While the massive casualties suffered in the war did im­press upon Stalin the need to reform his army, the biggest impact was to let Hitler know that the once-feared Red Army was beatable. Hitler mocked Stalin by privately offering to subdue the Finns. Hitler no longer feared the Russians.

Stalin led the Soviets through the war that killed some 20 million Russians and, to everyone’s relief, died in 1953.

TEN.

ROMANIA FIGHTS BOTH SIDES IN WORLD WAR II: 1941

Choosing the wrong friends can lead to unpaid loans, un­pleasant dinner parties, and possible jail time. In a war, choosing the wrong friends can be much, much worse.

On the eve of World War II Romania faced a decision of who to befriend. In a spasm of nationalist doltishness, Ro­mania joined hands with the Nazis in the hope that Hitler would hand them the gift of Transylvania, their ancestral homeland.

To achieve this goal and make Adolf happy, Romania’s Hitler-wannabe dictator Ion Antonescu decided to attack Russia, the largest and only undefeated country on earth. As Ion would painfully learn, any war plan based on the idea of making Hitler full of smiles and puppy love needs a thorough reevaluation.

But taking a moment to reflect on this decision apparently never occurred to the Romanian strongman. His decision led little Romania to eventually duke it out with the United States, Great Britain, the Soviet Union, and Germany, all in the same war. Romania fought so hard and inflicted so much damage to its allies and/or enemies that when the war ended, no one knew how to treat it. The West abandoned Romania and left it to rot under Soviet control for decades.

Romania’s role in the war was so fickle and so bizarre that during World War II it had the dubious distinction of being the third most powerful Axis country and the fourth most powerful Allied army. Romania allied itself with everybody at the party but still went home with no friends.

THE PLAYERS

Ion Antonescu — this brutal dictator of Romania, known as the “Conducător,” led Romania into the attack on the Soviet Union to regain Transylvania, stolen the year before by the wily Hungarians.

Skinny — Personal slogan was “Death before Dishonor.” He man­aged to obtain both.

Props — Hitler loved him. He got the big picture about who really should be controlling the world, the Germans and the Romanians.

Pros — Had blue eyes so Hitler assumed he came from good Aryan stock.

Cons — Eager participant in the Holocaust.

Lt. General Carl A. “Tooey” Spaatz — one of the most decorated air commanders in U.S. history, he held the title of Commander of the United States Strategic Air Forces in Europe and was the architect of the strategic bombing raids on the Axis countries.

Skinny — Prepped Europe for its postwar revitalization by bombing its cities flat.

Props — Was present at the surrender of all three Axis powers.

Pros — Never promised to bomb an enemy back to the Stone Age despite directing the dropping of two atomic bombs on Japan.

Cons — Became a writer after the war.

King Mihai of Romania — He became the Romanian king at age nineteen in 1940 when Ion booted his anti-German father King Carol from the country.

Skinny — Did nothing as king for four years as his country fought a devastating war.

Props — Last surviving head of state from World War II. Great-great-great grandson of Queen Victoria of England.

Pros — Before his country got crushed by the Russians he surren­dered to them.

Cons — He assumed the Soviets would forgive Romania for invad­ing, looting, pillaging, and killing. Wrong! Also assumed the Ameri­cans and British would give him credit for taking on the Germans at the end of the war. Wrong Wrong!!

THE GENERAL SITUATION

It was not easy being Romania in 1939. On one side the German menace, aggressively looking to stomp on anything that moved. On the other side the growling bear of the Soviet Union. In this tough neighborhood it was important to make the right friends.

Romania, in its first attempt at making friends and influ­encing people, had shrewdly waited until World War I was three years old before joining the Allies, hoping to cherry-pick from the victors’ spoils. The vastly more powerful Ger­mans and Austrians smashed the Romanians. But like the little engine that could, Romania did not give up. Instead, the tiny country manned it out and lost more territory to the Germans before finally calling it quits in early 1918. When Germany collapsed later that year, Romania regained its fighting mojo and again joined the fray, hoping it would be easier to defeat an already conquered enemy. This short second fling so impressed the hard-pressed Allies that Roma­nia won itself a seat at the peace talks in Paris where the spoils were carved up, and it walked away with an outsized share of the local swag. In this case, the minuscule country got enough territory, including Transylvania, to create Great Romania. All was well. Romania had chosen right.

During the 1930s, as German power grew and sovereign neighbors disappeared with little resistance, Romania’s leader, King Carol II, a former playboy, became increasingly nervous. When World War II broke out in Poland in 1939, Romanians feared their little corner of Europe would be the next entrée for Hitler. Romania’s only safeguard was to ally with the British and the always-eager-to-make-agreements-it-can-never-honor French. But in 1940 when Germany de­feated France and threw Britain off the continent, Romania was on its own.

Romania faced its own volatile political mixture. King Carol had ruled since 1930 with a strong hand. But the driv­ing force in the country’s politics was the Iron Guard: reli­gious fanatics, right-wing nuts, and violent anti- Semites. Unsurprisingly, they were much loved by the always-on-the-lookout-for-thugs-who-like-to-kill-the-helpless, Heinrich Himmler of the German SS. The Iron Guard was like a posse of Bible-toting SS thugs. They were not happy with Carol and probably wouldn’t have been happy with Hitler, either.

Fearing an Iron Guard takeover and unhindered by such notions as fair play, King Carol suddenly showed some im­pressive fascistic chops by orchestrating the assassination of the Iron Guard leader Cornelius Codreanu in 1938 and out­lawing the group. Carol also excluded General Ion Antonescu, the head of the army and former defense minister, from his government. In May 1940, with Poland already conquered by Hitler and the collapse of the west imminent, King Carol wrapped up a treaty with Germany giving the Nazi war machine access to Romania’s plentiful oil. The king, believing his hard work was done, was now able to relax and get back to his real interests, living the high life amid the gathering storms of total war.

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