ABSTRACT
The CSCE process was regarded by the Soviet Union as an opportunity to settle unresolved issues of the Second World War such as the recognition of its Western borders as victorious power. Romania too saw the conference as an opportunity but in another sense: to put an end to a world of victors and losers replacing it with the equality of all states. Moscow’s status as victor was the source of its hegemony in Eastern Europe, as the regime in Bucharest understood it, which is why challenging the relations and bipolarity originating from the war was Romania’s primary aim. As the regime in Bucharest claimed to pursue an independent course towards Communism and refused subordination to Moscow, Romania had reasons to presume that its security was threatened by the Soviet Union. This article explores Romania’s approach to the CSCE, the ideas it advanced and the rhetoric it used trying to undermine the bipolarity and hegemony which placed the country in the Soviet sphere of influence and explained the Brezhnev doctrine. Undermining the principles which offered Moscow such power and also promoting instruments (both legal and institutional) to limit superpower domination, Romania hoped to secure its independence and gain protection against the Soviets.
Keywords: CSCE; Romania; Soviet Union; bipolarity; hegemony; Western Europe; Cold War.
RESUMEN
La Unión Soviética consideró el proceso de la CSCE una oportunidad para resolver problemas que pendientes tras la Segunda Guerra Mundial; por ejemplo, el reconocimiento de sus fronteras occidentales como potencia victoriosa. Rumania también vio la conferencia como una oportunidad, pero en otro sentido: el de poner fin a un mundo de vencedores y perdedores, reemplazándolo por la igualdad de todos los Estados. El régimen de Bucarest entendía que el estatus de Moscú como vencedor era la fuente de su hegemonía en Europa del Este y por eso su objetivo principal fue desafiar las relaciones y la bipolaridad originadas en la guerra. Debido a su intento de seguir su propia vía hacia el comunismo y no subordinarse a Moscú, Rumania tenía razones para creer que su seguridad estaba amenazada por la Unión Soviética. Este artículo explora el enfoque rumano de la CSCE: las ideas que propuso y la retórica que utilizó para tratar de socavar la bipolaridad y la hegemonía que colocó al país en la esfera de influencia soviética y explicó la doctrina Brezhnev. Rumanía esperaba asegurar su independencia y obtener protección frente a los soviéticos minando los principios de los que procedía el poder de Moscú y promoviendo instrumentos (tanto legales como institucionales) para limitar el dominio de las superpotencias.
Palabras clave: CSCE; Rumania; Unión Soviética; bipolaridad; hegemonía; Europa Occidental; Guerra Fría.
At the time the Conference on Security and Co-operation in Europe (CSCE) process was initiated, the Romania were already well-known for its long-standing opposition to Soviet control. Bearing in mind Nicolae Ceaușescu’s fierce condemnation of the Soviet-led intervention in Czechoslovakia, it was certainly predictable that Romania was going to fight off the Brezhnev doctrine through any means possible in the context of the largest postwar conference in Europe[1]. Romania did set a very ambitious agenda for its participation in Helsinki, but along the difficult path to the conference, the Romanian leaders lost more than what they gained. Still, the CSCE facilitated a transformation in the international identity of the Communist elites in Bucharest which serves to further demonstrate the erosion of the Soviet bloc and the degradation of Communist internationalism.
When the Romanian party leadership first opposed the Soviets, in the early 1960s,
their argumentation was conceived in Marxist-Leninist terms, drawing from the Titoist
rhetoric on national Communism and perhaps on the Italian theses on the autonomy and
polycentrism of Communist parties
But a major yet under investigated event which shaped Romania’s policies vis-a-vis
the Soviet Union was the Soviet-American detente of 1972. As Elena Dragomir wrote
recently, the Romanian leaders perceived detente as a threat to their independence
since it appeared to consolidate the bipolar organization of the postwar world. Based
on such a view, the Romanian elites saw the CSCE both as a risk, in the sense of confirming
the bipolar character of detente, but also as an opportunity to fight off the hegemony
of the superpowers
This study evaluates the impact of detente on Romania’s position at the CSCE, the
key directions of Romania’s participation at the conference and the argumentation
it used. Since the conference may be considered a substitute for the peace conference
which never followed World War II, the CSCE was regarded by the Romanian Communist
leadership as an opportunity to claim the redundancy and dismissal of the postwar
arrangements which placed Romania under Soviet control. Bipolarity, enforced either
by conflict or by cooperation, was regarded as the source of hegemony and the opposite
of detente. The CSCE, N. Ceaușescu’s regime hoped, was going to challenge the postwar
political organization of Europe and reshape relations on the Old Continent according
to new principles, in the spirit of what was later called a multilateralization of detente
The methodological approach of this article relies on reinterpreting the political decision-making process in a double perspective, both perceptual and institutional. Drawing on unpublished archival material, the article explains how Romanian decision-makers perceived their options, how their interpreted the international environment but also how the institutional and legal framework of inter-state relations shaped their strategy and argumentation. It analyzes the causes and factors involved in the decision-making process focusing on the way previous political experiences —with both the Soviet Union and not only— shaped their perception of international relations, their vision of the CSCE and also the manner in which the party leadership chose to define Romania’s interests in the institutional framework of the CSCE.
The first section of the study deals with Romania’s vision of détente in the context of the CSCE and how the Romanian political elites envisaged the connection between the two processes. The second section explores Romania’s reluctance to accept the bipolar vision in which the Soviet Union approached the CSCE while the third section analyzes Romania’s relations with Western Europe and its quest for common ground against the pressures of bipolarity. The period of reference is 1972-1975 covering the negotiation of the CSCE from its beginning to the signing of the Final Act in Helsinki.
