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Romanian anti-communist resistance movement

Romanian anti-communist resistance movement
Part of the Cold War and the anti-communist insurgencies in Central and Eastern Europe

Map of Romania with armed resistance areas marked in red
Date1947–1962
Location
Result Insurgency suppressed
Belligerents

 PR Romania

Supported by:
 Soviet Union

Anti-communist groups

Supported by:
 United States
 United Kingdom
CNR
Commanders and leaders
Gheorghe Gheorghiu-Dej
Gheorghe Pintilie
Alexandru Drăghici
Ion Gavrilă Ogoranu
Ioan Carlaonț #
Vasile Motrescu [ro] Executed
Iosif Capotă Executed
Toma Arnăuțoiu Executed
Leon Șușman (DOW)
Teodor Șușman [ro] 
Nicolae Dabija Executed
Aurel Aldea #
Constantin Eftimiu #
Victor Lupșa Executed
Gogu Puiu 
Units involved
  • Haiducii lui Avram Iancu
  • Haiducii Muscelului
  • National Defence Front
  • ...and others
    Strength
    Several battalions[1] 10,000 rebels
    Casualties and losses
    Unknown, but most likely light 2,000 killed
    Most of the army rebels executed
    Rest of them imprisoned

    The Romanian anti-communist resistance movement was active from the late 1940s to the mid-1950s, with isolated individual fighters remaining at large until the early 1960s. Armed resistance was the first and most structured form of resistance against the Romanian People's Republic, which in turn regarded the fighters as "bandits". It was not until the overthrow of Nicolae Ceaușescu in late 1989 that details about what was called "anti-communist armed resistance" were made public. It was only then that the public learned about the several small armed groups, which sometimes termed themselves "hajduks", that had taken refuge in the Carpathian Mountains, where some hid for ten years from authorities. The last fighter was eliminated in the mountains of Banat in 1962. The Romanian resistance was one of the longest lasting armed movements in the former Eastern Bloc.[2]

    Some academics argue that the extent and influence of the movement is often exaggerated in the post-communist Romanian media, memoirs of the survivors, and even historiography, while the authoritarian, anti-Semitic and/or xenophobic ideology of part of the groups are generally overlooked or minimized.[3] Others, generally civic associations and former dissidents, argue that had external circumstances been different, and had the Western powers not permitted the Soviet Union to incorporate Romania and other countries from Eastern Europe into its sphere of domination, the anti-communist armed resistance could have led a successful war of national liberation.[4][5] Still others, mainly former officials, former members of the Securitate secret police, as well as sympathizers of the communist government, label these clandestine groups as fascist, criminal, or anti-national elements subordinate to foreign Western interests seeking to destabilize the country.[4] Some former resistance fighters (such as Ion Gavrilă Ogoranu, Gavrilă Vatamaniuc, and Lucreția Jurj) acknowledged after 1989 that they never posed a real threat to the communist government, and that their role was rather limited in maintaining an anti-communist climate in their local communities in the event of an American intervention.[4]

    Preliminaries

    Early resistance

    In March 1944, the Red Army set foot in Bukovina, advancing into Romania, at the time an ally of Nazi Germany. Hundreds of people went into the forests forming anti-Soviet guerrilla groups of 15–20 people.[6] A battalion was created and trained by the Wehrmacht to fight the NKVD;[7] consisting exclusively of local volunteers, this unit, which reached up to 1,378 fighters, could not stem the tide. By August 1944, most were captured by the NKVD, who considered them "political war criminals", and deported them to forced labor camps in Siberia; the surviving partisans were killed or captured by March 1945.[8][unreliable source?] Scholar Andrei Miroiu notes that at least part of the partisans may have actually been German troops trapped behind enemy lines. As soon as September 12, 1944, the Romanian authorities were actively cooperating with the NKVD in capturing the partisans, surrendering them to the Soviet Army.[7]

    After the Allied armistice with Romania (11–12 September 1944), the Red Army had a free run in Romania and the Romanian government did not have authority over Northern Bukovina. In late 1944 and early 1945, some small armed groups were formed in Romania, with a mission of harassing the Red Army in a future war between the Soviets and the West.[6] After the war, most of these groups dissolved while others remained in the mountains until 1948 when they became active. In May 1946, General Aurel Aldea, the former Minister of the Interior of the first Sănătescu cabinet, was arrested and charged with "bringing together various subversive organizations under his command". It appears, however, that the "National Resistance Movement", which he coordinated, did not pose much of an obstacle to the establishment of a pro-Soviet communist government.

