced War School, receiving the rank of Captain upon graduation.[1] In 1913, during the Second Balkan War against Bulgaria, Antonescu served as a staff officer in the First Cavalry Division in Dobruja.[1]

World War I

After 1916, when the Kingdom of Romania entered World War I on the Entente side, Ion Antonescu acted as chief of staff for General Constantin Prezan.[1] In August 1916, upon the start of the Romanian campaign, Romanian troops crossed the Carpathian Mountains, marching into the Austro-Hungarian-ruled region of Transylvania, but their effort was halted when the Central Powers opened new fronts. Bulgarian and Imperial German armies decisively defeated their ill-equipped and poorly-defended Romanian adversaries in the Battle of Turtucaia (August 24), and advanced into Dobruja. When enemy troops crossed the mountains from Transylvania into Wallachia, Antonescu was ordered to design a defense plan for Bucharest.[1]

The Romanian royal court, army and administration were subsequently forced to retreat into Moldavia, the last portion of territory still under Romanian control. Henceforth, he partook in any important decision involving defensive efforts, an unusual promotion which probably complimented his ambition.[4] In December, as Prezan became the Chief of the General Staff, Antonescu, who was by now a major, was named the head of operations, being involved in the defense of Moldavia. He contributed to the tactics used during the Battle of Mărăşeşti (July-August 1917), when Romanians under General Alexandru Averescu managed to stop the advance of German forces under the command of Field Marshal August von Mackensen.[6] Antonescu lived in Prezan's proximity for the remainder of the war, and influenced his decisions.[7]

That autumn, the October Revolution took place, taking Romania's main ally, the Russian Provisional Government, out of the conflict. Its successor, Bolshevik Russia made peace with the Central Powers by the Treaty of Brest-Litovsk, leaving Romania the only enemy of the Central Powers on the Eastern Front. In these conditions, the Romanian government signed, and the Parliament ratified, Romania's own peace treaty with the Central Powers. Romania broke the treaty later in the year, on grounds that King Ferdinand I had not signed it. During the interval, Antonescu, who viewed the separate peace as "the most rational solution", was assigned command over a cavalry regiment.[7] The renewed offensive played a part in ensuring the union of Transylvania with Romania. After the war, Antonescu's merits as an operations officer were noticed by among others, politician Ion G. Duca, who wrote that "his intelligence, skill and activity, brought credit on himself and invaluable service to the country".[7] Another event occurring late in the war is also credited with having played a major part in Antonescu's life: in 1918, Crown Prince Carol (the future King Carol II) eloped and technically deserted his army posting, to marry the commoner Zizi Lambrino.[4] This outraged Antonescu, who developed enduring contempt for the royal.[4]

Diplomatic assignments and General Staff positions

Lieutenant Colonel Ion Antonescu retained his notoriety during the interwar period. He participated in the political campaign to make Romania's gains in Transylvania recognized at the Paris Peace Conference of 1919. His nationalist argument about a future state of the Romanians was published as the essay Românii. Origina, trecutul, sacrificiile şi drepturile lor ("The Romanians. Their Origin, Their Past, Their Sacrifices and Their Rights"). The booklet claimed extension of Romanian rule beyond the confines of Greater Romania, and recommended, at the risk of war with the emerging Kingdom of Yugoslavia, the annexation of all Banat areas and the Timok Valley.[8] In March 1920, Antonescu was one of three people nominated by the new Averescu executive to be a military attaché of Romania in France, but a report issued by the French military observer in Romania, General Victor Pétin, was negative enough to make the French side choose a certain Colonel Şuţu instead (the text referred to Antonescu as "extremely vain", "chauvinistic" and "xenophobic", while acknowledging his "great military worth").[7]

Nevertheless, in 1922, Şuţu had to leave Paris, and when the Romanian government nominated Antonescu again, the French government felt obliged to accept his nomination, despite renewed criticism from Pétin's part.[9] At the moment of his reassignment, Antonescu was handling military instruction in the Transylvanian city of Sibiu, where his rebellious attitude was causing irritation among his commanders.[10] From 1923, Antonescu was also the Romanian attaché in the United Kingdom and Belgium.[10] After embarking on his mission, he negotiated a credit worth 100 million French francs to be placed in Romania's purchase of French weaponry, and worked together with Romanian League of Nations diplomat Nicolae Titulescu, whose personal friend he became.[10] According to one account, he was also in contact with the Romanian-born conservative aristocrat and writer Marthe Bibesco, who is reported to have introduced Antonescu to the ideas of Gustave Le Bon, a researcher of crowd psychology who had an influence on fascist leaders.[11] The same story has it that Bibesco saw the Romanian officer as a new version of 19th century nationalist rebel Georges Boulanger, introducing him as such to Le Bon.[11] In 1923, he made the acquaintance of lawyer Mihai Antonescu, who was to become his close friend, legal representative and political associate.[12]

After returning to Romania in 1926, Antonescu returned to his teaching position in Sibiu, and, in autumn 1928, was Secretary-General of the Defense Ministry in the Vintilă Brătianu cabinet.[10] He married Maria Niculescu, for long a resident of France, who had been married twice before: to a Romanian Police officer, with whom she had a son, Gheorghe (died 1944), and to Frenchman of Jewish origin.[13] After a period as Deputy Chief of the General Staff,[10] he was appointed its Chief (1933-1934). These assignments coincided with the rule of Carol's underage son Michael I and his regents, and with Carol's seizure of power in 1930. At the time, Antonescu first grew interested in the Iron Guard, an antisemitic and fascist-related movement headed by Corneliu Zelea Codreanu. In his capacity as Deputy Chief of Staff, he ordered the Army's intelligence unit to compile a report on the faction, and made a series of critical notes on Codreanu's various statements.[10]

As Chief of Staff, Antonescu reportedly had his first confrontation with the political class and the monarch. His projects for weapon modernization were questioned by Defense Minister Paul Angelescu, leading Antonescu to present his resignation.[10] According to another account, he completed an official report on the embezzlement of Army funds, which indirectly implicated Carol and his camarilla (see Škoda Affair).[14][4] The king consequently ordered him out of office, provoking indignation among sections of the political mainstream.[4] On Carol's orders, Antonescu was placed under surveillance by the Siguranţa Statului intelligence service, and closely monitored by the Interior Ministry Undersecretary Armand Călinescu.[15] The officer's political credentials were on the rise, and he had contacts with all sides of the political spectrum, while support for Carol plummeted. Antonescu maintained contacts with the two main democratic groups, the National Liberal and the National Peasants' parties (known respectively as PNL and PNŢ).[4] He was also engaged in discussions with the rising far right, antisemitic and fascist movements: although in competition with each other, both the National Christian Party (PNC) of Octavian Goga and the Iron Guard sought to attract Antonescu to their side.[16][4] In 1936, to the authorities' alarm, Army General and Iron Guard member Gheorghe Cantacuzino-Grănicerul arranged a meeting between Ion Antonescu and the movement's leader: Antonescu is reported to have found Codreanu arrogant, but to have welcomed his intention to revolutionize politics.[15]

Defense portfolio and the Codreanu trials

In late 1937, after the December general election came to an inconclusive result, Carol appointed Goga Prime Minister over a far right cabinet meant to curb Codreanu's rise, which was also the first executive to impose racial discrimination in its treatment of the Jewish community. Initially designated the Communications portfolio by his former rival, Interior Minister Armand Călinescu, Antonescu repeatedly demanded the office of Defense Minister, which he was eventually granted.[17] His mandate coincided with a troubled period, and saw Romania having to chose between its traditional alliance with France, Britain, the crumbling Little Entente and the League of Nations or moving closer to Nazi Germany and its Anti-Comintern Pact. Antonescu's own contribution is disputed by historians, who see him as either an Anglo-French alliance supporter or, like the PNC itself, more favorable to cooperation with Adolf Hitler's Germany.[4] At the time, Antonescu viewed Romania's alliance with the Entente core as insurance against Hungarian and Soviet revanchism, but, as an anti-communist, he was suspicious of the Franco-Soviet rapprochement.[18] Particularly concerned about Hungarian demands in Transylvania, he ordered the General Staff to prepare for a western attack.[19] However, his major contribution in office was in relation to an internal crisis: Antonescu extended the already imposed martial law as a response to violent clashes between the Iron Guard and the PNC's own fascist militia, the Lăncieri.[20]