The period which immediately preceded the debut of the CSCE process (Wenger, A. and Mastny, V. (2008). New perspectives on the origins of the CSCE process.
In A. Wenger, V. Mastny and C. Nuenlist. Origins of the European Security System: The Helsinki Process Revisited, 1965-75 (pp. 3-20). Abingdon: Routledge. Available at:
What did the Romanian leaders want after all? Most authors agree that the Romanian
Communist elites perceived the reforms N.S. Khrushchev implemented as a hazard to
the regime’s stability and therefore tried to consolidate their regime independently
from the USSR Tismăneanu ( Tismăneanu, V. (1991). Reinventing Politics. Eastern Europe from Stalin to Havel. New York NY: Free Press.
Dragomir, E. (2014). Cold War Perceptions. Romania’s policy change towards the Soviet Union, 1960-1964.
Helsinki: Helsinki University Printing House.
Both PCR leaders chose to self-censor their attitude in times of crisis for two different
reasons acting concurrently: on one hand, they could not afford to confront Moscow
as the Chinese did since Romania was much more vulnerable and, on the other hand,
their allegiance to Communism was just as strong as Mao’s while ideological and political
affinities did have a saying in the decision-making process. Considering what happened
in Hungary in 1956 and also in Czechoslovakia in 1968, it was evident that the Soviet
Union maintained both the determination and the capacity to impose its will upon its
satellites. From that point of view, the regime in Romania was vulnerable to Soviet
interference and could not advance on an independent course too far. Reducing such
a vulnerability was a primary objective of the regime in Bucharest Declaraţie cu privire la poziţia Partidului Muncitoresc Român în problemele mişcării
comuniste şi muncitoreşti internaţionale adoptată de Plenara lărgită a CC al PMR din
aprilie 1964, Bucureşti: Editura Politică (1964): 55-56.
In this context, Romania’s flirtation with the West was only instrumental and did
not reflect real affinities. Strong commercial ties with the West released at least
part of the Soviet pressures exerted through the Council of Mutual Economic Aid (CMEA)
because Romania was becoming less dependent on Soviet supplies of either raw materials
or technology —just as Tito chose to work with the Americans while under Stalin’s
ideological fire. Increased international visibility and integration in world institutions
also served to consolidate the regime and make it immune to Soviet interference while
domestically the same purpose was pursued through instrumentalization of nationalism
Romania first objected to the perspective of Soviet-American agreements with worldwide
consequences during the negotiation of the Nuclear Nonproliferation Treaty of 1968,
accusing the fact that small non-nuclear states were not involved in the negotiations
but had to obey the provisions of the treaty nonetheless which caused a legal inequity.
The formulation of the Brezhnev doctrine reminded the Romanian Communist Party that
Soviet control over Eastern Europe remained just as strong as before and, when American
President R. Nixon visited Moscow and signed SALT I, decision-makers in Bucharest
became convinced that the two superpowers were deciding the fate of the world once
again on bases of spheres of influence
Romania could not exercise any influence on the Soviet-American detente but that was
not the case with the CSCE. The CSCE involved a different framework which included
small and medium states and facilitated —at least theoretically— cooperation between
all those European states opposing the Soviet-American hegemony of Europe. The CSCE
also had a symbolic value as it was called upon to settle unresolved issues originating
in the end of the Second World War where the postwar bipolarity historically originated.
This is why the CSCE was regarded as an environment able to foster solutions against
hegemony, against the Brezhnev doctrine and also against the risks of a virtual Soviet-American
co-dominium. At the same time, the Romanian decision-makers thought that the CSCE
process also involved the risk of confirming hegemony and bipolarity should small
and medium states refrain from advocating their cause. In other words, the CSCE was
regarded by Bucharest as an open battle offering at least the chance to secure the
regime’s independence from Soviet (or foreign) interference by contributing to a redefinition
of international relations in Europe on different bases Wenger y Mastny ( Wenger, A. and Mastny, V. (2008). New perspectives on the origins of the CSCE process.
In A. Wenger, V. Mastny and C. Nuenlist. Origins of the European Security System: The Helsinki Process Revisited, 1965-75 (pp. 3-20). Abingdon: Routledge. Available at: https://doi.org/10.4324/9780203895306.ch1
In its effort to fight off Soviet hegemony, the Romanian approach to the CSCE disregarded
an issue that was going to gain great prominence in the future: human rights. While
the Soviet Union’s primary goal was to obtain recognition for its postwar borders,
the Western governments, pressured by the public opinion but not only, focused on
the so-called 3rd basket which later translated into the 7th principle of the “Helsinki Decalogue”, namely respect for human rights and fundamental
freedoms Zagorski ( Zagorski, A. (2018). The Human Dimension of the CSCE, 1975-1990. In N. Badalassi and
S. Snyder (eds.). The CSCE and the End of the Cold War: Diplomacy, Societies and Human Rights, 1972-1990
(p. 17). New York; Oxford: Berghahn Books. Available at: https://doi.org/10.2307/j.ctvw049dp.7 González Aldea ( González Aldea, P. (2008). Helsinki 1975. Începutul sfârșitului. București: Curtea Veche.
