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> Rejecting the Soviet Ultimatum in 1940, Implications
Imperialist
Posted: September 14, 2005 07:57 am
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QUOTE (dragos @ Sep 14 2005, 07:45 AM)
The risk of turning into the Czechoslovakia's case disappeared after the Vienna diktat, as Germany and Italy guaranteed the remaining borders.

Please don't come up with such simplifications. Who said that the Romanian soldiers were not good enough to die for their land? And about carrying military operations on the territory of Soviet Union, yes, it makes sense from a strategic perspective. The way these operations were employed is a different story, but this is not the point here.

The risk never disappeared. The very fact of trusting German and Italian guarantees was a risk. Nobody could have known if those were genuine guarantees or a way of making the politicians accept the first step in the weakening of the country.
I dont have the time to search now, but wasnt Czechoslovakia assured of its safety after the Sudetenlands were forfeited?

The decision to continue the ops in russian lands makes sense from a strategic point of view only because Romania was then completely in Germany's sphere of influence or domination. And the same strategic point of view was to appear when Romania was in Soviet sphere of domination and had to go beyond Transylvania.


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dragos
Posted: September 14, 2005 08:14 am
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With the guarantees of Germany and Italy, Romania had no option but to shift in the German sphere of influence, with a pro-German policy. I think you realize that Romania couldn't have remained isolated at the middle of interest of two great powers, in a moment when the fate of the European nations was being decided. It had to go with one side or another.
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Imperialist
Posted: September 14, 2005 08:41 am
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QUOTE (dragos @ Sep 14 2005, 08:14 AM)
With the guarantees of Germany and Italy, Romania had no option but to shift in the German sphere of influence, with a pro-German policy. I think you realize that Romania couldn't have remained isolated at the middle of interest of two great powers, in a moment when the fate of the European nations was being decided. It had to go with one side or another.

Yes, and like I said (I think on this thread) Carol already decided in favour of Germany, placed the bulk of the Army to face the soviets whom he considered to be the main enemy and gave up the idea of resisting in the face of the Diktat, choosing to sign the Arbitration in return of being accepted in Germany's sphere.



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dragos
Posted: September 14, 2005 08:57 am
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QUOTE (Imperialist @ Sep 14 2005, 10:57 AM)
I dont have the time to search now, but wasnt Czechoslovakia assured of its safety after the Sudetenlands were forfeited?

No, the borders were guaranteed only by France and Britain. Hitler said that he would guarantee the borders only after Czechoslovakia would have appeased the demands of Hungary and Poland, but even after the First Vienna Award, Germany did not offer any guarantee.
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Dénes
Posted: September 14, 2005 12:11 pm
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QUOTE (dragos @ Sep 14 2005, 02:57 PM)
the First Vienna Award

Wasn't that one also a 'Diktat' to you? Or only the second one? biggrin.gif

Gen. Dénes

This post has been edited by Dénes on September 14, 2005 12:11 pm
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dragos
Posted: September 14, 2005 03:42 pm
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QUOTE (Dénes @ Sep 14 2005, 03:11 PM)
QUOTE (dragos @ Sep 14 2005, 02:57 PM)
the First Vienna Award

Wasn't that one also a 'Diktat' to you? Or only the second one? biggrin.gif

Gen. Dénes

I do not know much of the circumstances of this event, but my guess is that it had the same character of a diktat. Am I wrong?
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dragos
Posted: September 14, 2005 04:35 pm
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I think you are right. After the infamous act of appeasement of Hitler's demand of Sudetenland, the further aggressions on Czechoslovakia after the Munich Agreement were between the CHARGES AND PARTICULARS OF VIOLATIONS OF INTERNATIONAL TREATIES, AGREEMENTS AND ASSURANCES CAUSED BY THE DEFENDANTS IN THE COURSE OF PLANNING, PREPARING AND INITIATING THE WARS:

QUOTE

XX

Charge : Violation of Assurances given on 11th March, 1938, and 26th September, 1938, to Czechoslovakia.