    Anti-communist demonstrations in Bucharest

    On 8 November 1945, the last large-scale anticommunist demonstration occurred in Bucharest; tens of thousands of people, most of them members and supporters of the opposition parties, gathered in front of the Royal Palace to show their support for King Michael I of Romania and protest against the Petru Groza communist-dominated government. After the communists also sent in armed workers, violence erupted between the two groups; the Romanian soldiers in the Soviet Army fired warning shots and ultimately the crowd dispersed. During the event, 11 were killed and dozens injured, however, the shooters were not identified, with the government and opposition accusing each other. Later documents indicated that the communist Gheorghe Pintilie was among the ones who fired.[9][10] After the elections of 1946, a coalescence of anti-communist forces led to a structure reuniting generals, senior officers, and politicians preparing and coordinating armed groups under a single command.[11] The central coordinating structure inside Romania reported on this initiative to the Romanian National Committee residing in Paris, which in turn informed the Western governments. The project was eventually intercepted by the Romanian authorities, which subsequently carried out massive arrests in spring 1948, comprising up to 80% of those who were implicated in the movement. Thus, the coordinated national resistance was decapitated.

    Onset of the armed resistance movement

    Gărzile lui Decebal, an anti-communist resistance group formed by members and sympathizers of the Iron Guard near Vatra Dornei. Photograph taken in September 1949 by an unknown Gărzile member, and preserved by the Securitate

    However, starting with the summer of 1948, individuals or small groups went underground in the Carpathians, forming various units of armed resistance in what was a relatively large movement, gathering several thousand people. The rebels came from all social strata and all areas of the country, spreading everywhere the terrain could shield them. The movement was related to the spate of mass arrests hitting the country after the communists seized power on 30 December 1947, as well as to the political and economical measures which ruined a sizable part of the peasantry and the middle class.[12][need quotation to verify]

    There were several reasons for people seeking shelter in the mountains. While some went underground to escape imminent arrest, more generally people fled as they abandoned hope for surviving after being economically ruined and risking detention or worse. Significantly, entire families took flight in late 1948 and early 1949. Thus, the British consular official in Cluj, reporting on 1 May 1949 on the situation of partisans under the leadership of General Corneliu Dragalina noted that:

    clothing and medicine are short and this is probably true as their numbers have been increased by a considerable proportion of women and children since the March 1st land expropriation. I have been given a figure as high as 20,000 as the number who has joined since the expropriation (...) The increase in the number of women and children will create problems of survival next winter (...) I am told now and again of lorries of army supplies going over to the partisans, sometimes by capture and sometimes by desertion, but I cannot say to what extent..."[11]

    Teodor Șușman – anticommunist resistant of Apuseni Mountains

    The members of the armed resistance did not identify themselves as "partisans", but hajduks,[13] a word for generous highwaymen, considered folk heroes. A further major component of the armed resistance consisted of individuals and groups motivated by anti-communist convictions and persuaded that only an armed engagement could contain increasing terror and prevent an irrevocable communist takeover. Some of the resistance groups were led by ex-army officers and acted in a more coordinated and planned way. It appears that they put their hope in stirring up a more general armed insurrection, which never came to life. A smaller category of insurgents were Romanian refugees recruited in Europe by the Office of Policy Coordination (OPC), trained in France, Italy, and Greece and then dropped in the Carpathians. It seems, however, that most of them, not being able to create local contacts imperative for survival, were soon captured.[11]