The Romanian position at CSCE was formulated for the first time in November 1972 when
the party leadership, following proposals from the MFA, approved the mandate of the
Romanian delegation which was going to participate at the first meeting at Dipoli
in Espoo. The Romanian position per se was the result of a long decision-making process, adapted to various circumstances
along the duration of the CSCE but its basic tenets, as formulated in November 1972,
remained unchanged. The mandate focused on: equality and equal rights for all participating
states (which had to be reaffirmed at all times both through the principles formulated
in official documents and through the procedures of the meetings); refraining from
the threat or use of force in inter-state relations; the establishment of a permanent
organism in charged with monitoring the outcome of the conference and the application
of its decisions; economic cooperation among states with different systems in Europe ANR, fund CC al PCR, section Chancellery, dossier no. 126/1972: 63-72.
Later clarifications added to the original document in 1973 as well as the directives
elaborated for the second phase of the CSCE laid great emphasis on three aspects in
particular: military, economic and institutional. In April 1973, new instructions
sent to the Romanian delegation at CSCE insisted on refraining from the threat or
use of force and tried to promote additional measures aimed to enforce the principle,
such as the obligation of a government to announce its military maneuvers and avoid
military exercises or maneuvers anywhere near its borders ANR, fund CC al PCR, section Chancellery, dossier no. 74/1973: 10-11. ANR, fund CC al PCR, section Chancellery, dossier no. 133/1973: 51-52.
This tridimensional orientation of the Romanian position was designed to safeguard the country against foreign interference by reshaping the system of inter-state relations in Europe on bases different from bipolarity. Although the principles as such had a universal value and might had been applicable to the situation in Europe, what the Romania pursued were guarantees against what it perceived as bipolar hegemony reinforced by the Soviet-American detente. The military components were aimed to neutralize the Brezhnev doctrine while economic cooperation across the Iron Curtain was aimed to provide a safety valve against Soviet pressures. A permanent organism was intended to generate restraint among the superpowers and offer international countenance in case of aggression. It was, obviously, a very generous endeavor in which the Romanian leaders understood that their position clashed with the Soviet view of the CSCE but N. Ceaușescu hoped he could rely on the Western Europe in order to defend similar principles. He therefore had to fight on two fronts.
As it became clear soon after the debut of the CSCE process in 1972, the first major
challenge Romania had to face was to resist Soviet pressures for uniformity. Only
a week before the preparatory consultations in Dipoli, the Soviet ambassador in Bucharest
invited the Romanian deputy minister of foreign affairs to a meeting in Moscow in
order to participate, along with the other Warsaw Pact countries, in “elaborating
the details concerning the common tactical line of the brotherly Socialist countries” ANR, fund CC al PCR, section Chancellery, dossier no. 126/1972: 45. Rey ( Rey, M. P. (2008). The USSR and the Helsinki process, 1969-1975: optimism, doubt or
defiance? In A. Wenger, V. Mastny and C. Nuenlist (eds.). Origins of the European Security System: The Helsinki Process Revisited, 1965-75 (pp. 65-82). Abingdon: Routledge. Available at: https://doi.org/10.4324/9780203895306.ch4
The mandate of the delegation which was going to travel to Moscow for the above-mentioned
Warsaw Pact meeting reveals in a simple form exactly how Bucharest hoped to hold out
to Moscow on this matter. The mandate specified, among numerous other things, that
if Moscow were to suggest that all Warsaw Pact countries should consult before any
decision and only advance common initiatives, the Romanian delegation had to reject
the suggestion arguing that such an approach would only determine NATO countries to
react in a similar manner therefore compromising the conference’s chances of success ANR, fund CC al PCR, section Chancellery, dossier no. 126/1972: 50-51.
In January 1973, the foreign ministers of all Warsaw Pact countries met in Moscow
to discuss the reduction of troops and conventional arms in Europe —a topic of Soviet-American
disarming negotiations, but also the progress of the CSCE. The Romanian delegate,
George Macovescu, reported back to Bucharest that this time it was the Polish delegation
which insisted that all Warsaw Pact countries should coordinate their positions at
CSCE. Macovescu also noticed that in all Soviet speeches or projects, the issue of
refraining from the threat or use of force was condoned; when Macovescu approached
Soviet foreign minister A. Gromyko on this topic, his answer was rather evasive ANR, fund CC al PCR, section Foreign Relations, dossier no. 248/1973: 2-6. Ibid.: 27-28.
It was not a secret that Moscow had its own particular agenda at the CSCE, concerning
mostly the recognition of postwar borders, and that Soviet leaders expected their
satellites to just follow in line. Many of these satellites had their own agenda —although
the matter is still under-researched— but avoided a clash with the Soviets on this
matter for various reasons Wenger y Mastny ( Wenger, A. and Mastny, V. (2008). New perspectives on the origins of the CSCE process.
In A. Wenger, V. Mastny and C. Nuenlist. Origins of the European Security System: The Helsinki Process Revisited, 1965-75 (pp. 3-20). Abingdon: Routledge. Available at: https://doi.org/10.4324/9780203895306.ch1 Ibid.
In July 1972, during the informal Yalta meeting, L. Brezhnev stated clearly that the
Warsaw Pact’s most important goal at the CSCE was the recognition of postwar borders ANR, fund CC al PCR, section Foreign Relations, dossier no. 80/1972: 18.
The following year, the informal Yalta meeting took place right between the first
and the second phases of the CSCE. L. Brezhnev reiterated once again that recognition
of borders was the most important goal of the Warsaw Pact at the CSCE. Also, he added,
the West was trying to take advantage of the Socialist countries by speculating the
differences that might exist between them and that was why, in Brezhnev’s view, the
Socialist countries had to demonstrate unity and solidarity in all their initiatives ANR, fund CC al PCR, section Foreign Relations, dossier no. 140/1973: 21-25. Ibid.: 187.
