National Socialist Party of Romania (National-Socialist, Fascist and Christian Steel Shield) Partidul Național-Socialist din România (Pavăza de Oțel Național-Socialistă, Fascistă și Creștină) | |
|---|---|
| President | Ștefan Tătărescu |
| Founded | March 25, 1932 |
| Dissolved | July 5, 1934 |
| Succeeded by | Numerus Valachicus National Movement Nationalist Soldiers' Front German People's Party |
| Headquarters | Precupeții Vechi Street 1,Obor,Bucharest |
| Newspaper | Crez Nou |
| Paramilitary wing | Pavăza de Oțel |
| Regional wings | National Socialist Self-Help Movement of the Germans in Romania (NSDR) National Movement for Renewal of the Germans of Romania (NEDR) |
| Ideology | Majority: • Nazism • Monarchism • Corporatism • Clerical fascism Minority: • Germanminority interests • Christian socialism |
| Political position | Far-right |
| National affiliation | National-Christian Defense League (1932, 1933) |
| Colours | Black,White,Red |
| Slogan | România Românilor ("Romania for the Romanians") |
| Party flag | |
TheNational Socialist Party (formallyNationalist-Socialist Party of Romania;Romanian:Partidul Național-Socialist din România, PNSR)[1] orSteel Shield (Pavăza de Oțel) was a mimeticNazi political party, active inRomania during the early 1930s. It was led by ColonelȘtefan Tătărescu, the brother ofGheorghe Tătărescu (twicePrime Minister of Romania during that interval), and existed around the newspaperCrez Nou. One of severalfar-right factions competing unsuccessfully against theIron Guard for support, the group made little headway, and existed at times as a satellite of theNational-Christian Defense League.
The PNSR proposed a program ofcorporatism andstatism, promising abasic income,full employment, and limits on capitalist profits. It was anticommunist generally, and in particularanti-Soviet, circulating the theory ofJewish Bolshevism while describing its own program as the alternative, "positive", socialism. The party also claimed for itself the banner of Christianity, which it associated with calls for social reorganization and the expulsion or segregation ofRomanian Jews. ItsGermanophilia andantisemitism were supplemented by shows of support for the policies ofKingCarol II.
The PNSR's ideological stance, exotic in its Romanian context, found favor inNazi Germany, notably fromAlfred Rosenberg. Overall, the PNSR failed in its bid to establish a pan-fascist alliance in Romania, and, despite being nativist, functioned as a magnet forTransylvanian Saxons,Bessarabia Germans, andRussian émigrés. Tătărescu was received officially by his German patrons, who also provided the PNSR with funds, but eventually dropped by them for his unpopularity and alleged corruption. In late 1933, under the antifascist Prime MinisterIon G. Duca, the party was repressed.
Tătărescu exercised some influence over his brother's government in 1934, helping to steer the country away from its traditional alliances, but failed in his attempt to obtain arms deals for Germany. Disavowed by both its Nazi backers and Gheorghe Tătărescu, the party moderated its stances, then disappeared from the political scene in July 1934. In 1935, it was succeeded by theNumerus Valachicus National Movement, which existed briefly as part of an electoral cartel with theRomanian Front. Later that decade, the Colonel was involved with the Nationalist Soldiers' Front, which borrowed the PNSR's symbols. The PNSR Saxon chapter, underFritz Fabritius, reemerged as theGerman People's Party in 1935.