    Rebel co-operation with the Central Intelligence Agency

    The rebels had links with the Central Intelligence Agency (CIA), which conducted parachute missions in Romania in the early post-war years. At the beginning of 1949, the CIA through its Office of Policy Coordination (OPC) began to recruit displaced Romanians from West Germany, Austria, and Yugoslavia. Gordon Mason, the CIA station chief in Bucharest from 1949 to 1951, said that the smuggling of weapons, ammunition, radio transmitters, and medicine was organized. Agents smuggled into Romania by the CIA were to help organize the sabotage of factories and transport networks. Among the Romanian volunteers recruited by the CIA at the beginning of 1951 were Constantin Săplăcan, Wilhelm Spindler, Gheorghe Bârsan, Matias Bohm, and Ilie Puiu. They were the first to be parachuted, on the night of October 18 to 19, 1951, in the Făgăraș Mountains, but they were soon caught by the Securitate and executed (except for Bârsan, who committed suicide while in custody).[14][15] The Securitate discovered that these men had been recruited in Italy by a former Romanian pilot. Following this, the Romanian Government sent a note to the United States protesting interference in the country's internal affairs, and that the captured CIA agents had been "sent to carry out acts of terrorism and espionage against the Romanian Army."[16]

    Later on, a two-man team was parachuted into Romania by the CIA on 2 October 1952 near Târgu Cărbunești in Oltenia. Three American-trained agents were sent in June 1953 to the Apuseni Mountains; they were later captured, but not executed, as the Romanian authorities intended to use them as double agents. In the Oradea-Satu Mare region, three airdropped agents were killed, one of them in a firefight and two others later executed.[17]

    Resistance groups

    Ion Gavrilă Ogoranu, leader of Făgăraș Mountains movement

    Ion Gavrilă Ogoranu

    Ion Gavrilă Ogoranu, a member of the Iron Guard's youth wing who led a resistance group in the Făgăraș Mountains from 1948 to 1956, and remained undetected until 1976, worked out a set of defining traits of the typical Romanian resistance group.[18] According to this author, such a group was rather small but could number up to 200 men, located in a mountainous/forested area which comprised some communities. Ogoranu further stated that such groups were supported by a significant number of inhabitants (up to several thousand), who provided shelter, food, and information.

    Leon Șușman's resistance group

    In the Apuseni Mountains region of Transylvania, the most active group was led by Leon Șușman, a former member of the Iron Guard who had been sentenced for his participation in the Legionnaires' rebellion and Bucharest pogrom. The group mainly hid in the woods and acquired part of its armament from an Iron Guard band that the Germans parachuted in the area in 1944–45. Suspicion within the group was high, and one of the members was shot in 1954 by his comrades. To eliminate this resistance group, the Securitate used informers against them and intercepted the correspondence of family members. The group was eliminated after an attack by Securitate troops, both sides suffering a casualty each during the battle.[19] An armed group called "The National Defense Front-The Haiduc Corps" was headed by a former officer of the Royal Army who participated in the war against the Soviet Union on the Eastern Front, Major Nicolae Dabija. Resistants from this group robbed the Tax Office in Teiuș, armed with a rifle and handguns. The Securitate learned about the location of this group after an arrested resistant revealed their location on Muntele Mare [ro] and about their strength. The Securitate decided to attack the rebels on the morning of 4 March 1949; Securitate forces led by Colonel Mihai Patriciu charged the peak where the rebels were located, with a gunfight and later hand-to-hand combat occurring. The Securitate suffered three deaths and three others wounded, possibly also due to friendly fire. Seven or eleven partisans died in the battle, and further twelve were captured. Dabija escaped along with two others; however, he was arrested on 22 March 1949 after a local villager, whose barn he was sleeping in, notified the authorities of his presence. On 28 October 1949, seven members of the group, including Major Nicolae Dabija, were executed in Sibiu.[19]

    Infiltration of the resistance movement

    Lieutenant Toma Arnăuțoiu, leader of "Haiducii Muscelului", one of the most long-lived groups