As far as the Romanian views on international relations were concerned, these were
in a process of transformation at the time. Independence in foreign policy was no
longer regarded in Marxist-Leninist terms, in the framework of the world Communist
movement, but the focus was slowly shifting towards juridical, non-ideological terms
in the geographical framework of Europe. In June 1973, a series of meetings of the
party leadership illustrate well this process of transformation. On 25 June 1973,
the Party Presidium rejected a Soviet proposal according to which Warsaw Pact ministers
of foreign affairs were supposed to meet separately in Helsinki. N. Ceaușescu stated
on that occasion, with visible frustration, that Romania could not accept just any
proposal advanced by just any section of the Central Committee in Moscow. Furthermore,
he added, the purpose of the CSCE should be exactly the opposite: “Europe must become
a force in itself against the diktat of the two superpowers” ANR, fund CC al PCR, section Chancellery, dossier no. 117/1973: 23. Ibid.: 21.
An interesting debate took place on 20 August 1973, after the summer Yalta meeting.
As the CSCE negotiations were making progress, it was Emil Bodnăraș again who raised
the issue of the frontiers. Referring to various versions of documents discussed at
the CSCE, Bodnăraș expressed reserve towards the inviolability of frontiers as a principle.
He argued that Moscow was interested in that because it just wanted to consolidate
the territorial conquests it made during the war but Romania did not share such interest;
even more, negotiation on the delimitation of the continental plateau of the Black
Sea —in which Romania was indeed very interested— would be hindered by the principle
of frontier inviolability ANR, fund CC al PCR, section Chancellery, dossier no. 133/1973: 21. Ibid.: 22.
Apart from the technicalities of frontier inviolability, it is visible that the party leaders in Bucharest were reevaluating —once again after 1964— their relation with the Soviet Union, without any inhibition and without any regard for the taboos of inter-bloc relations. The CSCE was an opportunity to resettle relations in Europe on new bases and they wanted to make sure that those bases would be beneficial to Romania. If this resettling required official narratives of the postwar world order to be altered decades after 1945 by arraigning vital Soviet interests, the Romanian leaders seemed determined enough to do it.
During the most intense phase of the CSCE negotiations (1973-1974), Romanian-Soviet
divergences were never discussed in depth at any bilateral meeting. N. Ceaușescu met
L. Brezhnev on several occasions during this time and yet the CSCE was only approached
formally in their talks. The two leaders appeared willing to transfer their disagreements
to lower level officials in order to spare their relations of more tension. It is
also interesting that, in matters concerning Romania’s relations with China, Brezhnev
always confronted Ceaușescu openly during their talks, never missing a chance to express
his discontent, always oscillating between promises and threats (either explicit or
implicit)
What the Romanian party leadership disliked terribly in the Soviet approach was the
continuous reference to Potsdam. This was the key to the Soviet view on the CSCE because
it invoked a special, different role for the Union in Europe, deriving from the Second
World War, from the victory and the responsibilities (as occupying power) which Moscow
saw as deriving from victory. It placed the Soviet Union at a different table together
with the other victorious powers rendering the equality of all states futile. George
Macovescu, the Romanian minister of foreign affairs, noted in his report on the first
phase of the CSCE that his Soviet homologue, Andrei Gromyko, insisted on the fact
that European security can only rely on the Potsdam agreement ANR, fund CC al PCR, section Foreign Relations, dossier no. 237/1973: 31. Ibid.
For the Romanian decision-makers, it became evident especially during the second phase
of the CSCE that Moscow relied on its agreement with the Americans in advancing a
bipolar vision on European security and detente. It was probably the reason for which
Brezhnev chose not to pressure Ceaușescu much: he had a bigger scheme on his mind.
Still, America’s lack of interest in the CSCE process was visible in its bilateral
relations with the Soviet Union as well. When H. Kissinger visited Moscow in May 1973,
the suggested to the Soviets that the obstacles encountered by the CSCE were caused
by the large number of governments involved in the negotiations. He was evidently
suggesting that a bilateral Soviet-American approach would have been much more convenient
which was exactly what the Soviets thought too. Also, when L. Brezhnev visited America
later that year, he and Nixon did not discuss the topic at length. R. Nixon’s informal
position was that he was unable to force his Western allies into anything
But Ceaușescu was not going to quit so easily. In the following year and a half, he focused the entire Romanian diplomacy on pressuring both the Soviets and the Americans but especially the Western European delegations and governments to accept small changes in the documents of the conference with the purpose of diluting references to bipolarity. The Romanian diplomacy did have a rhetoric advantage: the concept of the CSCE was first formulated in 1966 and 1969, long before the rise of international detente with R. Nixon’s visit to Moscow in 1972. It is important to notice that the Soviets were much more willing to discuss equality among all states before 1972, a fact that was recorded in the documents of the Bucharest and Budapest conferences of 1966 and 1969. That was enough to offer the Romanian diplomats arguments against the Soviet position as it had been formulated by A. Gromyko in 1973.
Valentin Lipatti, head of the Romanian delegation at CSCE, approached the Soviet delegation
in November 1974 in Geneva, inquiring directly about the Soviet reticence in accepting
the principle of equality for all states. His argument was that the Declaration of
Bucharest in 1966 as well as the Appeal of Budapest in 1969, both signed by the Soviets,
included this provision. Lev Mendelevich, deputy head of the Soviet delegation, offered
a direct answer on that occasion, which was rather rare in mutual consultations. Mendelevich
told Lipatti that the Soviet Union could not accept the equality of all states simply
because the states were not equal in fact. Some of them, he argued, were members of
the Security Council of the United Nations and had certain responsibilities while
others were not and their responsibilities were much more limited ANR, fund CC al PCR, section Foreign Relations, dossier no. 328/1974: 22-23. Ibid.