Tătărescu, a retired colonel of theRomanian Air Force, former military attache to Berlin,[2] and author of patriotic plays, had made his start in politics with the left-wingPeasants' Party.[3] C. Candea, of the left-wing dailyAdevărul, noted that his status as an aviator transferred into his civilian life: "since he has been cruising virtually all of the county's parties."[4] He first explored the idea of creating a Romanian version of theGerman Nazi Party (NSDAP) during early 1932, but his interest in fascism dated back to at least 1928.[5] In August of that year, he set up his own "League of National Defense" (Liga Apărarea Națională, LAN),[6] afterward serving as its president.[3] The LAN promised "military training to youths aged 12–19", in particular againstchemical warfare. More controversially, it promised to colonize Romanians on all ofGreater Romania's borders, to reduce the presence of minorities, specifically includingHungarians, in those strategic areas.[6]
The Colonel became an affiliate of the mainstreamNational Liberal Party (PNL), which was also where his brother Gheorghe made his political career. In May 1930, he was organizing the PNL columns at the general congress held in Schiesstadt Park,Bucharest.[7] He left that party in June, to join the right-wing-dissidentGeorgist Liberals, who supported the political program ofRomanian KingCarol II. In his speeches of the period, the Colonel criticized the PNL for having failed to recognize Carol's legitimacy, and supported the Georgist promise of a "clampdown on anarchy".[8] He took part in the party'sPloiești congress,[9] and became one of the leaders of the Georgist section inPutna County.[10] Serving in theSenate after theJune 1931 election, he issued calls against theprice gouging of bread.[11]
Whilst theNational-Christian Defense League (LANC) had developed a direct relationship with Nazi agents, the formation of a specific Nazi party in Romania soon followed.[12] This was consecrated on March 25, 1932, with the publication of leaflet called "Program of the Romanian National-Socialists"—unsigned, but attributed to Col. Tătărescu. It urged for modifying the1923 Constitution to enshrine "the absolute power of the Romanian people, namely those of Romanian blood".[13] DemandingJewish quotas andnationalization, it allowed non-Romanian Christians their civil rights, except for holding political office, and proposedcorporatism instead of the parliamentary regime.[14] Tătărescu's group was additionally monarchist, expressing strong support for Carol II. As noted by historianFrancisco Veiga, this was the "only concession to Romanianness" of an otherwise mimetic party, reflected in its choice of a party logo: an eagle adapted fromNazi symbolism, clutching theswastika, but donning theSteel Crown of Romania.[15] The leaflet itself was headlined by theNazi flag, defaced with the sloganRomânia Românilor ("Romania for the Romanians").[13] The PNSR emerged around Tătărescu's weekly,Crez Nou ("New Credo"), which closely emulated German political newspapers[15] and only ran 500 copies per issue.[16] It shared title with a propaganda book, in which Tătărescu outlined his Nazi plan for Romania.[17][3]
At this stage, the Colonel denied that the PNSR was connected with either the "Hitlerite National-Socialist movement" or theNational Fascist Party inItaly, or that it supported dictatorship and racism in any form—he only acknowledged that the Romanian, German and Italian groups were similar in their geopolitical outlook and their anticommunism. He presented "Romanian National-Socialism" as a spontaneous "reaction of the people" against theSoviet Union, which was encroaching on Greater Romania's territory by demanding the cession ofBessarabia.[18] In his interpretation, the communist danger was fed by the "terrible economic dictatorship" ofSoviet industrialization, whereas Romania was economically mismanaged and painfully affected by theGreat Depression. He argued that the "new redeeming ideology" ofdirigisme would close the divide, by remaking Romania into a "productive country, withzero unemployment".[18]
The party headquarters were located at Precupeții Vechi Street 1,[17] in Bucharest'sObor neighborhood. In June 1932, Tătărescu was touring the country and establishing the first PNSR branches inTransylvania. Networking with nationalist groups inWestern Moldavia, he obtained the allegiance of Toma Popescu Berca, M.D., who set up a PNSR Legion atIași, and Georgel G. Ioanescu ofDorohoi County; Ioanescu was recruited alongside a "sizable group of friends", all of whom had previously served the governingNational Peasants' Party (PNȚ).[19] At that stage, the PNSR's "somewhat important members" included Theodor M. Vlădescu, Nicolae Bogdan, and a formerRomanian Police Commissioner, Constantin Botez Voinea;[17] shoemaker Ion R. Petringenaru Moțu was described by theZionist paperÚj Kelet as "one of the pillars of this faction".[20] Joining them was a journalist, Marcel Bibiri Sturia,[17] previously known for hisanti-Germanism, publicized through his booklets—Creșterea influenței economice germane în România ("Growth of the German Economic Influence in Romania", 1915)[21] andGermania în România ("Germany in Romania", 1916).[22]