    Resistance groups were the target of systematic and enduring military actions from fully armed regular troops of the Securitate. The strength of the Securitate troops could vary from platoon to battalion up to regiment, including armoured vehicles, artillery, and occasionally even aviation. The insurgent groups sustained losses consisting of dead and wounded captured by the Securitate. They also fell victim to treason from supporters or infiltrated persons, which led to losses and captures. Gavrilă-Ogoranu states that some of the arrested rebels and their supporters were killed during interrogation, while other members of resistance groups were indicted in public or secret trials, and sentenced to death or prison. He estimates that several thousands of convictions were imposed. Capital punishment was carried out – either secretly, with bodies thrown into unknown common graves, or publicly in order to intimidate the local population. A significant number of detained rebels, who had not been sentenced to death, were killed outside prisons, under unexplained circumstances. In areas where the rebels were active, the population underwent systematic intimidation and terror from the state authorities.

    Structure and function

    Weapons and ammunition of the anti-communist resistance group "Grupul Carpatin Făgărășan" seized by the Securitate around 1952

    Dispersal, extent, and duration of the resistance rendered research after 1990 more difficult in ascertaining structural information on the movement. Evaluating the archives of the Securitate the CNSAS (National Council for the Study of the Securitate Archives) has assessed a provisional figure of 1196 resistance groups acting between 1948 and 1960.[20] The size of the groups varied from small groupings of less than 10 members to intermediate sized groups counting around 40 fighters up to larger detachments of more than 100 men, with the highest distribution density placed around a strength of 15–20 men.[11][18] According to these assumptions, the total number of active resistance fighters may not fall below 10,000 rebels, with an estimated figure of at least 40–50,000 supporting civilians.[20] The number of killed victims on the insurgents' side could be established according to both archive data and various memoirs published after 1990. The archives revealed several hundred death penalties, yet a much larger number of resisters had been killed, either in battle or during different phases of detention.[21] An estimated figure could amount to 2,000 lost lives.

    The social structure of the insurgent groups was heterogeneous, comprising a considerable part of peasants, many students, and intellectuals as well as several army officers.[11] A report of the Securitate from 1951 containing information on 804 arrested resistance members ranking among 17 "mountain bands" reveals the following: 63% of people who participated in the anti-communist insurgency had no political affiliation. 37% of people who participated in the insurgency had a political affiliation: 11% National Peasants' Party, 10% Ploughmen's Front, 9% Iron Guard, 5% Communist Party, 2% National Liberal Party.[11]

    List of resistance groups

    The territorial structure of the resistance covered mainly the mountainous and heavy forested parts of the country. A list of some of the most important resistance groups and their location:[22][23]