A week later, on 28 November 1974, V. Lipatti approached A.G. Kovalev, head of the
Soviet delegation, to discuss the Romanian proposals regarding the threat or use of
force. Romania wanted the conference to adopt a set of effective measures aimed to
protect states from the threat or use of force and the Soviets were, as expected,
reluctant. Lipatti explained Kovalev that the principle in itself had already been
agreed with Moscow on previous occasions and there were numerous documents signed
by the Soviet leadership reaffirming the USRR’s commitment to the principle. A.G.
Kovalev explained that, in spite all that, he had instructions from Moscow to oppose
the Romanian initiative Ibid.: 34.
Ibid.: 35.
The argument invoked by Kovalev was extremely delicate for Romania as it had been
an enemy state in the Second World War and article 53 of the UN Charter concerned
it directly. N. Ceaușescu denounced this approach at the 11th party congress in November 1974 where he stated that European security depended on
the measure in which each state felt safe from foreign interference. “Achieving European
security is incompatible with the existence of opposing military blocs”, he also added Programul Partidului Comunist Român de făurire a societăţii socialiste multilateral
dezvoltate şi înaintare a României spre comunism, Bucureşti: Editura Politică (1975): 165.
ANR, fund CC al PCR, section Foreign Relations, dossier no. 368/1974: 20-21.
But the Romanian leaders did have an ace up their sleeve: the other superpower. Romania continued to improve its relations with the United States after 1967 because of its role as a mediator between the Americans and the Chinese and later due to its mediation in the Middle East crisis. Although Romania never assumed the role of mediator in Sino-American relations, the fact that Washington often transmitted top secret messages to the Chinese through the Romanian channel certainly had a major effect of mutual relations and helped build trust and confidence in Romanian-American relations. As the CSCE process was progressing in 1974 and the Romanian initiatives did not appear to advance, decision-makers in Bucharest decided to approach the United States for support. The American lack of interest in the CSCE process was already known at the time but N. Ceaușescu hoped to convince White House officials relying on their understanding of Romania’s position in relations with the USSR. From this point of view, N. Ceaușescu had a very good relations with R. Nixon and was hoping for the same in relation with Gerald Ford.
Shortly after Gerald Ford took office following Nixon’s resignation, Romanian Ambassador
to Washington, Corneliu Bogdan, visited the President to congratulate him and took
the opportunity to approach the delicate CSCE issues. Corneliu Bogdan emphasized how
important it was, from the Romanian perspective, for the United States to increase
its involvement in the CSCE process ANR, fund CC al PCR, section Foreign Relations, dossier no. 359/1974: 26-27. Ibid.: 4-6.
Corneliu Bogdan reminded Ford and Kissinger of the Romanian proposal regarding the
establishment of a permanent organism responsible for monitoring how the conference
decisions were applied. He did not have to stress out why the organism was important
for Romania as Kissinger understood, without much ado, that Romania imagined the organism
as a defense against Moscow. At that time, N. Ceaușescu and the party leadership did
not anticipate that such an organism, once established, could have been used against
its own regime as it later happened when the Helsinki follow-up meetings focused especially on human rights putting Romania in a defensive position
due to its human rights abuses. It results clearly from Bogdan’s conversations with
his American counterparts that the Romanian leadership only envisaged the idea of
a permanent organism in charged with defending the principles of the conference only
as a safeguard against Soviet interferences. It is worth mentioning that other Eastern
countries embrac ed such a vision as well: Poland, for example, as Csaba Békés noticed,
supported the idea of institutionalization hoping that it would provide more leverage
for small and medium states against the superpowers
During the above-mentioned conversation, Kissinger explained Bogdan that the White
House was aware of the reasons for which Romania promoted the idea of a permanent
organism and empathized but the implications of such an organism could be detrimental
to the United States. An organism capable of protecting Romania against Soviet aggression
may also be capable of interfering in Western Europe and that was unacceptable for
the Americans. H. Kissinger did add that he was not reticent to the idea in itself
and may be willing to analyze favorably a different formula which could satisfy Romania’s
security needs without interfering with American interests ANR, fund CC al PCR, section Foreign Relations, dossier no. 359/1974: 6-8.
N. Ceaușescu discussed these problems with Henry Kissinger in November 1974 when the
secretary of state paid a short visit to Romania. Ceaușescu insisted to explain that
Romania expected the conference in Europe to settle everything that was left unsettled
after the war and reminded him of article 53 of the UN Charter which permitted military
intervention in the “former enemy states”. Kissinger claimed to be unaware of the
implications. Ceaușescu further explained that Romania, as a former enemy state, did
have a peace treaty with the United Nations signed in 1947, but article 53 of the
UN Charter still remained valid as it had been introduced in the document before the
peace treaties of 1947 were signed. In this case, although the juridical implications
of the situation were complicated, article 53 of the Charter still offered at least
the pretext for foreign intervention, if intervention was really wanted. Kissinger
confessed that he never saw things that way and promised to look into the matter much
more carefully ANR, fund CC al PCR, section Foreign Relations, dossier no. 364/1974: 12.