The Goga cabinet ended when the tentative rapprochement between Goga and Codreanu[21] prompted Carol to overthrow the democratic system and proclaim his own authoritarian regime (see 1938 Constitution of Romania, National Renaissance Front). The deposed Premier died in 1938, and Antonescu remained close friend of his widow, Veturia Goga.[22] By that time, revising his earlier stance, Antonescu had also built a close relationship with Codreanu, and was even said to have become his confidant.[23][24] On Carol's request, he had earlier asked the Guard's leader to consider an alliance with the king, which Codreanu promptly refused in favor of negotiations with Goga, coupled with claims that he was not interested in political battles (an attitude supposedly induced by Antonescu himself).[25]

Soon afterward, Călinescu, acting on indications from the monarch, arrested Codreanu and prosecuted him in two successive trials. Antonescu, whose mandate of Defense Minister had been prolonged under the premiership of Miron Cristea, resigned in protest to Codreanu's arrest.[26] He was a celebrity defense witness at the latter's first[24] and second trials.[26] During the latter, which saw Codreanu's conviction for treason, Antonescu vouched for his friend's honesty while shaking his hand in front of the jury.[26] Upon the end of procedures, the king ordered his former minister interned at Predeal, before assigning him to command the Third Army in the remote eastern region of Bessarabia (and later removing him after Antonescu expressed sympathy for Guardists imprisoned in Chişinău).[27] Attempting to discredit his rival, Carol also ordered his wife's trial for bigamy, based on a false claim that her divorce had not been finalized. Defended by Mihai Antonescu, the officer was able to prove his detractors wrong.[28] Codreanu himself was taken into custody and discreetly killed by the Gendarmes acting on Carol's orders (November 1938).[29]

Carol's regime slowly dissolved into crisis, the process being enhanced after the start of World War II, when the military success of the core Axis Powers and the non-aggression pact signed by Germany and the Soviet Union saw Romania isolated and threatened (see Romania during World War II). In 1940, two of Romania's regions, Bessarabia and Northern Bukovina, were lost to a Soviet occupation consented to by the king. This came as Romania, exposed by the Fall of France, was seeking to align its policies with those of Germany.[30] Ion Antonescu himself had come to value a pro-Axis alternative after the 1938 Munich Agreement, when Germany imposed demands on Czechoslovakia with the acquiescence of France and the United Kingdom, leaving locals to fear that, unless reoriented, Romania would follow.[31] Angered by the territorial losses of 1940, General Antonescu sent Carol a general note of protest, and, as a result, was arrested and interned at Bistriţa Monastery.[32][4] While there, he commissioned Mihai Antonescu to establish contacts with Nazi German officials, promising to advance German economic interest, particularly in respect to the local oil industry, in exchange for endorsement.[33] Commenting on Ion Antonescu's ambivalent stance, Hitler's Ambassador to Romania, Wilhelm Fabricius, wrote to his superiors: "I am not convinced that he is a safe man."[34]

Rise to power

Banner of Ion Antonescu as Conducător

His internment ended in August, during which interval Romania had signed off the regions of Southern Dobruja—to Bulgaria, and Northern Transylvania—under Axis pressures, to Hungary (see Treaty of Craiova, Second Vienna Award). The latter grant caused consternation among large sections of Romania's population, causing Carol's popularity to fall to a record low and provoking large-scale protests in Bucharest. These movements were organized in competition by the pro-Allied PNŢ, headed by Iuliu Maniu, and the pro-Nazi Iron Guard, revived under the leadership of Horia Sima.[4] The latter was organizing a coup d'état.[35] Antonescu simply left his assigned residence. He may have been secretly helped in this by German intercession,[36] but was more directly aided to escape by socialite Alice Sturdza, who was acting on Maniu's request.[37] Antonescu subsequently met with Maniu in Ploieşti, where they discussed how best to manage the political situation.[38][4] While these negotiations were carried out, the monarch himself was being advised by his entourage to recover legitimacy by governing in tandem with the increasingly popular Antonescu, while creating a new political majority from the existing forces.[37][4] Carol and Antonescu accepted the proposal, Antonescu being mandated to approach political party leaders Maniu of the PNŢ, Dinu Brătianu of the PNL.[39][4] They all called for Carol's abdication as a preliminary measure,[40][4] while Sima, another leader sought after for negotiations, could not be found in time to express his opinion.[37] Antonescu partly complied with the request but also asked Carol to bestow upon him the reserve powers for Romanian heads of state.[41][4] Carol yielded and, on September 5, 1940, the general became Prime Minister with full powers as head of state.[42][4] The latter's first measure was to curtail potential resistance within the Army by relieving Bucharest garrison chief Gheorghe Argeşanu of his position and replacing him with Dumitru Coroamă.[43] Shortly afterward, Antonescu was informed that two of Carol's loyalist generals Gheorghe Mihail and Paul Teodorescu were allegedly planning to have him killed.[44] In reaction, he imposed formal abdication on the monarch, while General Coroamă was refusing to carry out the royal order of shooting down Iron Guardist protesters.[45]

The king eventually left the throne and Michael I inaugurated his second rule, while Antonescu's effective powers as dictatorial Premier were confirmed and extended.[46][4] He was formally declared Conducător of the state on September 6, by a royal decree which consecrated a ceremonial role for the monarch.[47] Among his subsequent measures was ensuring the safe departure into self-exile of Carol and his lover Elena Lupescu, granting protection to the royal train which found itself attacked by armed members of the Iron Guard.[4] Horia Sima's subsequent cooperation with Antonescu was endorsed by high-ranking Nazi German officials, many of whom feared the Iron Guard was too weak on its own.[48] Antonescu therefore received the approval of Ambassador Fabricius.[49] Despite early promises, Antonescu abandoned projects for the creation of a national government,[50][4] and opted instead for a coalition between a military dictatorship lobby and the Iron Guard.[51][4] He later justified his choice by stating that the Iron Guard "represented the political base of the country at the time."[52]

Antonescu-Sima partnership

The resulting regime, deemed National Legionary State and officially proclaimed on September 14, had Antonescu as Premier and Conducător, with Sima as Deputy Premier and leader of the Iron Guard, the latter being remodeled into a single official party.[53][54][4] Antonescu subsequently ordered Carol's Iron Guardist prisoners to be set free.[55] On October 6, he presided over the Iron Guard's mass rally in Bucharest, one in a series of major celebratory and commemorative events organized by the movement during the late months of 1940.[56] However, he tolerated the PNŢ and PNL's informal existence, allowing them to preserve much of their political support.[57]

There followed a short-lived and always uneasy partnership between Antonescu and Sima. In late September, the new regime denounced all pacts, accords and diplomatic agreements signed under Carol, which brought the regime in Germany's orbit while subverting its relationship with a former Balkan ally, the Kingdom of Yugoslavia.[58] Germans troops entered the country in stages, in order to defend the local oil industry[59] and help instruct their Romanian counterparts on Blitzkrieg tactics.[60] On November 23, Antonescu was in Berlin, where his signature sealed Romania's commitment to the main Axis instrument, the Tripartite Pact.[61][4] Two days later, the country also adhered to the Nazi-led Anti-Comintern Pact.[62] Other than these generic commitments, Romania had no treaty binding it to Germany, and the Romanian-German alliance functioned informally.[63] Speaking in 1946, Antonescu claimed to have followed the pro-German path in continuation of earlier policies, and for fear of a Nazi protectorate in Romania.[64]