    Area Name of the group/group leader
    Maramureș[24] Aristina Pop-Săileanu [ro] (in the Țibleș Mountains);[25] Gavrilă Mihali Ștrifundă [ro]; Vasile Popșa; Ilie Zubașcu; Ion Ilban; Nicolae Pop; Vasile Dunca; Gavrila Iusco;[26] group of Uniate priests
    Bucovina[27][28][29] Bucovina Regional Battalion [ro]; Constantin Cenușă,[6] Vasile Motrescu [ro]; Col. Vasile Cârlan; Grigore Sandu; Vasile Cămărușă; Partisan group Gavril Vatamaniuc [ro] (Gavril Vatamaniuc; Ion Vatamaniuc),[6] Vladimir Macoveiciuc, Petru Maruseac, Ion Chiraș, and Gheorghe Chiraș;[6] Gărzile lui Decebal[30] (Gheorghe Vasilache, Filaret Gămălău),[31] Dragoș Flocea, Andrei Ghivnici, and Silvestru Harsmei.[32]: 180–184 
    Crișul Alb River and Arad National Liberation Movement; Valer Șirianu; Adrian Mihuțiu; Gligor Cantemir;[33] Ion Lulușa
    Bistrița-Năsăud/Rodna Mountains
    Apuseni Mountains
    Cluj[40] Gheorghe Pașca; Alexandru Podea; Maj. Emil Oniga; Cornel Deac; White Army (Capt. Alexandru Suciu)
    Bacău Vasile Corduneanu; Uturea group (Gheorghe Ungurașu, Petre Baciu)
    Banat[41][42][43][44] Col. Ion Uță [ro];[45] Spiru Blănaru [ro];[46] Aurel Vernichescu; Acft. Cdr. Petru Domășneanu; Nicolae Popovici; Gheorghe Ionescu; Petru Ambruș; Great Romania Partisans; brothers Blaj; Ion Tănase; Dumitru Isfănuț (Sfârlogea); Nicolae Doran; Ion Vuc; Ioan Ienea[47]
    Hunedoara Lazăr Caragea; Petru Vitan
    Sibiu Resistance point Fetea
    Covasna Vlad Țepeș Organization (Victor Lupșa,[48] Gheorghe Corneliu Szavras[49])
    Brașov[50] Vlad Țepeș Organization[51]
    Vrancea Mountains[52][53] Vrancea group (brothers Paragină); Gheorghe Militaru; Vlad Țepeș Organization (Victor Lupșa); Acft. Capt. Mândrișteanu
    Neamț County[31] Iustin Pârvu [ro], Grigore Caraza, Gen. Dumitru Coroamă, Ioasaf Marcoci, Nicolae Grebenea
    Bârlad Constantin Dan
    Northern Făgăraș Mountains[54] Dumitru (Ionele Ion); Făină; Ion Cândea; Făgăraș Carpathian Group [ro] (Ion Gavrilă Ogoranu)
    Southern Făgăraș Mountains[54]
    Gorj Capt. Mihai Brâncuși
    Vâlcea Arnota partisans[57] (Gheorghe Pele, Ion Oprițescu); Șerban Secu; Ion Jijie
    Craiova Gen. Ioan Carlaonț;[58] Col. Gheorghe Cărăușu; Col. Ștefan Hălălău [ro]; Radu Ciuceanu;[59] Marin Dumitrașcu
    Dobruja[60][61] Haiducii Dobrogei (Gogu Puiu; Nicolae Ciolacu; Fudulea brothers);[62][63] Vulturii Daciei[64]

    Rather than a planned action, the resistance movement was a spontaneous reaction in response to the wave of terror initiated by the authorities after the seizure of power in early 1948.[65] The spontaneous nature of the movement explains its marked fragmentation and the lack of coordination between the resistance groups. However, acting isolated and on a local basis conferred the groups a multiformity and flexibility which rendered the annihilation of the entire movement more difficult, and ensured a remarkable staying power for some groups. Furthermore, in some areas a notable reproducibility occurred, exterminated groups being replaced by new cores of resistance.

    A characteristic trait of the movement was its defensive nature. Indeed, few offensive actions such as sabotages or occupation of localities have been recorded.[65] While the groups did not pose a major material threat to the authorities, their dangerousness for the government resided in the symbol they represented: as long as the resisters remained free, they created a tangible challenge to the government's claim of exercising total control over the country.[66]

    Repression

    Monument to the Anti-Communist Resistance, Cluj-Napoca
    Memorial in Teregova commemorating anti-communist partisans in the Banat Mountains and the Mehedinți Mountains

    Adriana Georgescu Cosmovici was one of the first people to be arrested for belonging to the resistance movement. In July 1945, the 28-year-old woman was arrested in Bucharest, and severely beaten by the secret police investigators.[67] In a statement made in Paris in 1949, she named three investigators as having threatened her with guns, one of them being Alexandru Nicolschi.[67] According to a 1992 article for Cuvântul, Nicolschi ordered in July 1949 the murder of seven prisoners (allegedly the leaders of an anti-communist resistance movement) in transit from Gherla Prison.[67]

    Elisabeta Rizea and her husband, two peasants opposed to the government's policy of forced collectivization, joined the guerrilla group "Haiducii Muscelului" led by Colonel Gheorghe Arsenescu, providing food and supplies. Caught in 1952, she served 12 years in prison, during which time she was subjected to torture.[68] Historian Radu Ciuceanu joined the "National Resistance Movement" in 1946; centered in Craiova, the resistance group was led by general Ioan Carlaonț and colonels Gheorghe Cărăușu and Ștefan Hălălău [ro]. Arrested in 1948 and held in prison until 1963, Ciuceanu was subjected to a re-education program which involved severe beatings and harsh conditions of detention.[59]