Furthermore, Ceaușescu lectured Kissinger on the need to involve all countries in
the process of detente and argued that a bipolar detente reminded him of something
else, of a historical event with disastrous outcomes: “I remember —and you must know
it well— what happened in 1939. Stalin preferred an agreement with Hitler. It was
written that it was an agreement for a thousand years but we know how much it lasted
and what the consequences were. We know the United States cannot be compared with
Germany but the danger of an agreement between two parties is visible to all countries
in Europe, even by your best allies” Ibid. Ibid.: 13-14.
Since Moscow’s influence in East Central Europe was based on the results of the Second World War, the Romanian leadership calculated, any political or symbolic step proclaiming the end of the post-war realities and the beginning of a new age in international relations would therefore undermine the Soviet moral justification for hegemony. It was one of the stakes of Ceaușescu’s talks with the Americans, but Ceaușescu had other stakes as well. His highest bid was to attract the Western Europeans in an anti-hegemonic scheme.
Western Europe was going through a process of transformation in the second half of
the 1960s which encouraged the Romanian leaders to think that new partnerships were
becoming possible in the future. N. Piers Ludlow argued that, starting with the 1960s,
Western Europeans began to reject American control because of their growing self-confidence
generated by the success of postwar reconstruction and European integration, but also
because the American involvement in Vietnam
For Romania, Neue Ostpolitik was a major turning point. Romania was the first Warsaw Pact country to react favorably
to Willy Brandt’s initiatives even before he became chancellor and advocated in favor
of a positive response among other Warsaw Pact members
Perhaps it was just “wishful thinking” on part of N. Ceaușescu but his presumption
was that Western Europe was just as displeased with the American hegemony as Romania
was with the Soviet hegemony. It was later along the process that he discovered how
evolutions in the West were only partially similar and convergent with evolutions
in the East and the partnership against hegemony that he was looking could not go
as far as he imagined. In any case, N. Ceaușescu relied on the fact that Romania’s
struggle against hegemony would go hand in hand with that of Western Europe. In May
1968, for example, he was recounting enthusiastically to I.B. Tito of Yugoslavia his
meeting with French President Charles de Gaulle only days earlier. France, he told
Tito, promotes a different understanding of European security, one based on the independence
of each state, one that includes the Socialist states of Eastern Europe too and the
existence of both German states, even though de Gaulle —Ceaușescu added— was not in
the position to assume publicly all the implications of his ideas ANR, fund CC al PCR, section Foreign Relations, dossier no. 75/1968: 24-25. Ibid.
But the progress of the European economic integration in the West represented a major
challenge for the Romanian vision on East-West anti-hegemonic collaboration and did
not fit into Ceaușescu’s plans. Romania needed Western Europe for economic reasons
too because trade and economic cooperation outside the Communist bloc were a safety
valve for Romania which was subjected to Soviet pressures within CMEA. Ceaușescu’s
opposition to Moscow depended on the way he managed to find economic alternatives.
As early as 1967 he told a French Socialist delegation led by Guy Mollet that unification
was not yet possible in the West nor in the East and that was why the Common Market
only obstructed cooperation instead of facilitating it. Both CMEA and the EEC, he
said, were trying to impose integration by institutional means but integration could
only be the result of gradual development ANR, fund CC al PCR, section Foreign Relations, dossier no. 31/1967: 11. Ibid.: 7.
Georges-Henri Soutou pointed out that the French vision on Europe was marked by a
convergence between two apparently independent evolutions: detente and European integration.
The author argued that French President Georges Pompidou joined efforts for a European
security conference fearing a Soviet-American or a Soviet-West German rapprochement
which would place Europe under the co-dominium of those powers. Also, France saw European
integration as a rampart against a bipolar Soviet-American detente Soutou ( Soutou, G. H. (2007). The linkage between European integration and detente. The contrasting
approaches of de Gaulle and Pompidou, 1965-1974. In P. Ludlow (ed.). European Integration and the Cold War: Ostpolitik-Westpolitik, 1965-1973 (pp. 11-35). Abingdon: Routledge. Available at: https://doi.org/10.4324/9780203088975.ch1
Romania was not the only Eastern bloc country interested in economic cooperation with
Western Europe at the expense of the EEC. Many other Warsaw Pact countries were interested
to enlarge their economic cooperation in the West and were displeased with the obstacles
involved by the rather restrictive trade and tariffs policy of the EEC. Peter van
Ham, for example, argues that the European Economic Community practiced a real “protectionism
against East European products” which obstructed the Eastern countries from exporting
on Western markets Ham, (1995): 110.
N. Ceaușescu talked about that to Hans Janitschek, secretary general of the Socialist
International in 1973, expressing his ideas about the future of Europe outside the
bipolar limitations. Europe has to devise its own security strategies, he said, must
not fear the atomic bomb because it cannot bring much benefit to whoever might use
it. Europe must understand, Ceaușescu added, that “defense from the outside is not
a guarantee” ANR, fund CC al PCR, section Foreign Relations, dossier no. 214/1973: 25. Ibid.
Although just as determined to fight against bipolarity and the challenges of a bipolar
detente, most Western decision-makers regarded this fight in different terms when
compared with the Romanian leaders who practically stood out as radicals. In a meeting
with the West German minister of foreign affairs, Walter Schell in November 1973,
N. Ceaușescu referred to the talks on Mutual Reductions of Forces and Armaments in
Central Europe underway in Vienna at the time and insisted that troops stationed on
foreign territories must be withdrawn as a prerequisite of European security, as part
of the Romanian vision aimed at dismantling both military blocks in Europe. Schell
explained to Ceaușescu that his vision did not exactly converge with the Western view
on security: “we, Europeans from the West, cannot defend ourselves from the nuclear
might of the Soviet Union without the contribution of the other nuclear superpower,
the United States. This nuclear protection only works as long as American troops are
in Europe” ANR, fund CC al PCR, section Foreign Relations, dossier no. 112/1973: 15.