During the National Legionary State period, earlier antisemitic legislation was upheld and strengthened, while the "Romanianization" of Jewish-owned enterprises became standard official practice.[65][4] Immediately after coming into office, Antonescu himself expanded the anti-Jewish and Nuremberg law-inspired legislation passed by his predecessors Goga and Ion Gigurtu,[66] while tens of new anti-Jewish regulations were passed in 1941-1942.[67] This was done despite his formal pledge to Wilhelm Filderman and the Jewish Communities Federation that, unless engaged in "sabotage", "the Jewish population will not suffer."[68] Antonescu did not reject the application of Legionary policies, but was offended by Sima's advocacy of paramilitarism and the Guard's frequent recourse to street violence.[69][4] He arose much hostility from his partners by extending some protection to former dignitaries whom the Iron Guard had arrested.[70] One early incident opposed Antonescu to the Guard's magazine Buna Vestire, who accused him of leniency and was subsequently forced to change its editorial board.[71] By then, the Legionary press was routinely claiming that he was obstructing revolution and aiming to take control of the Iron Guard, and that he had been transformed into a tool of the Freemasonry (see Anti-Masonry).[72] The political conflict coincided with major social challenges, including the influx of refugees from areas lost earlier in the year and the large-scale Bucharest earthquake.[73]

Disorder peaked in the last days of November 1940, when, after uncovering the circumstances of Codreanu's death, the fascist movement ordered retaliations against political figures previously associated with Carol, carrying out the Jilava Massacre, the assassinations of Nicolae Iorga and Virgil Madgearu, and several other acts of violence.[74][4] As retaliation for this insubordination, Antonescu ordered the Army to resume control of the streets,[75] unsuccessfully pressured Sima to have the assassins detained, ousted the Iron Guardist prefect of Bucharest Police Ştefan Zăvoianu, and ordered Legionary ministers to swear an oath to the Conducător.[76] His condemnation of the killings was nevertheless limited and discreet, and, the same month, he joined Sima at a burial ceremony for Codreanu's newly-discovered remains.[77] The widening gap between the dictator and Sima's party resonated in Berlin. When, in December, Legionary Foreign Minister Mihail R. Sturdza obtained the replacement of Fabricius with Manfred Freiherr von Killinger, perceived as more sympathetic to the Iron Guard, Antonescu promptly took over leadership of the ministry, which the compliant diplomat Constantin Greceanu as his right hand.[78] In Germany, leaders of the National Socialist Party such as Heinrich Himmler, Baldur von Schirach and Joseph Goebbels[79][4] threw their support behind the Legionaries, whereas Foreign Affairs Minister Joachim von Ribbentrop and the Wehrmacht stood by Antonescu.[4] The latter were concerned that any internal conflict would threaten Romania's oil industry, vital to the German war effort.[80][4] The German leadership was by then secretly organizing Operation Barbarossa, the attack on the Soviet Union.[81][82]

Legionary Rebellion and Operation Barbarossa

Antonescu and Adolf Hitler at the Führerbau in Munich (June 1941). Foreign Minister Joachim von Ribbentrop and Generalfeldmarschall Wilhelm Keitel in the background

Antonescu's plan to act against his coalition partners in the event of further disorder hinged on Hitler's approval,[83][54][84][4] a vague signal of which had been given during ceremonies confirming Romania's adherence to the Tripartite Pact.[85][4] A decisive turn occurred when Hitler invited Antonescu and Sima both over for discussions: whereas Antonescu agreed, Sima stayed behind in Romania, probably plotting a coup d'état.[86][4] While Hitler did not produce a clear endorsement for clamping down on Sima's party, he made remarks interpreted by their recipient as oblique blessings.[87]

The Antonescu-Sima dispute erupted into violence in January 1941, when the Iron Guard instigated a series of attacks on public institutions and a pogrom, incidents collectively known as the "Legionary Rebellion".[88][4] This came after the mysterious assassination of Major Döring, a German agent in Bucharest, which was used by the Iron Guard as a pretext to accuse the Conducător of having a secret anti-German agenda,[89] and made Antonescu oust the Legionary Interior Minister, Constantin Petrovicescu, while closing down all of the Legionary-controlled "Romanianization" offices.[90] Various other clashes prompted him to demand the resignation of all Police commanders who sympathized with the movement.[91] After two days of widespread violence, which resulted in some 120 deaths among Bucharest's Jewish community,[92][4] Antonescu sent in the Army, under the command of General Constantin Sănătescu.[4] German officials acting on Hitler's orders, including the new Ambassador Manfred Freiherr von Killinger, helped Antonescu eliminate the Iron Guardists, but several of their lower-level colleagues actively aided Sima's subordinates.[93] Goebbels was especially upset by the decision to support Antonescu, believing it to have been advantageous to "the Freemasons".[94]

After the events, Hitler kept open an alternative by granting political asylum to Sima, whom Antonescu's courts sentenced to death, and to other Legionaries in similar situations.[95] They were detained in special conditions at Buchenwald and Dachau concentration camps.[96] In parallel, Antonescu publicly obtained the cooperation of Codrenists, members of an Iron Guardist wing which had virulently opposed Sima, and whose leader was Codreanu's father Ion Zelea.[97] Antonescu again sought backing from the PNŢ and PNL to form a national cabinet, but his rejection of parliamentarism made the two groups refuse him.[98]

Antonescu traveled to Germany and met Hitler on eight more occasions between June 1941 and August 1944.[99] Such close contacts helped cement an enduring relationship between the two dictators, and Hitler reportedly came to see Antonescu as the only trustworthy person in Romania,[100][4] and the only foreigner to consult on military matters.[101] In later statements, he offered praise to Antonescu's "breadth of vision" and "real personality."[102] The German military presence increased significantly in early 1941, when, using Romania as a base, Hitler invaded the rebellious Kingdom of Yugoslavia and the Kingdom of Greece (see Balkans Campaign).[103] In parallel, Romania's relationship with the United Kingdom (at the time the only major adversary of Nazi Germany) aggravated into conflict: on February 10, 1941, British Premier Winston Churchill recalled His Majesty's Ambassador Reginald Hoare, and approved the blockade of Romanian ships in British-controlled ports.[104]

In June of that year, Romania joined the attack on the Soviet Union, led by Germany in coalition with Hungary, Finland, the State of Slovakia, the Kingdom of Italy and the Independent State of Croatia. Antonescu had been made aware of the plan by German envoys, and supported it enthusiastically even before Hitler extended Romania an offer to participate.[105] The Romanian force engaged formed a General Antonescu Army Group under the effective command of German general Eugen Ritter von Schobert.[106] Romania's campaign on the Eastern Front began without a formal declaration of war, and was consecrated by Antonescu's statement: "Soldiers, I order you, cross the Prut River."[107] A few days after this, the city of Iaşi witnessed a large-scale pogrom, which killed thousands and was carried out with Antonescu's agreement (see Iaşi pogrom).[108][82]

The first Romanian to be granted the Knight's Cross of the Iron Cross, which he received from Hitler at their August 6 meeting in the Ukrainian city of Berdychiv, Ion Antonescu was promoted to Marshal of Romania by royal decree on August 22, in recognition for his role in restoring the eastern frontiers of Greater Romania.[109] He took one of his most debated decisions when, with Bessarabia's conquest almost complete, he committed Romania to Hitler's war effort over the Dniester and thrust deeper into Soviet territory, thus waging a war of aggression.[110][82] On August 30, Romania occupied a territory it deemed "Transnistria", formerly a part of the Ukrainian SSR (and including the entire Moldavian ASSR).[111][82] Like the decision to continue the war beyond Bessarabia, this earned Antonescu much criticism from the semi-clandestine PNL and PNŢ.[82] Soon after the takeover, the area was assigned to a civil administration apparatus headed by Gheorghe Alexianu and became the site for the main component of the Holocaust in Romania: a mass deportation of the Bessarabian and Ukrainian Jews, followed later by transports of Romani Romanians and Jews from Moldavia proper. The accord over Transnistria's administration, signed in Tighina, also placed areas between the Dniester and the Dnieper under Romanian military occupation, while granting control over all resources to Germany.[112]

