De la pactul Ribbentrop-Molotov (23 august 1939) la tratatul de la Paris (10 februarie 1947): avatarurile unei frontiere
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94(478) (1650)
Istoria Moldovei. Republica Moldova (67)
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AGRIGOROAIEI, Ion. De la pactul Ribbentrop-Molotov (23 august 1939) la tratatul de la Paris (10 februarie 1947): avatarurile unei frontiere. In: Revista de Istorie a Moldovei, 2013, nr. 1(93), pp. 86-103. ISSN 1857-2022.
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Revista de Istorie a Moldovei
Numărul 1(93) / 2013 / ISSN 1857-2022

De la pactul Ribbentrop-Molotov (23 august 1939) la tratatul de la Paris (10 februarie 1947): avatarurile unei frontiere
CZU: 94(478)

Pag. 86-103

Agrigoroaiei Ion
 
Universitatea "Alexandru Ioan Cuza", Iaşi
 
Disponibil în IBN: 9 iunie 2015


Rezumat

Following the signing of the Nazi-Soviet Pact of August 23, 1939, Germany attacked Poland and the Second World War had begun. For its part, the Soviet Union annexed the eastern part of Poland and occupied the Baltic States in the summer of 1940. After Germany invaded France, the USSR occupied Bessarabia and Northern Bukovina on June 28, 1940, with an area of 50,762 km2 and a total of approx. 3.915 million people. Within the global conflagration, Romania was first attacked on 28 June 1940 by the Soviet Union. Therefore, the position adopted on June 22, 1941 will be in response to this attack. Peace Treaty signed on February 10, 1947 in Paris enshrined in regards with the Soviet-Romanian border the situation imposed by the Armistice Convention of September 1944 and, therefore, the situation created on 28 June 1940. On February 10, 1947 a painful chapter in Romania’s participation in the Second World War was closed. In East, as well as in West, Romania’s aim was legitimate: recovering the territories lost in 1940. Regaining Bessarabia, Northern Bukovina and the Hertza region was just as entitled as the recovery of Northern Transylvania, and the sequel of the military operations across the Dniester was just as necessary as the continuation of military operations across the western border of Romania.