The French Socialists also shared this point of view much to Ceaușescu’s disappointment.
When he met François Mitterrand in May 1972 —shortly before Mitterand signed the Common
Program with the Communists in the framework of L’Union de la gauche— Ceaușescu sharply criticized the EEC as an obstacle in the path of European cooperation
and an expression of monopolist capitalism ANR, fund CC al PCR, section Foreign Relations, dossier no. 35/1972: 28. Dimitrakopoulos ( Dimitrakopoulos, D. (2010). Introduction. Social-democracy, European integration and
preference formation. En D. Dimitrakopoulos (ed.). Social Democracy and European Integration: The politics of preference formation. Abingdon: Routledge. Available at: https://doi.org/10.4324/9780203845349 ANR, fund CC al PCR, section Foreign Relations, dossier no. 35/1972: 33.
Another Socialist leader, Alain Savary, explained to Ceaușescu a year before in 1971
that French Socialists did not necessarily see connections between the EEC and NATO.
The Common Market, Savary explained, helped support the independence of France in
front of both American and Soviet hegemony but it also served to keep Germany under
control and prevent the resurgence of nationalism. Therefore, although the EEC borders
partially overlapped with those of the Iron Curtain, there was a major difference
of meaning between the Common Market, on one hand, and the two military blocks, on
the other hand ANR, fund CC al PCR, section Foreign Relations, dossier no. 17/1971: 9-10. ANR, fund CC al PCR, section Foreign Relations, dossier no. 112/1973: 9.
This difference of interpretation derive mainly from an asymmetry: Western Europe
was practically a group where members were not isolated one from another and they
could always fall back on a structure that represented their own interests in a form
separate from the United States. Romania, on the other hand, was isolated in the Communist
bloc, did not have partners to work with against Soviet domination and no structure
to rely on in case of Soviet pressure. Apart from that, there were, obviously, significant
differences between what American hegemony meant in the West when compared to Soviet
hegemony in the East. This is why, in spite of the fact that Western Europe was indeed
motivated to fight off hegemony and superpower bipolarity, the chances for Romania
to work together with Western Europe and elaborate a common formula above and across
the Iron Curtain —as the Romanian leaders envisaged— were remote. Up to a certain
point, the Western Europeans even saw the Soviet Union as an opportunity for economic
cooperation and were interested to consider formulas of cooperation which would exclude
the United States and offer Western Europe initiative. As Peter van Ham argued, the
Western European summit of Paris in October 1972 decided that the EEC should pursue
a common commercial policy towards the East in order to encourage detente
But Romania and Western Europe did agree on one important issue: delegitimizing the
Brezhnev doctrine. The Soviet proposals on the renunciation to the use of force were
formulated so as to permit the use of force under specific circumstances: bilateral
or multilateral treaties, conventions or agreements. The aim of such formulation was
to offer justification for the Brezhnev doctrine, for a Czechoslovak-like intervention
in case Moscow saw it necessary. As Angela Romano argued, most Western governments
understood exactly where Moscow was hinting and refused to accept such formulation
asking instead for a very clear definition of renunciation to the use of force
Romania saw the CSCE as a chance to politically rearrange postwar Europe so as to undermine the bases on which Soviet and American hegemony over the continent had been established. In advancing such a project, the Romanian Communist elites moved further in their anti-Soviet dissidence from the Marxist-Leninist arguments previously used to defending national Communism or to defend neutrality in the Sino-Soviet dispute to a different level of argumentation. In doing so, the party leadership in Bucharest relied on the fact that Western Europe was opposing American hegemony too and therefore a common front against bipolarity could be put together in order to transform political relations in Europe.
Romania promoted many principles and ideas at the CSCE but the most relevant of them aimed at securing the country’s position in the event of a military threat deriving from the Brezhnev doctrine: at principled level, refraining from the threat or use of force and at practical level, the establishment of an organism in charged with supervising the application of the final documents. These measures (and others) were part of a wider endeavor aimed at transforming relations in Europe on bases of equality and multilateral detente instead of the bipolarity which originated at the end of the Second World War and was the source of superpower hegemony. Romania had to once again confront the Soviet Union on a different platform, challenging its position and role in postwar Europe as it had before challenged Moscow’s position in the world Communist movement.
The Romanian leadership tried to secure both American and European support for their
efforts (at different stages and for different purposes) but success was rather limited.