Reversal of fortunes

Ribbentrop greeting Antonescu during the latter's return to Germany (1943)

The Romanian Army's inferior arms, insufficient armor and lack of training had been major concerns for the German commanders since before the start of the operation.[113] One of the earliest major obstacles Antonescu encountered on the Eastern Front was the resistance of Odessa, a Soviet port on the Black Sea. Refusing any German assistance, he ordered the Romanian Army to maintain a two-month siege on heavily-fortified and well-defended positions.[114][82] The ill-equipped 4th Army suffered losses of some 100,000 people.[115] Antonescu's popularity again rose in October, when the fall of Odessa was celebrated triumphantly with a parade through Bucharest's Arcul de Triumf, and when many Romanians reportedly believed the war was as good as won.[82] In Odessa itself, the aftermath included a large-scale massacre of the Jewish population, ordered by the Marshal as retaliation for an explosion which killed some 60 Romanian soldiers (General Ioan Glogojeanu among them).[116][82] The city subsequently became the administrative capital of Transnistria.[117][82] According to one account, the Romanian administration planned changing Odessa's name to Antonescu.[118]

As the Soviet Union recovered from the initial shock and slowed down the Axis offensive at the Battle of Moscow (October 1941-January 1942), Romania was asked by its allies to contribute a larger number of troops.[119] A decisive factor in Antonescu's compliance with the request appears to have been a special visit to Bucharest by Wehrmacht commander Wilhelm Keitel, who introduced the Conducător to Hitler's plan for attacking the Caucasus (see Battle of the Caucasus).[119] The Romanian force engaged in the war reportedly exceeded German demands.[119] It came to around 500,000 people[120][119] and thirty actively-involved divisions.[121] As a sign of his satisfaction, Hitler presented his Romanian counterpart with a luxury car.[119] On December 7, 1941, after reflecting on the possibility for Romania, Hungary and Finland to change their stance, the British government responded to repeated Soviet requests and declared war on all three countries.[122] Following Japan's attack on Pearl Harbor and in compliance with its Axis commitment, Romania declared war on the United States five days later. These developments contrasted Antonescu's own statement of December 7: "I am an ally of the [German] Reich against [the Soviet Union], I am neutral in the conflict between Great Britain and Germany. I am for America against the Japanese."[123]

A crucial change in the war came with the Battle of Stalingrad in June 1942-February 1943, a major defeat for the Axis. Romania's armies alone lost some 150,000 men (either dead, wounded or captured)[119] and more than half of the country's divisions were wiped out.[124] For part of that interval, the Marshal had been withdrawn from public life, owing to an unknown affliction, which is rumored to have been either a mental breakdown, a foodborne illness or a symptom of the syphilis he had allegedly contracted earlier in life.[125] Upon his return, Antonescu blamed the Romanian losses on German overseer Arthur Hauffe, whom Hitler agreed to replace.[126] In parallel with the military losses, Romania was confronted with large-scale economic problems. While Germany monopolized Romania's exports,[127] it defaulted on most of its payments.[128] Like all countries whose exports to Germany, particularly in oil, exceeded imports from that country, Romania's economy suffered from Nazi control of the German Reichsmark-leu exchange rate (see Economy of Nazi Germany).[129] On the German side, those directly involved in harnessing Romania's economic output for German goals were economic planners Hermann Göring and Walther Funk, together with Hermann Neubacher, the Special Representative for Economic Problems.[130] The situation was further aggravated in 1942, as USAF and RAF were able to bomb the oil fields in Prahova County (see Bombing of Romania in World War II, Operation Tidal Wave).[131] Official sources from the following period amalgamate military and civilian losses of all kinds, which produces a total of 554,000 victims of the war.[132]

In this context, the Romanian leader acknowledged that Germany was losing the war, and he therefore authorized his Deputy Premier and new Foreign Minister Mihai Antonescu to set up contacts with the Allies.[133][119] In parallel, he allowed the PNŢ and the PNL to engage in parallel talks with the Allies at various locations in neutral countries.[134][119] The discussions were strained by the Western Allies' call for an unconditional surrender, over which the Romanian envoys bargained with Allied diplomats in Sweden and Egypt (among them the Soviet representatives Nikolai Vasilevich Novikov and Alexandra Kollontai).[135] Antonescu was also alarmed by the possibility of war being carried on Romanian territory, as had happened in Italy after Operation Avalanche.[136] The events also prompted hostile negotiations aimed at toppling Antonescu, and involving the two political parties, the young monarch, diplomats and soldiers.[137][119] A major clash between Michael and Antonescu took place during the first days of 1943, when the 21-year old monarch used his New Year's address on national radio to part with the Axis war effort.[138]

Ouster and arrest

In March 1944, the Soviet Red Army broke the Southern Bug and Dniester fronts, advancing on Bessarabia. This came just as Henry Maitland Wilson, Allied commander of the Mediterranean theater, presented Antonescu with an ultimatum.[119] After a new visit to Germany and a meeting with Hitler, Antonescu opted to continue fighting alongside the remaining Axis states, a decision which he later claimed was motivated by Hitler's promise to allow Romania possession of Northern Transylvania in the event of an Axis victory.[119] Upon his return, the Conducător oversaw a counteroffensive which stabilized the front on a line between Iaşi and Chişinău to the north and the lower Dniester to the east.[119] This normalized his relations with Nazi German officials, whose alarm over the possible loss of an ally had resulted in the Margarethe II plan, an adapted version of the Nazi takeover in Hungary.[139][119]

However, Antonescu's non-compliance with the terms of Wilson's ultimatum also had drastic effects on Romania's ability to exit the war.[119] By then, Antonescu was conceiving of a separate peace with the Western Allies,[140][119] while maintaining contacts with the Soviets.[141] In parallel, the mainstream opposition movement came to establish contacts with the Romanian Communist Party (PCR), which, although minor numerically, gained importance for being the only political group to be favored by Soviet leader Joseph Stalin.[142] On the PCR side, the discussions involved Lucreţiu Pătrăşcanu and later Emil Bodnăraş.[143][119] Another participating group at this stage was the old Romanian Social Democratic Party.[144]

Large-scale Allied bombings of Bucharest took place in spring 1944, while the Soviet Red Army approached Romanian borders.[145] The Battle for Romania began in late summer: while German commanders Johannes Frießner and Otto Wöhler of the Army Group South Ukraine attempted to hold Bukovina, Soviet Steppe Front leader Rodion Malinovsky stormed into the areas of Moldavia defended by Petre Dumitrescu's troops.[146] In reaction, Antonescu attempted to stabilize the front on a line between Focşani, Nămoloasa and Brăila, deep inside Romanian territory.[119] On August 5, he visited Hitler one final time in Kętrzyn. On this occasion, the German leader reportedly explained that the his people had betrayed the Nazi cause, and asked him if Romania would go on fighting (to which Antonescu reportedly answered in vague terms).[147] After the statements of Soviet Foreign Minister Vyacheslav Molotov, according to which Romanian subservience was not going to be a requirement,[148] the factions opposing Antonescu agreed that the moment had come to overthrow him, by carrying out the Royal Coup of August 23.[149][119] On that day, the sovereign asked Antonescu to meet him in the royal palace building, where he presented him with a request to take Romania out of its Axis alliance.[150][119] The Conducător refused, and was promptly arrested by soldiers of the guard, being replaced as Premier with General Constantin Sănătescu, who presided over a national government.[151][119]

The new Romanian authorities declared peace with the Allies and advised the population to greet Soviet troops.[119] On August 25, as Bucharest was successfully defending itself against German retaliations, Romania declared war on Nazi Germany.[152] The events disrupted German domination in the Balkans, putting a stop to the Maibaum offensive against Yugoslav Partisans.[153] The coup was nevertheless a unilateral move, and, until the signature of an armistice on September 12,[154][119] the country was still perceived as an enemy by the Soviets, who continued to take Romanian soldiers as prisoners of war.[119] In parallel, Hitler reactivated the Iron Guardist exile, creating a Sima-led government in exile which did not survive the war's end in Europe.[155]