Tătărescu's party was only a minor contestant in theJuly 1932 election. Initially, it drafted on its own electoral lists, on which it used a horizontal tetragram icon (𝌆).[23] At that stage, it was approached by the PNȚ with an offer to share lists "in those counties where [the PNSR] is more fully organized." Tătărescu rejected the offer, announcing that "the rise of the national-socialist current" was too significant to warrant any alliance with a mainstream group.[24] It then formed a cartel with the LANC, running under its swastika logo;[25] under the terms of this agreement, Tătărescu and Bibiri Sturia headlined the candidates' lists inCetatea Albă andTighina Counties, respectively.[26][27] Tătărescu was additionally second on the LANC list inIlfov County, immediately after League chairmanA. C. Cuza.[28] The LANC also allowed Petringenaru Moțu to be the alliance candidate inBihor. His activity became a focus of national news after it was discovered that he was campaigning among theRomanian Jews ofSăcueni, promising them that voting for the PNSR would protect them from antisemitic persecution.[29]
The nationalist newspaperCurentul congratulated the PNSR for having helped the LANC consolidate its position nationally, but also noted that, only due to a "defective electoral law", none of the Nazi candidates had been elected. Tătărescu and Bibiri Sturia each took slightly more than 5,000 votes.[27] The success of the NSDAP in theconcurrent federal election inrepublican Germany increased interest in their ideology in Romania. On the Romanian right, there followed a "Naziphiliac epidemic"[15] and "adaptation to the more efficient model".[30] The PNSR, LANC, and other such groups found it hard to compete with theIron Guard, which experienced a steady growth in membership and support. As Veiga notes, the Guard was "authentic" when compared to the PNSR and theNational Romanian Fascio, which were "coarse copies", and PNSR membership remained "minuscule".[31] An April 1932 note inAdevărul suggests that the Guard, which was facing a government ban, considered reserving the "National Socialist Party" title for itself, and was therefore jealous of Tătărescu's styling.[32] Among the PNSR cadres, Petringenaru Moțu was a former Guardist, indicted in 1931 as one of the Guardist leaders in Bihor.[33] Shortly after the PNSR had been created, he was endorsing a PNSR–LANC–Guardist coalition, with himself as the designatedMinister of Labor; he wanted Cuza atEducation and the Guard'sCorneliu Zelea Codreanu asMinister of War.[20]
The PNSR's constitutive congress was held atChișinău, in Bessarabia, on September 24. Its main resolution was to create a paramilitary wing for peasant recruits, calledPavăza de Oțel ("Steel Shield"). Modeled on theSturmabteilung, its units were tasked with putting pressures on the communities by overseeing commercial transactions and "ensure that no Jew is appointed a clerk of the state."[34] In the "Great Congress" held in October atTighina, the Colonel announced an immediate "boycott of Jewish goods" and the planned expulsion of non-native Jews "before May 1, 1934".[35][36] PNSR personnel took it upon itself to compile lists of Jews to be deported, with the party calling for the restriction of political rights for all Jews and renewing calls for Jewish quotas. The congress motion also included a call for Romanian elites to renounce theirFreemasonry membership, and for Romanian servants to leave Jewish families.[36] Economic demands were supplemented by a denunciation of thegold standard, to be replaced by a "national-wealth" standard.[36] It was also in Tighina that Tătărescu expressed his desire of combining the Guard, LANC, and PNSR into a super-party which would be able to compete against the greater liberal groups.[35][37] From October 1, he had styled himself "Supreme commander of the Romanian national-socialist and fascist movement".[38] The Iron Guard had ridiculed Tătărescu, but finally approached him for talks, sending delegates to the PNSR congress.[37]