This partial failure was due to the fact that Western Europe was not determined to
go as far as the Romanian leaders in fighting off hegemony and bipolarity because
Western Europe was simply not as affected by hegemony as Romania was. Still, Romania
did not fail. Its efforts helped accelerate the fragmentation that was already manifesting
in the Communist bloc, they encouraged and contributed to various evolutions directed
against Cold War bipolarity and superpower hegemony (such as non-alignment or Eurocommunism)
and therefore played a role —as minor as it may have been— in the ultimate dissolution
of military blocs and the demise of the Cold War
[1] | |
[2] |
Tismăneanu (Tismăneanu, V. (2003). Stalinism for All Seasons: A Political History of Romanian Communism. Berkeley CA: University of California Press.2003): 178-179. |
[3] | |
[4] | |
[5] | |
[6] | |
[7] |
Pechlivanis (Pechlivanis, P. (2017). Between Détente and Differentiation: Nixon’s visit to Bucharest
in August 1969. Cold War History, 17, 241-258. Available at:
|
[8] | |
[9] |
Tismăneanu (Tismăneanu, V. (1991). Reinventing Politics. Eastern Europe from Stalin to Havel. New York NY: Free Press.1991): 34; Dragomir (Dragomir, E. (2014). Cold War Perceptions. Romania’s policy change towards the Soviet Union, 1960-1964. Helsinki: Helsinki University Printing House.2014): 37-42. |
[10] |
Tismăneanu (Tismăneanu, V. (2003). Stalinism for All Seasons: A Political History of Romanian Communism. Berkeley CA: University of California Press.2003): 168-169. |
[11] |
Declaraţie cu privire la poziţia Partidului Muncitoresc Român în problemele mişcării comuniste şi muncitoreşti internaţionale adoptată de Plenara lărgită a CC al PMR din aprilie 1964, Bucureşti: Editura Politică (1964): 55-56. |
[12] | |
[13] | |
[14] | |
[15] | |
[16] | |
[17] | |
[18] | |
[19] |
González Aldea (González Aldea, P. (2008). Helsinki 1975. Începutul sfârșitului. București: Curtea Veche.2008): 44 et passim. |
[20] |
ANR, fund CC al PCR, section Chancellery, dossier no. 126/1972: 63-72. |
[21] |
ANR, fund CC al PCR, section Chancellery, dossier no. 74/1973: 10-11. |
[22] |
ANR, fund CC al PCR, section Chancellery, dossier no. 133/1973: 51-52. |
[23] |
ANR, fund CC al PCR, section Chancellery, dossier no. 126/1972: 45. |
[24] | |
[25] |
ANR, fund CC al PCR, section Chancellery, dossier no. 126/1972: 50-51. |
[26] |
ANR, fund CC al PCR, section Foreign Relations, dossier no. 248/1973: 2-6. |
[27] |
Ibid.: 27-28. |
[28] | |
[29] | |
[30] |
Ibid. |
[31] | |
[32] |
ANR, fund CC al PCR, section Foreign Relations, dossier no. 80/1972: 18. |
[33] |
ANR, fund CC al PCR, section Foreign Relations, dossier no. 140/1973: 21-25. |
[34] |
Ibid.: 187. |
[35] |
ANR, fund CC al PCR, section Chancellery, dossier no. 117/1973: 23. |
[36] |
Ibid.: 21. |
[37] |
ANR, fund CC al PCR, section Chancellery, dossier no. 133/1973: 21. |
[38] |
Ibid.: 22. |
[39] | |
[40] |
ANR, fund CC al PCR, section Foreign Relations, dossier no. 237/1973: 31. |
[41] |
Ibid. |
[42] | |
[43] |
ANR, fund CC al PCR, section Foreign Relations, dossier no. 328/1974: 22-23. |
[44] |
Ibid. |
[45] |
Ibid.: 34. |
[46] |
Ibid.: 35. |
[47] |
Programul Partidului Comunist Român de făurire a societăţii socialiste multilateral dezvoltate şi înaintare a României spre comunism, Bucureşti: Editura Politică (1975): 165. |
[48] |
ANR, fund CC al PCR, section Foreign Relations, dossier no. 368/1974: 20-21. |
[49] |
ANR, fund CC al PCR, section Foreign Relations, dossier no. 359/1974: 26-27. |
[50] |
Ibid.: 4-6. |
[51] | |
[52] |
ANR, fund CC al PCR, section Foreign Relations, dossier no. 359/1974: 6-8. |
[53] |
ANR, fund CC al PCR, section Foreign Relations, dossier no. 364/1974: 12. |
[54] |
Ibid. |
[55] |
Ibid.: 13-14. |
[56] | |
[57] | |
[58] | |
[59] | |
[60] | |
[61] | |
[62] |
ANR, fund CC al PCR, section Foreign Relations, dossier no. 75/1968: 24-25. |
[63] |
Ibid. |
[64] |
ANR, fund CC al PCR, section Foreign Relations, dossier no. 31/1967: 11. |
[65] |
Ibid.: 7. |
[66] | |
[67] | |
[68] | |
[69] | |
[70] |
Ham, (1995): 110. |
[71] |
ANR, fund CC al PCR, section Foreign Relations, dossier no. 214/1973: 25. |
[72] | |
[73] |
Ibid. |
[74] |
ANR, fund CC al PCR, section Foreign Relations, dossier no. 112/1973: 15. |
[75] |
ANR, fund CC al PCR, section Foreign Relations, dossier no. 35/1972: 28. |
[76] | |
[77] |
ANR, fund CC al PCR, section Foreign Relations, dossier no. 35/1972: 33. |
[78] |
ANR, fund CC al PCR, section Foreign Relations, dossier no. 17/1971: 9-10. |
[79] |
ANR, fund CC al PCR, section Foreign Relations, dossier no. 112/1973: 9. |
[80] | |
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Romano (Romano, A. (2009). From Détente in Europe to European Détente: How the West Shaped the Helsinki CSCE. Brussels: Peter Lang.2009): 105. |
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ANR |
Arhivele Naționale ale României [National Archives of Romania] |
CC |
Comitetul Central [Central Committee] |
CMEA |
Council for Mutual Economic Assistance |
CSCE |
Conference on Security and Co-operation in Europe |
EEC |
European Economic Community |
MFA |
Ministry of Foreign Affairs |
NATO |
North Atlantic Treaty Organization |
PCR |
Partidul Comunist Român [Romanian Communist Party] |
SALT |
Strategic Arms Limitation Talks |
UN |
United Nations |
USSR: |
Union of Soviet Socialist Republics |