Placed in the custody of PCR militants, Ion Antonescu spent the interval at a house in Bucharest's Vatra Luminoasă quarter.[156][119] He was afterward handed in to the Soviet occupation forces, and transported to Moscow, together with his deputy Mihai Antonescu, Governor of Transnistria Gheorghe Alexianu, Defense Minister Constantin Pantazi, Gendarmerie commander Constantin Vasiliu and Bucharest Police chief Mircea Elefterescu.[157][119] They was subsequently kept in luxurious detention at a mansion nearby the city,[158][119] and guarded by SMERSH, a special counter-intelligence body answering directly to Stalin.[119] Shortly after the surrender of Germany in May 1945, the group was moved to Lubyanka prison. There, Antonescu was interrogated and reputedly pressured by SMERSH operatives, among them Viktor Semyonovich Abakumov, but transcripts of their conversations were never sent back to Romania by the Soviet authorities.[159][119] Later research noted that the main issues discussed were the German-Romanian alliance, the war on the Soviet Union, the economic toll on both countries, and Romania's participation in the Holocaust (defined specifically as crimes against "peaceful Soviet citizens").[119] At some point during this period, Antonescu attempted suicide in his quarters.[157][119] He was returned to Bucharest in spring 1946, being held in Jilava prison. He was subsequently interrogated by prosecutor Avram Bunaciu, to whom he complained about the conditions of his detainment, contrasting them with those in Moscow, while explaining that he was a vegetarian and demanding a special diet.[160]

Trial and execution

File:Ion Antonescu during his trial.jpg
Ion Antonescu during his trial

In May 1946, Ion Antonescu was prosecuted at the first in a series of People's Tribunals, on charges of war crimes, crimes against the peace and treason.[161][119] The idea of organizing it had first been proposed by the PNŢ,[119] and was compatible with the Nuremberg Trials in Allied-occupied Germany.[162][119] The Romanian legislative framework was drafted by coup participant Pătrăşcanu, who had been granted leadership of the Justice Ministry as a PCR member.[163] Despite the idea having earned support from several sides of the political spectrum, the procedures were politicized in a sense favorable to the PCR and the Soviet Union,[164][119] and posed a legal problem for being based on ex post facto decisions.[165] The first such local trial took place in 1945, resulting in the sentencing of Iosif Iacobici, Nicolae Macici, Constantin Trestioreanu and other soldiers commanders directly involved in planning or carrying out the Odessa massacre.[166]

Antonescu was represented by Constantin Paraschivescu-Bălăceanu and Titus Stoica, two public defenders whom he had first consulted with a day before the procedures were initiated.[167] The prosecution team, led by Vasile Stoican, and the panel of judges, presided over by Alexandru Voitinovici, were infiltrated by PCR supporters.[168] Both consistently failed to admit that Antonescu's foreign policies were overall dictated by Romania's positioning between Germany and the Soviet Union.[169][119] Nevertheless, and although references to the mass murders formed just 23% of the indictment and corpus of evidence (ranking below charges of anti-Soviet aggression),[170] the procedures also included Antonescu's admission of and self-exculpating take on war crimes, including the deportations to Transnistria.[171][119]They also show his awareness of the Odessa massacre, accompanied by his claim that few of the deaths were his direct responsibility.[172] One notable event at the trial was a testimony by PNŢ leader Iuliu Maniu. Reacting against the aggressive tone of other accusers, Maniu went on record saying: "We [Maniu and Antonescu] were political adversaries, not cannibals."[119] Upon leaving the bench, Maniu walked toward Antonescu and shook his hand.[173][119]

Ion Antonescu was found guilty of the charges. This verdict was followed by two sets of appeals, which claimed that the restored and amended 1923 Constitution did not offer a framework for the People's Tribunals and prevented capital punishment during peacetime, while noting that, contrary to the armistice agreement, only one power represented within the Allied Commission had supervised the tribunal.[174] They were both rejected within six days, in compliance with a legal deadline on the completion of trials by the People's Tribunals.[175] King Michael subsequently received pleas for clemency from Antonescu's lawyer and his mother, and reputedly considered asking the Allies to reassess the case as part of the actual Nuremberg Trials, taking Romanian war criminals into foreign custody.[176] Subjected to pressures by the new Soviet-backed Petru Groza executive, he issued a decree in favor of execution.[177] Together with his co-defendants Mihai Antonescu, Alexianu and Vasiliu, the former Conducător was executed by a military firing squad on June 1, 1946. Ion Antonescu's supporters circulated false rumors that regular soldiers had refused to fire at their commander, and that the squad was mostly composed of Jewish policemen.[178] Another apologetic claim insists that he himself ordered the squad to shoot, but footage of the event has proven it false.[179] It is however attested that he refused a blindfold and raised his hat in salute once the order was given.[180] The execution site, some distance away from the locality of Jilava and the prison fort, was known as Valea Piersicilor ("Valley of the Peach Trees").[181][119] His final written statement was a letter to his wife, urging her to withdraw into a convent, while stating the belief that posterity would reconsider his deeds and accusing Romanians of being "ungrateful".[182]

Ideology

Nationalism and expansionism

Romania in 1942. Northern Transylvania to Hungary and Transnistria under Romanian administration

Nationalism was a main motivator behind Antonescu's policies. A firm believer in the restoration of Greater Romania as the union of lands inhabited by Romanian ethnics, he permanently objected to Northern Transylvania's incorporation into Hungary. Although both countries were technically allied through the Axis system, their relationship was always tense, and marked by serious diplomatic incidents.[183] The Romanian leader kept contacts with representatives of ethnic Romanian communities directly affected by the Second Vienna Award, including Transylvanian Greek-Catholic clergy.[184] Another aspect of Antonescu's nationalist policies was evidenced after the Balkans Campaign. Antonescu's Romania did not partake in the military action, but laid a claim to the territories in eastern Vojvodina (western Banat) and the Timok Valley, home to a sizable Romanian community. Reportedly, Germany's initial designs of attributing Vojvodina to Hungary enhanced the tensions between Antonescu and Miklós Horthy to the point where war between the two countries became a possibility.[185] Such incidents made Germany indefinitely prolong its occupation of the region.[186] The Romanian authorities issued projects for an independent Macedonia with autonomy for its Aromanian communities,[187] while an official memorandum on the Timok region, approved by Antonescu, made mention of "Romanian" areas "from Timok [...] to Salonika".[188] The Conducător also maintained contacts with Aromanian fascists in Axis-occupied Greece, awarding refuge to Principality of Pindus leaders Alchiviad Diamandi di Samarina and Nicola Matushi, whose pro-Romanian policies had brought them into conflict with other Macedonian factions.[189]

Conducător Antonescu thought Hitler willing to revise his stance on Northern Transylvania, and claimed to have obtained the German leader's agreement, using it to justify participation on the Eastern Front after the recovery of Bessarabia.[190][119] However, transcripts of the Hitler-Antonescu conversations do not validate his interpretation.[100][119] Another version has it that Hitler sent Antonescu a letter informing him that Bessarabia's political status was ultimately depending on German decisions.[119] In one of his letters to Hitler, Antonescu himself stated an anti-communist ideological motivation: "I confirm that I will pursue operations in the east to the end against that great enemy of civilization, of Europe, and of my country: Russian Bolshevism [...] I will not be swayed by anyone not to extend this military cooperation into new territory."[191] Antonescu's ideological perspective blended national sentiment with generically Christian and particularly Romanian Orthodox traits. This identity issue is confronted by British historian Arnold D. Harvey with Nazi doctrine and its anti-religious elements: "It seems that Hitler was not even perturbed by the militant Christian orientation of the Antonescu regime".[102]