    By the late 1950s, the resistance movement was in shambles. Romanian counter-insurgency operations had almost completely destroyed the guerrilla insurgency.[69]

    On 18 July 1958, Vasile Motrescu [ro] was executed in Botoșani. In 1959, 80 people led by Vasile Blănaru were tried for "armed insurrection" in the area of Câmpulung Muscel.[6]

    By the early 1960s, most of the anti-communist partisans in Romania were either killed or arrested. All influential or popular rebel leaders had been executed or captured. There were a few isolated guerrillas, but they either gave up fighting, went into hiding, or were simply executed after being captured by the Romanian Securitate.[69]

    The Romanian Security Forces succeeded in defeating rebel forces due to coordination between the Securitate and militia forces, as well the penetration of the insurgent groups with the use of informers, intelligence gathering, and persuasion.[70] The implacable chase of the authorities on the resisters as well as the gag order on the existence of the resistance show how concerned the government was, that the symbol of political insubordination might become contagious.[11]

    In memoriam

    Anti-communist resistance monument in front of the House of the Free Press

    In 2016, a monument dedicated to the anti-communist resistance in Romania and Bessarabia was unveiled in front of the House of the Free Press, in Bucharest, close to the spot where a statue of Vladimir Lenin was between 1960 and 1990. The sculpture, which is 20 metres (66 ft) tall and weighs 100 tons, is called "Wings" (Aripi); it was done by sculptor Mihai Buculei, whose father was a political prisoner at Aiud Prison.[71]

    The Monument to the Anti-Communist Resistance in Cluj-Napoca was inaugurated in 2006 and is the work of architect Virgil Salvanu. It is a cube made of concrete, covered with white marble; on its sides, on plaques made of black marble, are the names of those prisons where members of the anti-communist resistance were incarcerated. There is also a memorial in Teregova commemorating anti-communist partisans in the Banat and Mehedinți mountains.

    The Memorial of the Victims of Communism and of the Resistance in Sighetu Marmației houses the Sighet Memorial Museum, honoring the political prisoners who were detained at Sighet Prison, many of whom died there.