Particulars: In that Germany, on or about 15th March, 1939, did, by establishing a Protectorate of Bohemia and Moravia under duress and by the threat of force, violate the assurance given on 11th March, 1938, to respect the territorial integrity of the Czechoslovak Republic and the assurance given on 26th September, 1938, that, if the so- called Sudeten territories were ceded to Germany, no further German territorial claims on Czechoslovakia would be made.

XXI

Charge: Violation of the Munich Agreement and Annexes of 29th September, 1938.

[Page 46]
Particulars :

    (1) In that Germany on or about 15th March, 1939, did by duress and the threat of military intervention force the Republic of Czechoslovakia to deliver the destiny of the Czech people and country into the hands of the Fuehrer of the German Reich.

    (2) In that Germany refused and failed to join in an international guarantee of the new boundaries of the Czechoslovakian State as provided for in Annex No. I to the Munich Agreement.




http://www.nizkor.org/hweb/imt/tgmwc/tgmwc...c-01-01-10.html

It is safe to assume that both Vienna Arbitrations or Vienna Diktats had the same character of violation of international treaties, preparing and initiating the war.
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Carol I
Posted: September 14, 2005 06:29 pm
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QUOTE (Dénes @ Sep 14 2005, 01:06 AM)
We do know. The Soviet Union was prepared to resort to war if her demands would not met by Bucharest:

QUOTE
Telegram

VERY URGENT

Moscow, June 23, 1940-9:26 p. m.

Received June 23, 1940-11:20 p. m.

No. 1200 of June 23

Reference your telegram No. 1065 of the 22d and my telegram No. 1195 of the 21st. [76]


Molotov made the following statement to me today: The solution of the Bessarabian question brooked no further delay. The Soviet Government was still striving for a peaceful solution, but it was determined to use force, should the Rumanian Government decline a peaceful agreement. The Soviet claim likewise extended to [the entire, D.B.] Bukovina, which had a Ukrainian population. (...)

SCHULENBURG

Dénes, you forgot about Schulenburg's telegram No. 1244 dispatched on 27 June at 4:40 p.m.

QUOTE
Molotov just now informed me through his Chef de Cabinet that Soviet troops would cross the Romanian border early tomorrow morning, if the Romanian Government did not give a favourable reply to the Soviet demands today.
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dragos
Posted: September 14, 2005 07:10 pm
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According to the Soviet plan 1 (authorized to be used in case Romania rejected the ultimatum), the 12th and 9th Soviet Armies, supported by 5th Army, had to strike towards Jassy, in order to destroy the bulk of the Romanian troops in the north. The 9th Army had as the main objective the ocupation of Kishinev sector, then, together with 12th and 5th Armies had to complete the encirclement of the Romanian troops in northern Bessarabia. Between 11 and 26 June the Soviet units moved in position of attack. On 19 June, at Proscurov, took place special exercises, with the participation of the military councils and corps commanders, in order to familiarize with the plan of operations, and with the designated missions. By 23 June, each of the 40 Soviet divisions knew its combat mission thoroughly. It has been studied in detail a number of issues, such as the use of air force, the operations behind the combat zone, the evacuation and care of the wounded, the handling of POWs, the recording, usage, maintenance and evacuation of the war booty, the military-administrative organization of the occupied territories etc.

According to the plan of operations, in both variants, airborne assaults had to be carried out in order to cut off the enemy and to create diversions behind the Romanian lines. On 25 June 1940, the Air Force of the Southern Front received the order of dropping paratroops near the town of Târgu-Frumos (beyond the Prut River). The airborne assault had to be preceded by massive air bombardments on Romanian military objectives. In order to achieve the success of the operation, the Soviet forces carried out reconnaissance in force, such as the forcing of the Dniester River at 0435 hours of 28 June, near Kashilovka village (south of Kamenets-Podolsk), with two platoons, that initiated fight with Romanian troops. Behind the front, Marshal Timoshenko attested the setting up of a large number of field hospitals, anti-epidemic centres, mobile detachments of surgeons and 12 hospital trains. For the wounded were also available the hospitals of Lvov, Tarnopol and Proscurov, with the capacity of 32,400 beds.