It is also possible that, contrary to Antonescu's own will, Hitler viewed the transfer of Transnistria as compensation for the Transylvanian areas, and that he therefore considered the matter closed.[192] According to the Romanian representative in Berlin, Raoul Bossy, various German and Hungarian officials recommended the extension of permanent Romanian rule into Transnistria, as well as into Podolia, Galicia and Pokuttya, in exchange for delivering the whole of Transylvania to Hungary (and relocating its ethnic Romanian majority to the new provinces).[193] American political scientist Charles King writes: "There was never any attempt to annex the occupied territory [of Transnistria], for it was generally considered by the Romanian government to be a temporary buffer zone between Greater Romania and the Soviet front line."[194] At his 1946 trial, Antonescu claimed that Transnistria had been occupied to prevent Romania being caught in a "pincer" by Germany, "the question of Drang nach Osten", and the Volksdeutsche communities, while denying charges of having exploited the region for Romania's benefit.[195]

Romanian historian Lucian Boia believes that Ion Antonescu may have nevertheless had expansionist goals to the east, and that he implicitly understood Operation Barbarossa as a tool for containing Slavic peoples.[196] Similar verdicts are provided by other researchers.[197] Another Romanian historian, Ottmar Traşcă, argues that Antonescu did not wish to annex the region "at least until the end of the war", but notes that Antonescu's own statements make reference to its incorporation in the event of a victory.[198] In addition to early annexation plans to the Southern Bug (reportedly confessed to Bossy in June 1941),[199] the Conducător is known to have presented his ministers with plans for the region's colonization.[200] The motivation he cited for this was alleged malnutrition among Romanian peasants: "I'll take this population, I'll lead it into Transnistria, where I shall give it all the land it requires".[198] Several nationalists sympathetic to Antonescu acclaimed the extension of Romanian rule into Transnistria, which they understood as permanent.[201]

Antisemitism and antiziganism

A recurring element in Antonescu's doctrines is racism, and in particular antisemitism. This was linked to his sympathy for ethnocratic ideals, and complimented by his statements in favor of "integral nationalism" and "Romanianism".[202] Like other far right Romanians, he saw a Jewish presence behind liberal democracy, and believed in the existence of Judeo-Masonry.[203] His earliest thoughts on Codreanu's ideology criticize the Legionary leader for advocating "brutal measures" in dealing with the "invasion of Jews", and instead propose "the organization of Romanian classes" as a method for reaching the same objective.[10] Politician Aureliu Weiss recalled that, although antisemitic "to the core", the emerging leader Antonescu was capable of restrain in public.[204] According to historian Mihail Ionescu, the Conducător was not averse to the Iron Guard's "Legionary principles", but wanted antisemitism to be "applied in an orderly fashion", as opposed to Horia Sima's revolutionary ways.[4] Historian Ioan Scurtu believes that, during the Legionary Rebellion, Antonescu deliberately waited before stepping in, in order for the Guard to be "profoundly discredited" and for himself to be perceived as a "savior".[4] In April 1941, he let his ministers know that he was considering letting "the mob" deal with the Jews, "and after the slaughter, I will restore order."[204] Lucian Boia notes that the Romanian leader was indeed motivated by antisemitic beliefs, but that these need to be contextualized in order to understand what separates Antonescu from Hitler in terms of radicalism.[205] However, various other researchers assess that, by aligning himself with Hitler before and during Operation Barbarossa, Antonescu implicitly agreed with his thoughts on the "Jewish Question", choosing racial over religious antisemitism.[206][82] According to Harvey, the Iaşi pogrom made the Germans "evidently willing to accept that organized Christianity in Romania was very different from what it was in Germany".[102]

Antonescu was a firm believer in the conspiracy theory of "Jewish Bolshevism", according to which all Jews were supporters of communism and the Soviet Union.[207][82] His arguments on the matter involved a spurious claim that, during the 1940 retreat from Bessarabia, the Jews had organized themselves and attacked Romanian soldiers.[208][82] In part, this notion exaggerated unilateral reports of enthusiasm among the marginalized Jews upon the arrival of Red Army troops.[209] In a summer 1941 address to his ministers, Antonescu stated: "The Satan is the Jew. [Ours] is a battle of life and death. Either we win and the world will be purified, either they win and we will become their slaves."[210] At around the same time, he envisaged the ethnic cleansing ("cleaning out") of Jews from the eastern Romanian-held territories.[211][82] However, as early as February 1941, Antonescu was also contemplating the ghettoization of all Jewish Romanians, as an early step toward their expulsion.[212] In this context, Antonescu frequently depicted Jews as a disease or a poison.[213] After the Battle of Stalingrad, he encouraged the army commanders to resist the counteroffensive, as otherwise the Soviets "will bring Bolshevism to the country, wipe out the entire leadership stratum, impose the Jews on us, and deport masses of our people."[214]

Ion Antonescu's antiziganism manifested itself as the claim that some or all Romani people, specifically nomadic ones, were given to criminal behavior.[215] Such a view was contrasted by the regime's own actions: in various cases, those deported had close relatives drafted into the Romanian Army.[216] Although racist slogans targeting Romani people had been popularized by the Iron Guard, it was only under Antonescu's unchallenged rule that solving the "Gypsy problem" became official policy and antiziganist measures were enforced.[217] After a February 1941 inspection, Antonescu singled out Bucharest's Romani community for alleged offenses committed during the blackout, and called on his ministers to present him with solutions.[218] Initially, he contemplated sending all Romani people he considered undesirable to the inhospitable Bărăgan Plain, to join the ranks of a local community of manual laborers.[219] In 1942, he commissioned the Romanian Central Institute for Statistics to compile a report on Romani demography, which, in its edited form, provided scientifically racist conclusions, warning the Conducător about alleged Romani-Romanian miscegenation in rural Romania.[220] In doing so, Antonescu offered some credit to a marginal and pseudoscientific trend in Romanian sociology, which, basing itself on eugenic theories, recommended the marginalization, deportation or compulsory sterilization of the Romani people, whose numeric presence it usually exaggerated.[221] Among those who signed the report was demographer Sabin Manuilă, who saw the Romani presence as a major racial problem.[222] The exact effect of the report's claims on Antonescu is uncertain.[223]