    See also

    References

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    2. ^ Consiliul Național pentru Studierea Ahivelor Securității, Bande, bandiți și eroi. Grupurile de rezistență și Securitatea (1948–1968), Editura Enciclopedică, București, 2003
    3. ^ Totok, William; Macovei, Elena-Irina (2016). Între mit și bagatelizare. Despre reconsiderarea critică a trecutului, Ion Gavrilă Ogoranu și rezistența armată anticomunistă din România. Polirom. pp. 103–104, 179–180. ISBN 978-973-46-6127-5.
    4. ^ a b c Ciobanu, Monica (28 July 2015). "Remembering the Romanian Anti-Communist Armed Resistance: An Analysis of Local Lived Experience". Eurostudia. 10 (1): 105–123. doi:10.7202/1033884ar.
    5. ^ Boldur-Lățescu, Gheorghe (2005). The communist genocide in Romania. New York: Nova Science Publishers. ISBN 1-59454-251-1. OCLC 57002619.
    6. ^ a b c d e f Din istoria rezistenței anticomuniste in România, Adrian Stănescu, Curierul Românesc, Year XVI, number 5 (208), May 2004, pages 8–9.
    7. ^ a b Miroiu, Andrei (30 November 2010). "Wiping Out 'The Bandits': Romanian Counterinsurgency Strategies in the Early Communist Period 1". The Journal of Slavic Military Studies. 23 (4): 679. doi:10.1080/13518046.2010.526021. S2CID 144406270.
    8. ^ "Destine de eroi ai rezistenței anti-comuniste din munți. Toma Arnăuțoiu și Haiducii Muscelului". cherish-humanity.org (in Romanian). 23 July 2019. Retrieved 31 August 2020.
    9. ^ Pădurean, Bianca (8 November 2017). "Manifestația anti-comunistă din 8 noiembrie 1945, înabușită în sânge". RFI România (in Romanian). Retrieved 7 November 2020.
    10. ^ "Demonstrația promonarhistă din 8 nov. 1945. Democrați. Cum este recuperată istoria cenzurată?". bucladememorie.ro (in Romanian). Retrieved 7 November 2020.
    11. ^ a b c d e f g Deletant, Dennis (1999). "Chapter 10". Communist Terror in Romania. New York: St. Martin's Press. pp. 225–234.
    12. ^ Stoica, Stan (coordinator). Dicționar de Istorie a României, p. 78. Bucharest: Editura Merona, 2007
    13. ^ Claudia Dobre, Rezistența anticomunistă în România: memorie și istorie in Memoria, Revista gândirii arestate, Nr. 55 Archived 21 June 2007 at the Wayback Machine
    14. ^ Oprea, Marius (14 July 2006). "Spionii care au intrat în frig (I)" [The spies who came in to the cold (I)]. Ziarul Financiar (in Romanian). Retrieved 23 July 2022.
    15. ^ Oprea, Marius (28 July 2006). "Spionii care au intrat în frig (II)" [The spies who came in to the cold (II)]. Ziarul Financiar (in Romanian). Retrieved 23 July 2022.
    16. ^ McDermott, Kevin; Stibbe, Matthew (2006). Revolution and resistance in Eastern Europe: challenges to communist rule. Oxford: Berg. p. 84. ISBN 1-84788-324-9. OCLC 290552336.
    17. ^ Andrei Miroiu (2010): Wiping Out 'The Bandits': Romanian Counterinsurgency Strategies in the Early Communist Period. The Journal of Slavic Military Studies, 23:4, p.676
    18. ^ a b Gavrilă-Ogoranu Ion, Short History of Armed Anti-Communist Resistance in Romania in Ionițoiu, Cicerone, Cartea de Aur a rezistenței românești împotriva comunismului. Vol. I-II, București, Ed. Hrisovul, 1996
    19. ^ a b Miroiu, Andrei (30 November 2010). "Wiping Out 'The Bandits': Romanian Counterinsurgency Strategies in the Early Communist Period 1". The Journal of Slavic Military Studies. 23 (4): 683–684. doi:10.1080/13518046.2010.526021. S2CID 144406270.
    20. ^ a b Consiliul Național pentru Studierea Arhivelor Securității, Mișcarea armată de rezistență anticomunistă din România. 1944–1962, Editura Kullusys, București, 2003
    21. ^ Dobre Florica (Editor), Bande, bandiți și eroi. Grupurile de rezistență și Securitatea (1948–1968), Ed. Enciclopedică, București, 2003
    22. ^ Ionițoiu, Cicerone [ro], Rezistența anticomunistă din munții României, 1946–1958, "Gîndirea Românească", 1993 also see online document
    23. ^ Brișca, Adrian, The Anticommunist Armed Resistance in Romania, 1944–1962, AT, nr. 34-35, 1-2/2002, pp. 75-101
    24. ^ Bellu, Ștefan. Rezistența în munții Maramureșului, in: AS, 1995, 2, p.320-326
    25. ^ Săileanu, Aristina (2008). Să trăiască partizanii până vin americanii [Long live the partisans until the Americans come] (in Romanian). București: Fundația Academia Civică Centrul Internațional de Studii asupra Comunismului. ISBN 978-973-8214-40-8. OCLC 419501615.
    26. ^ "Condamnat pentru "crimă contra ordinii sociale"". HotNews (in Romanian). 1 April 2004. Retrieved 1 September 2024.
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    28. ^ Brișcă, Adrian, Jurnalul unui partizan: Vasile Motrescu și rezistența armată din Bucovina, 2005
    29. ^ Brișcă, Adrian; Ciuceanu, Radu. Rezistența armată din Bucovina. 1944–1950. Vol. I, București, 1998
    30. ^ Radu Ciuceanu, Octavian Roske, Cristian Troncotă [ro], Începuturile mișcării de rezistență, doc. 2, pp. 138-147
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