Source: RIM 4(10), 1991
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Dénes
Posted: September 14, 2005 09:03 pm
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QUOTE (dragos @ Sep 14 2005, 10:35 PM)
It is safe to assume that both Vienna Arbitrations or Vienna Diktats had the same character of violation of international treaties, preparing and initiating the war.

Wrong. Both Vienna Arbitrations actually prevented war, not "preparing and initiating" a war, as you suggested.
But this is already off-topic.

Gen. Dénes

This post has been edited by Dénes on September 14, 2005 09:04 pm
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dragos
Posted: September 15, 2005 07:13 am
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QUOTE (Dénes @ Sep 15 2005, 12:03 AM)
QUOTE (dragos @ Sep 14 2005, 10:35 PM)
It is safe to assume that both Vienna Arbitrations or Vienna Diktats had the same character of violation of international treaties, preparing and initiating the war.

Wrong. Both Vienna Arbitrations actually prevented war, not "preparing and initiating" a war, as you suggested.
But this is already off-topic.

Gen. Dénes

Well, I'm sorry, but it's part of the charges of Nuremberg Trial.

The Trial of German Major War Criminals

Naturally, there were also other aggressors ready to pick up the crumbs off the Hitler's table, such us Mussolini or Horthy.




This post has been edited by dragos on September 15, 2005 07:24 am
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sid guttridge
Posted: September 15, 2005 09:55 am
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Hi Imperialist,

A point of information.

In your post of Sep 13 2005, 01:42PM you corrected my formulation, "Approaching half the population loss was of minorities, not of Romanians" by stating that "the mere numbers are 4 million Romanians lost, and 2 million minorities".

In fact, according to official Romanian figures, the total loss of population in Basarabia, Northern Bucovina, Morthern Transilvania and Southern Dobrogea was 6,161,317, of whom 3,029,928 (49%) were minorities.

Cheers,

Sid.
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Imperialist
Posted: September 15, 2005 01:28 pm
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QUOTE (sid guttridge @ Sep 15 2005, 09:55 AM)


In fact, according to official Romanian figures, the total loss of population in Basarabia, Northern Bucovina, Morthern Transilvania and Southern Dobrogea was 6,161,317, of whom 3,029,928 (49%) were minorities.


According to Dragos the numbers are:

QUOTE

The total population lost in 1940 is 6,829,238, of which 3,421,000 Romanians.


I'd rather go with his numbers.

thanx



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sid guttridge
Posted: September 16, 2005 10:34 am
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Hi Imperialist,

My source is "Spatiul Istoric si Etnic Romanesc" Volume III (Editura Militara, Bucuresti, 1993), pp.76-77. Its source is "Harta Etnografica a Romaniei dupa Rezultatele Recensamentului din 1930" by Dr. Sabin Manuila (Director al Institutului Central de Statistica al Romaniei).

It contains two sets of statistics about the lost areas of 1940. The first (p.76) are the 1930 census figures. The second (p.77) are for the "situatia probabila in 1940".

I gave you some 1930 figures last time. The 1940 estimates are as follows:

Province - Total population - Romania population - Romanian percentage

Basarabia & N. Bucovina - 3,748,198 - 1,962,613 - 52.4%
N. Transilvania - 2,603,832 - 1,305,066 - 50.1%
S. Dobrogea - 407,515 - 106,534 - 26.2%
TOTAL of Lost Territories - 6,759,098 - 3,374,329 - 49.9%

These are very close to Dragos's numbers but very different from yours.

Cheers,

Sid.
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sid guttridge
Posted: September 16, 2005 10:46 am
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Hi Dragos,

Given that 1940 population figures are all estimates,I guess there are bound to be differences in detail. Where are yours from?

Cheers,

Sid.
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