After mass deportations of Jews from Bessarabia & Bukovina to Transnistria in summer/fall 1941, the Antonescu regime had only deported individual Jews as a punishment, mostly for avoiding forced labor. In 1942, 306 Jewish men, plus 249 family members, had been so punished. 2/
The head of the Jewish Central Office Radu Lecca had been negotiating with SS representative Gustav Richter to deport remaining Jews from Romania to Nazi-occupied Poland. The fizzling talks now ended. (A courtroom sketch of the Romanian official postwar.) 3/
Moreover, the Romanian Gendarmerie - urged on by its chief General Constantin Z. "Piki" Vasiliu - had deported 11,474 nomadic and 13,245 "criminal" sedentary Roma in two waves starting on 1 Jun 1942. Rumors of a third wave targeting even more Roma abounded. 4/
A few liberal elites in Romania, such as Constantin I. C. Brătianu (leader of the outlawed Liberal Party) began to protest further deportations of Roma. Roma leaders wrote petitions and convinced sympathetic allies in local government to write petitions on their behalf too. 5/
International pressure from the papal nunico, Swiss Embassy, and US (passed along by the neutral Swiss because the two nations were at war) against the Antonescu regime's continued persecution of Jews in Romania had increased. 6/
King Mihai I and Queen Mother Helen expressed private disapproval of deportations of more Jews to Transnistria and of plans to sent them to Nazi-occupied Poland. 7/
Finally, perhaps most importantly, the situation at the front caused the Antonescu regime to reconsider its plans and halt all deportations of Jews or Roma. Despite impressive advances, Axis forces hadn't taken huge numbers of POWs and were halted at Stalingrad. 8/
The Antonescu regime worried about the economic impact the removal of all Jews would have as they made up a large portion of the middle class despite efforts at "Romanianization." Plus extorting Jews for exemptions from forced labor was profitable for Lecca and others. 9/
The halt order was only temporary, however. If Stalingrad fell or the USSR collapsed, the vice prime minister and the conducător Marshal Ion Antonescu could resume negotiations to deport Jews from Romania to Auschwitz. 10/
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Today, I managed to squeeze in a quick visit to the National Military Museum in Bucharest so I could see how it was updated after a long renovation a few years back. A 🧵 follows.
The museum has been in this building since 1988. The statues & designs reflect peak national communism under Ceauşescu. A fairly large artillery park of mostly WW2 guns out front. The vehicle park in the back is still being redone & not open to the public.
The entrance lobby has a new temporary exhibit featuring a gun used in the Russo-Turkish War of 1877-1878 (Romanian War of Independence). There is a huge mural of the central role of the military in society.
This was probably my favorite Star Wars film to watch as a kid - on VHS in the '90s - when selected edited with @E1educador using the FFW button after Jabba's palace to watch the cool space battle. (Now that I'm not 9, Empire Strikes Back is my favorite.) #HATM
1. Fascist Legionaries (Iron Guardists) showing off their cuts, bruises, & other injuries after the 1933 elections when they engaged in street violence to target rival political groups & intimidate voters.
2. A group of Legionaries who assassinated Prime Minister Armand Călinescu in Bucharest in 1939 in revenge for his violent suppression of their movement were then executed on the spot & left in the streets to rot for days with a banner warning of a similar fate for traitors.
With all the 80th anniversary of the battle of Kursk & invasion of Sicily tweets, I thought I'd do a 🧵 about the fighting in the Kuban bridgehead at this time to highlight Romanian soldiers on the eastern front. 1/10 #Romania #WW2 #SWW #OTD
Just mentioning that Romanian troops were still fighting in the frontline is important.
After #Stalingrad, Italy withdrew all its forces from the USSR & Hungary only had 2 divisions in the rear.
In contrast, Romania had 6 divisions on the front & 3 divisions in the rear. 2/10
Hitler demanded maintaining a bridgehead in the N Caucasus for a future counteroffensive. German & Romanian, under German 17th Army, troops withdrew into a perimeter in mid-February 1943, which soon shrunk but only after the construction of 6 successive lines of defense. 3/10
On 26 June 1940, 1 day after France's armistice with Nazi Germany went into effect, the USSR delivered an ultimatum to Romania demanding Bessarabia & N Bukovina. The Soviet occupation began 2 days later. The traumatic 4-day Romanian withdrawal hastened Romania's joining the Axis.
"Long live the Soviet Bessarabia and the Soviet Bukovina."
Soviet propaganda celebrated the occupation of Romanian territories that took place under near combat conditions with a river crossing over the Dniester & air drops as well as air transports at a rapid pace.
Romanian losses were 9 killed (including 2 officer suicides I believe), 5 wounded, & 65,503 missing (nearly all local conscripts who deserted).