Naziphile enthusiasm fell in Romania within weeks of the Tighina congress, as the NSDAP registered significant losses in theNovember election.[39] There were parallel by-elections for a Senate seat inBălți County, during which the PNSR endorsed lawyer I. N. Georgescu Zinca as its candidate; he came in last, with 870 votes, while the LANC man, Vladimir Novițcki, came in second, with 3,924.[40] In the aftermath, Georgescu Zinca reported that Novițcki, though a nominal ally, had assaulted him.[41] For a while in early 1933, Tătărescu himself rejoined the LANC, by then a "purely Nazi organization", becoming its "military chief" and organizer of itsLăncieri units.[42] In March, Tătărescu and Fabritius had assembled a think-tank of Germanophiles, the "Romanian–German Cultural Institute". Its board also includedRudolf Brandsch,Hans Otto Roth,Gheorghe Tașcă, andAlexandru Tzigara-Samurcaș. These figures, joined byProtoiereusIeremia Cecan, reestablished the PNSR andCrez Nou in May of the same year; later, the Nazi envoy Friedrich Weber also enlisted.[43] In June 1933, Tătărescu and Bibiri Sturia, alongside "Bălan, a former tax collector who has been found guilty of embezzlement", arrived in for another PNSR congress at Tighina—also organizing an additional rally inBulboaca. They spread manifestos arguing that "the Romanian and German peoples have been called upon by providence to defend honor, freedom and civilization in central and south-eastern Europe."[4]
Also in May 1933, Tătărescu stated his commitment to Germany, writing that the Germans of Romania were his party's natural allies, "the avant-garde of the great national revolution that is currently taking place up North". The German spirit, he argued, would do away with "the fictitious parliamentarian regime" and "dime-a-dozen politicians".[44] Also then, the PNSR outlined its other "cardinal beliefs": "You as an individual can accomplish nothing; the organized nation can obtain everything. Neither slaves to the capitalists; nor a herd of cattle under a Bolshevik tyranny. The Romanian as a master of his home and a brother to all, in Christian spirit."[45] The party now rejected economic theory in favor of pragmatic and radical solutions to the Great Depression, arguing that "decisive men [of state]" were required. It cited as examplesMustafa Kemal andBenito Mussolini.[46]
Tătărescu's German loyalty, reaffirmed at a new party conference, was partly rewarded: the Reich Press Office maintained preferential links with Tătărescu,Octavian Goga, and with the NazifiedSaxon leaderFritz Fabritius, noting that they stood for more ideologically complex movements. It regarded the Guard and the LANC as "exclusively antisemitic".[47] After theNSDAP's seizure of power,Alfred Rosenberg, head of its foreign political office, promoted and financially supported the PNSR, inviting Tătărescu to attend a meeting withAdolf Hitler in autumn 1933.[48]
The party soon built a base in Saxon Transylvania, mainly among affiliates of theGerman Party (to which Brandsch and Roth belonged). It also had a regional Romanian newspaper,Svastica Ardealului ("Transylvania's Swastika"), published by Ion Cleja.[49][50] This wing had stronger chapters inSălaj and Bihor, respectively led by Cleja and lawyer Ciprian Hubic, and was joined by Mihail Kreutzer, who claimed to represent theSatu Mare Swabians.[51] By April 1933, Brandsch was openly anti-Nazi and was attempting to establish a democratic movement of the Saxons and the Germans in general; Roth, meanwhile, "encouraged the formation of National Socialist battalions".[52]
The PNSR organized Romanian sections in other areas of the country—includingOltenia, where the PNSR called on the landowner Theo Martinescu-Asău.[49] The latter had previously led a League of Conscious Youth (Liga Tineretului Conștient), and, alongside Iron Guard leaders, had been investigated by the authorities for his alleged involvement inGheorghe Beza's attempt to assassinateConstantin Angelescu.[53] Another powerful wing was in Bessarabia and theBudjak, which housed theRussian émigré andBessarabian German communities. The Chișinău congress failed to recruit from the Iron Guard, but cemented PNSR affiliations from ethnic minority groups: Vasile Leidenius representedBessarabian Russians (whom the PNSR pledged to help in their fight "against the Soviet regime and ideology"),[36] and Arthur Fink the Germans.[54] In that region, the PNSR put out German-language manifestos; this campaign allegedly involved the German citizen Schroeder, who was managing the Tighina electric plant.[4] Prominent Bessarabian members included Cecan (the regional honorary president),[55] Georgescu Zinca, and German community leader Hans Enlesn. Two local Russian-language newspapers affiliated with the cause: Cecan'sTelegraf ("The Telegraph") and Leidenius'Voskresenie ("Resurrection").[56]
In neighboringBukovina, the PNSR chapter, which put outSvastica Bucovinei ("Bukovina's Swastika"), was led by Cicerone Manole and Captain Runtz.[49][50] Also in Bukovina, the PNSR advertised its sympathy for theUkrainian minority and the Ukrainian people at large.Crez Nou denounced theHolodomor as a "diabolical" and "Judeo-Russian" conspiracy, concluding that: "our superior national interest dictates that we should assist in the liberation of the Ukrainian people."[57] Many members of theUkrainian National Party joined the local Nazi movement, believing that Germany would support an independent "Greater Ukraine". They did not affiliate with the PNSR sections, but rather directly with the Fabritius faction.[58]