Fascism and conservatism

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j Deletant, p.37
  2. ^ Deletant, p.70, 257
  3. ^ Penkower, p.152-153
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  6. ^ Deletant, p.37-38
  7. ^ a b c d Deletant, p.38
  8. ^ Haynes, p.113, 115
  9. ^ Deletant, p.38-39
  10. ^ a b c d e f g h Deletant, p.39
  11. ^ a b Jaap van Ginneken, Crowds, Psychology, and Politics, 1871-1899, Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, 1992, p.186. ISBN 0-521-40418-5
  12. ^ Deletant, p.301-302
  13. ^ Deletant, p.39, 45, 290
  14. ^ Veiga, p.281
  15. ^ a b Deletant, p.40
  16. ^ Deletant, p.34, 40-41; Veiga, p.281
  17. ^ Deletant, p.40-41
  18. ^ Veiga, p.281, 296
  19. ^ Deletant, p.42-43
  20. ^ Deletant, p.41
  21. ^ Final Report, p.43; Deletant, p.34, 42; Veiga, p.246-247
  22. ^ Deletant, p.70
  23. ^ Deletant, p.42
  24. ^ a b Template:Ro icon Ilarion Ţiu, "Relaţiile regimului autoritar al lui Carol al II-lea cu opoziţia. Studiu de caz: arestarea conducerii Mişcării Legionare", in Revista Erasmus, 14/2003-2005, at the University of Bucharest Faculty of History
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  26. ^ a b c Deletant, p.44
  27. ^ Deletant, p.45, 293
  28. ^ Deletant, p.45, 58, 302
  29. ^ Cioroianu, p.54; Deletant, p.35, 50; Ornea, p.320-321; Veiga, p.257
  30. ^ Deletant, p.3, 10-27, 45-47; Ornea, p.323-325; Veiga, p.256-257, 266-269
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  32. ^ Deletant, p.46-47. Deletant notes the determining factor for this decision was Antonescu's link to the Iron Guard.
  33. ^ Deletant, p.47, 293
  34. ^ Deletant, p.47. Cf. Final Report, p.57, 60
  35. ^ Deletant, p.48-51, 66; Griffin (1993), p.126; Ornea, p.325-327
  36. ^ Browning, p.211
  37. ^ a b c Deletant, p.48
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  39. ^ Deletant, p.48; Kelso, p.96
  40. ^ Deletant, p.48; Ornea, p.325-327; Roper, p.8
  41. ^ Deletant, p.48-49; Ornea, p.326-327
  42. ^ Final Report, p.320; Morgan, p.85; Ornea, p.326
  43. ^ Ornea, p.327
  44. ^ Deletant, p.49-50, 52, 194
  45. ^ Deletant, p.49-50
  46. ^ Cioroianu, p.54; Deletant, p.52-55; Griffin (1993), p.126; Kelso, p.96; Roper, p.8
  47. ^ Deletant, p.52-55
  48. ^ Deletant, p.49-51; Veiga, p.279-280. Veiga mentions in particular Heinrich Himmler, head of the Schutzstaffel organization, who, although inclined to support Sima, advised the latter to let the general take hold of government.
  49. ^ Deletant, p.49; Ornea, p.326-327, 339
  50. ^ Deletant, p.55-56; Ornea, p.326
  51. ^ Deletant, p.52-68; Gella, p.171; Geran Pilon, p.59; Kelso, p.96-97; Kenney, p.92-93; Morgan, p.85; Ornea, p.326-327; Veiga, p.281-282, 296, 327. According to Kelso and Ornea, Antonescu was turned down by all political forces except the Iron Guard. Deletant (p.55-56) notes that this refusal was motivated by Sima's requests, which Maniu perceived as excessive.
  52. ^ Deletant, p.55
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  54. ^ a b Peter Davies, Derek Lynch, The Routledge Companion to Fascism and the Far Right, Routledge, London, 2002, p.196. ISBN 0-415-21494-7
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  58. ^ Haynes, p.102
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  64. ^ Deletant, p.51
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  70. ^ Deletant, p.60
  71. ^ Ornea, p.334-335
  72. ^ Ornea, p.338-339, 341-343; Veiga, p.291, 297
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  75. ^ Final Report, p.110-111; Veiga, p.293-295
  76. ^ Ornea, p.341
  77. ^ Ornea, p.341; Veiga, p.294-295
  78. ^ Deletant, p.63, 301
  79. ^ Final Report, p.62-63; Veiga, p.280, 296
  80. ^ Deletant, p.25-27, 47, 61, 287
  81. ^ Final Report, p.63; Deletant, p.61-62, 76-78
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  85. ^ Veiga, p.296
  86. ^ Deletant, p.63-65; Ornea, p.342-343; Veiga, p.296-297
  87. ^ Deletant, p.64, 299; Veiga, p.297
  88. ^ Final Report, p.43, 46, 62-63, 103, 112-115, 181, 208, 382; Ancel (2005 a), p.33, 402-403, 408; Browning, p.211-212; Deletant, p.64-68, 71-72; Ioanid, p.232, 236; Ornea, p.219, 250, 284, 343-348; Veiga, p.297-304, 312-313. Cf. Penkower, p.148-149
  89. ^ Deletant, p.64-65, 299; Ornea, p.343
  90. ^ Deletant, p.64-65, 105-106; Ornea, p.343; Veiga, p.297-298. Cf. Final Report, p.186
  91. ^ Deletant, p.64-65; Ornea, p.343; Veiga, p.298
  92. ^ Final Report, p.43, 46, 103, 112-115, 208, 382; Browning, p.211-212; Deletant, p.66, 71-72, 299-300; Ioanid, p.232; Veiga, p.298-299, 301. Cf. Ancel (2005 a), p.402-403
  93. ^ Final Report, p.62-63, 125; Harvey, p.497; Veiga, p.301-302, 313
  94. ^ Harvey, p.497-498. Cf. Final Report, p.63
  95. ^ Final Report, p.63, 382; Harvey, p.498. Cf. Browning, p.211-212
  96. ^ Harvey, p.498; Veiga, p.301-302. Cf.: Browning, p.212; Deletant, p.87; Morgan, p.188
  97. ^ Ornea, p.329-331, 346-348
  98. ^ Deletant, p.68, 301
  99. ^ Deletant, p.280
  100. ^ a b Deletant, p.62
  101. ^ Final Report, p.65, 168; Deletant, p.1, 280; Harvey, p.498
  102. ^ a b c Harvey, p.498
  103. ^ Deletant, p.61-63, 75-76, 304. Cf.Final Report, p.63-64
  104. ^ Deletant, p.26-27, 75
  105. ^ Deletant, p.78-80, 83
  106. ^ Deletant, p.80, 83. Cf. Final Report, p.253
  107. ^ Deletant, p.80
  108. ^ Final Report, p.120-126, 200, 204, 208-209, 243-244, 285-286, 315, 321, 323, 327-329; Ancel (2005 a), passim; Deletant, p.130-140, 316-317; Ioanid, p.233; Traşcă, p.398-399; Weber, p.167
  109. ^ Deletant, p.83, 86, 280, 305
  110. ^ Final Report, p.320; Boia, p.270-271; Deletant, p.51, 84-87, 90-91, 254; King, p.93-94; Traşcă, p.377-380
  111. ^ Achim, p.171, 184; Deletant, p.86-87; Browning, p.277; King, p.93-94; Traşcă, p.380sqq
  112. ^ Deletant, p.166; Traşcă, p.384
  113. ^ Deletant, p.77-78, 83, 94-96
  114. ^ Traşcă, p.385-389
  115. ^ Deletant, p.87-88; Traşcă, p.385-387
  116. ^ Final Report, p.150-157, 245, 321, 323; Ancel (2005 a), p.291; Deletant, p.171-177, 248-253, 261, 276-277, 328-329; Traşcă, p.389sqq
  117. ^ Deletant, p.167-168; Gella, p.171
  118. ^ Nicholls, p.6; White, p.175
  119. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac ad ae af ag ah ai aj ak al am an ao ap Template:Ro icon Delia Radu, "Serialul 'Ion Antonescu şi asumarea istoriei' (3)", BBC Romanian edition, August 1, 2008
  120. ^ Deletant, p.2
  121. ^ Nicholls, p.6
  122. ^ Deletant, p.90-92
  123. ^ Deletant, p.92
  124. ^ Deletant, p.96-97, 99; Gella, p.171; Penkower, p.161
  125. ^ Deletant, p.209-210, 335
  126. ^ Deletant, p.98-99
  127. ^ Final Report, p.63, 117, 168; Deletant, p.26-27, 75; Harvey, p.545
  128. ^ Harvey, p.545
  129. ^ Deletant, p.26; Harvey, p.544-545
  130. ^ Deletant, p.26-27
  131. ^ Chant, p.75; Deletant, p.27; Gella, p.171
  132. ^ Gella, p.173. Cf. Weber, p.164
  133. ^ Final Report, p.252; Cioroianu, p.51; Deletant, p.230-240, 341-344; Penkower, p.153, 161
  134. ^ Deletant, p.75, 231-240, 341-344; Roper, p.8, 14
  135. ^ Deletant, p.231, 233-234, 236-239, 342-345
  136. ^ Deletant, p.234-236
  137. ^ Deletant, p.237-240, 343-344; Roper, p.14
  138. ^ Deletant, p.236, 337
  139. ^ Chant, p.124; Deletant, p.234-235, 342
  140. ^ Deletant, p.231; White, p.158
  141. ^ Deletant, p.233-234, 238-239; Kelso, p.129
  142. ^ Cioroianu, p.51-52; Deletant, p.237-240, 343-344; Gella, p.172; Roper, p.8-9, 13-14
  143. ^ Deletant, p.238-240, 343-344
  144. ^ Cioroianu, p.51; Deletant, p.238-239, 344; Roper, p.14; Weber, p.156
  145. ^ Deletant, p.240, 344; Kelso, p.129; Nicholls, p.6
  146. ^ Chant, p.84, 303
  147. ^ Deletant, p.239-240
  148. ^ Chant, p.124; Deletant, p.237
  149. ^ Cioroianu, p.50-55; Chant, p.84-85, 124-125, 303; Deletant, p.3-4, 241-246, 265-266, 343-346; Gella, p.172; Guran & Ştefan, p.112; Ioanid, p.235-236; Kelso, p.129; Kenney, p.93; Kent, p.52; King, p.94; Morgan, p.188; Nicholls, p.6, 166-167; Roper, p.13-15; Weber, p.152-154, 158-159; White, p.158. Cf. Ancel (2005 a), p.321; Bucur (2004), p.173-176
  150. ^ Deletant, p.241-242; Roper, p.14
  151. ^ Cioroianu, p.55; Deletant, p.242-243; Roper, p.14
  152. ^ Chant, p.84-85, 124-125, 303; Gella, p.172; Kelso, p.129
  153. ^ Chant, p.122
  154. ^ Final Report, p.316; Cioroianu, p.51; Deletant, p.247-248; Kelso, p.130; Nicholls, p.167, 225
  155. ^ Harvey, p.498; Morgan, p.188; Veiga, p.302-303, 313-314
  156. ^ Deletant, p.243-244, 345-346
  157. ^ a b Deletant, p.244
  158. ^ Deletant, p.244, 246. Cf. Cioroianu, p.296
  159. ^ Deletant, p.246, 346
  160. ^ Deletant, p.249
  161. ^ Final Report, p.317-331; Cioroianu, p.295-296; Deletant, p.245-261, 346-350; Frankowski, p.218-219
  162. ^ Final Report, p.316, 319-320, 331; Deletant, p.247-248, 261
  163. ^ Ioanid, p.235. Cf. Final Report, p.316-317; Frankowski, p.219
  164. ^ Final Report, p.313-331; Cioroianu, p.295-296; Deletant, p.245-261; Frankowski, p.218-219
  165. ^ Deletant, p.248, 255
  166. ^ Deletant, p.172, 248-249, 328. Final Report, p.314
  167. ^ Deletant, p.251
  168. ^ Final Report, p.313, 322; Deletant, p.250-251
  169. ^ Final Report, p.320-321; Deletant, p.248
  170. ^ Final Report, p.321
  171. ^ Final Report, p.240-241, 252, 321-322; Achim, p.168; Deletant, p.73, 252-255, 261, 276-277; Kelso, p.97
  172. ^ Final Report, p.245; Deletant, p.173-174, 252-253, 261, 276-277, 329
  173. ^ Deletant, p.255-256, 348
  174. ^ Deletant, p.248, 255
  175. ^ Deletant, p.248, 261
  176. ^ Deletant, p.255-257, 349-350
  177. ^ Deletant, p.256-259, 349-350
  178. ^ Deletant, p.259, 350
  179. ^ Deletant, p.5, 259
  180. ^ Deletant, p.259
  181. ^ Cioroianu, p.296; Deletant, p.259
  182. ^ Deletant, p.260
  183. ^ Final Report, p.171-172; Deletant, p.61-62, 75-76, 79, 167; Haynes, p.106-110, 120; Ioanid, p.245; Traşcă, p.380-385
  184. ^ Kent, p.224
  185. ^ Deletant, p.76; Haynes, p.99-100, 102-109
  186. ^ Deletant, p.76; Haynes, p.99-100, 108-110, 120
  187. ^ Deletant, p.76, 326
  188. ^ Haynes, p.119
  189. ^ John S. Koliopoulos, Plundered Loyalties: Axis Occupation and Civil Strife in Greek West Macedonia, 1941-1949, C. Hurst & Co. Publishers, London, 1999, p.87-88. ISBN 1-85065-381-X
  190. ^ Final Report, p.253; Deletant, p.62, 85-87, 93; Traşcă, p.379-380. Cf. Final Report, p.171-172
  191. ^ Deletant, p.85. Partly rendered in Traşcă, p.378
  192. ^ Achim, p.184; Boia, p.270; Deletant, p.167, 326; Traşcă, p.380-385; White, p.157-158
  193. ^ Traşcă, p.380-382
  194. ^ King, p.93
  195. ^ Deletant, p.253-254
  196. ^ Boia, p.270-271
  197. ^ Final Report, p.253; Gella, p.171
  198. ^ a b Traşcă, p.383
  199. ^ Deletant, p.79
  200. ^ Deletant, p.152-153; Traşcă, p.383
  201. ^ Deletant, p.325-326; Haynes, p.119-120; White, p.175
  202. ^ Final Report, p.116, 181
  203. ^ Final Report, p.246-247, 248, 322-323
  204. ^ a b Final Report, p.243
  205. ^ Boia, p.260
  206. ^ Final Report, p.116, 127-128, 181-182, 184, 202-203, 323, 325, 383, 385; Deletant, p.1, 128-129; Traşcă, p.388-389
  207. ^ Final Report, p.101, 209-211, 243-247, 384; Deletant, p.15-20, 116-120, 128-129, 138, 140-141, 210-211, 259, 276-277, 318; Ioanid, p.232-233; Traşcă, p.387-389. Cf. Penkower, p.182
  208. ^ Final Report, p.82-86, 247, 285; Deletant, p.15-20, 140-142, 318; Ioanid, p.232; Traşcă, p.387. Several researchers mention violence committed by retreating Romanian troops against the Bessarabian Jews (Browning, p.275-276; Deletant, p.18; King p.93) or the retaliatory Dorohoi pogrom (Final Report, p.84-86).
  209. ^ Boia, p.258-259; Deletant, p.15-20; Ornea, p.394
  210. ^ Deletant, p.85. Partly rendered in Final Report, p.244 and Traşcă, p.388
  211. ^ Final Report, p.120-122, 127-142, 169, 175-177, 321; Ancel (2005 a), p.15-19, 291, 402; Deletant, p.79, 116-118, 127-130, 142-150, 155-156, 319; Polonsky & Michlic, p.27. The term used by Mihai Antonescu in his recommendations to the Romanian administrators is "ethnic purification", as confinement to "labor camps, where Jews and other foreigners with doubtful attitudes will not be able to exercise their prejudicial influences" (Ioanid, p.232). Cf.: Achim, p.167; Browning, p.276; Traşcă, p.387-389
  212. ^ Deletant, p.129
  213. ^ Final Report, p.133-134; Deletant, p.118, 206
  214. ^ Ancel (2005 b), p.234
  215. ^ Final Report, p.225-228, 240-241; Achim, p.168-169; Deletant, p.189-190; Ioanid, p.234; Kelso, p.97-98
  216. ^ Final Report, p.229; Achim, p.169; Deletant, p.192; Ioanid, p.234; Kelso, p.101, 105, 124-127
  217. ^ Final Report, p.225-226; Achim, p.166-167; Deletant, p.187-189
  218. ^ Final Report, p.227, 240-241; Achim, p.168, 171; Deletant, p.188-189, 254
  219. ^ Final Report, p.225-226; Achim, p.168, 171; Deletant, p.188
  220. ^ Kelso, p.98
  221. ^ Final Report, p.223-228; Achim, p.164-168
  222. ^ Final Report, p.227; Achim, p.168; Deletant, p.187-188
  223. ^ According to Achim (p.167-170, 179, 182-183, 185) and Deletant (p.189-190), the measures reflected Antonescu's views on "social problems" more than a racist perspective. However, Kelso (p.99-100) believes the report was a notable factor in the decision to deport the Romani people.