Tătărescu ultimately went on a diplomatic tour ofNazi Germany, which included being interviewed by theVölkischer Beobachter and visitingSonnenburg concentration camp.[59] The encounter with Hitler took place in Berlin on September 15, 1933.[59][60] Tătărescu informed Hitler about the activities of the PNSR[59] and discussed with other NSDAP officials methods of antisemitic action.[35] The meeting was also encouraged by theRomanian Minister Foreign Affairs,Nicolae Titulescu. At the time, the latter was trying to move Romania away from its alliance with France and theLittle Entente, but asked Hitler to provide Romania with guarantees; Hitler refused to present any, identifying Titulescu as on obstacle ofGerman re-armament.[61] While in Germany, Tătărescu also spoke forBreslau Radio, describing his meeting with Hitler in enthusiastic terms. The broadcast was covered at home by the PNȚ's center-left daily,Dreptatea, which described the PNSR fan base as "people of no consequence and no social use, no precise ethnicity, no honest employment, and in general nobodies with no sort of training". The paper also called Tătărescu a "gadabout", and insisted that "our salvation can only be found at home, not in Rome, Berlin, orNanking".[59]
Tătărescu's public appeal for 250,000 ℛ︁ℳ︁ in funds[62] was poorly received in Berlin, and he was asked to preserve secrecy.[16]Ambassador von der Schulenburg specified that funding the PNSR up-front "would be regarded as an unjustified intrusion in Romania's internal affairs." He recommended prioritizing the LANC dissidentNichifor Crainic as a more profitable and less conspicuous alternative. In Schulenburg's ideal scenario, Tătărescu and Crainic were to form an alliance.[62] For his part, the Colonel offered to distribute the funds for his printing office by putting out Crainic'sCalendarul and Goga'sȚara Noastră.[59] In July, Hitler's preferences had already been noted byErnő Hátszegi inÚj Kelet: "Hitler wants to lay the foundations of a serious national socialist party in Romania. The German chancellor does not have much faith in the abilities of Cuza and Codreanu. But it is not Ștefan Tătărescu's National Socialist Party [that he wants]. Hitler is trying to win serious intellects and for this purpose he singled out Nichifor Crainic".[63]
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Although the preferred acronym continued to be PNSR,[54] the group became primarily known as "National-Socialist Christian Party", or, occasionally, as the "Nazi Christian-Fascist party".[35] Its symbols also included theRomanian tricolor defaced with the swastika.[54] Its ceremonials included honoring images of King Carol with what the party itself termed a "fascist salute".[51]Crez Nou, previously called "organ of the National-Socialist Party of Romania", became "organ of the National-Socialist, Fascist and Christian Movement of Romania", and finally, on November 10, 1933, "organ of the Romanian National-Socialist, Fascist and Christian Steel Shield".[1] The latter became its official name, shortened to "Steel Shield", with the publication of a new party program. Calling itself "a lay army for the affirmation of Christianity",[64] it demanded a new social and economic order reflecting "brotherly cooperation" and "Christ's teachings", and, more generically, a culture of "manly spiritualism" that looked back to the days theZalmoxis. The "demoniac" enemies of Christ were identified as beingJudaism,Marxism, and Freemasonry.[65]
In this new avatar, the party was again supportive of corporatism andguilds, which would have replaced parliament as the source of representation and legislation.Crez Nou claimed that a "corporatist system", supported by the entire "national and Christian right", would "ensure the consolidation and real prosperity of the whole Romanian nation, with no difference of class and with the assurance of social justice."[66] Speaking at the regional Steel Shield gathering inCarei, on October 29, 1933, Tătărescu defined his economics as "positive, active, anticommunist and anti-Masonic socialism, reclaiming the people's right to work and bread for all".[51] The party program announced its respect for private property, but imposed abasic income model, and argued that property "must serve a useful function in the community"—proposing to overtax "profiteers" and to punish tax evaders, spies and "saboteurs" with thedeath penalty.[64] To encourage the emergence of a local industry, it promised the full electrification of Romania.[64] As noted by historianPiotr Șornikov, Cecan and hisTelegraf, issuing their own calls forsocial ownership, essentially believed that Nazism was a sample ofChristian socialism.[67]
The PNSR was also taking a stand againstHungarian irredentism, which appeared as a menacing presence on Romania's western border. Attending the great nationalist rally of November 6, 1932, Tătărescu expressed his contempt for bothrevanchism andinternationalism.[68] The Shield reiterated the proposal to expel from the country those Jewish families who were supposedly foreign, and also urged segregation against native Jews; at the same time, it argued for "brotherly and permanent collaboration" with the local Germans.[64] PNSR antisemitism was by then becoming internationally famous: in a January 1934 piece,The Sydney Morning Herald noted that "the National Socialist Group under the leadership of Stephan Tataresco" was one of the four "powerful anti-Semitic organisations in Rumania." The other three were the LANC, the Iron Guard, and remnants of theBlack Hundreds.[69] Shield propaganda also continued to claim that there was a "Judeo-Marxist left", which intended to "enslave all Romanian intellectuals, workers and ploughmen". It described this category as including the radicalRomanian Communist Party and the moderateSocial Democratic andUnited Socialist parties.[66] In return, the National Antifascist Committee (a front for the Communist Party) denounced the PNSR as a symptom of the "brown plague".[70]
During the Tighina gatherings, the PNSR complained of being harassed byPan Halippa, the PNȚ Minister for Bessarabia, and suggested that Halippa himself was manipulated by "the heads of Judaic communities".[54] According to Candea, by mid 1933 the group was not just tolerated, but also tacitly encouraged by the lower echelons of police in Bessarabia: when Lvovschi, the Jewish owner of a Tighina cinema, tied to unglue PNSR posters on his walls, the public guards took him into custody (though he was promptly released by a supervising officer).[4] Eventually, the arrival to power of a PNL cabinet, headed byIon G. Duca, meant a clampdown on Nazi activity. In November 1933, while organizing a new PNSR congress in Chișinău, Tătărescu was seized by the local police and escorted back toBucharest.[71] In the nearby city ofBălți, Georgescu Zinca was sued by the authorities for having put up an unauthorized PNSR sign.[72]
Also in November 1933, during elections for the Saxon community bodies, Brandsch publicized his warnings about Nazism, declaring that Hitler and Fabritius were "tearing our people apart".[73] Late that month, Romania's government also outlawed Fabritius' own autonomous organization, the National Socialist Self-Help Movement of the Germans in Romania (NSDR), forcing it to reemerge as the National Movement for Renewal of the Germans of Romania (NEDR).[74] In contrast, Brandsch announced that he was "forming a new German party with an anti-Hitlerian program".[75] In early December, police raided Cleja's home in Carei, "where they picked up magazines titledPavăza de Oțel, by Col. Șt. Tătărescu, a batch of electoral manifestos, and stamps marked with the party symbol".[76]
During theparliamentary elections of late December, the Colonel and Cicerone Manole unsuccessfully ran as candidates of Goga'sNational Agrarian Party.[77] By then, Tătărescu's brother Gheorghe was emerging as a favorite of Carol II, and took over as premier following Duca's killing by the Guard. He himself supported the "young liberals" faction, a brand ofsocial liberalism withstatist leanings,[78] and was inclined toward making use of "extreme nationalism".[79] For a while in 1934, he and the king hoped to appease and coax the Guard into submission.[80] As a Nazi agent of influence, Col. Tătărescu is credited with having created the conflict between his brother the Prime Minister and Titulescu, resulting in a shift toward Germany, and away from "democratic countries."[81] He persuaded the cabinet to sign arms deals with Germany, but Titulescu fought the decision—he managed to obtain from the king himself approval to sign contracts in liberal countries, as well as a clampdown on the Iron Guard.[82]
In April 1934, the government also clamped down on the Steel Shield, having discovered that the Colonel was laundering his German sponsorship through a contract withIG Farben, in complicity withArtur Adolf Konradi. This incident made it hard for the NSDAP to maintain contacts with Col. Tătărescu, who was being threatened by the authorities.[59] German supporters also realized that the Guard had returned to ridiculing the Shield, and withdrew their backing entirely.[37] On July 5, the Tătărescu government outlawed the Saxon and Bessarabian chapters of the PNSR, which, overseen by Fabritius, were apparently the last functioning bodies in the party.[83] Meanwhile, most Bessarabian Nazis had switched their allegiance toward the Guard;[55] in April 1937, Leidenius was serving on the leadership board of the Bessarabian Christian Journalists' Syndicate.[84] Also in Bessarabia, Cecan, briefly arrested as local leader of the Guard,[85] finally quit fascism. His moderate position focused on ridiculing the Romanian far-right and taking the side ofBessarabian Jews—to the point of calling antisemites "sick".[86] Popescu-Berca reemerged in national news in March 1936, when he was injured after trying to flee from a police checkpoint. He was found to be carrying manifestos of thePloughmen's Front.[87]
In late July 1934, news emerged that Col. Tătărescu planned to issue a political newspaper calledLiberalul ("The Liberal"), but he himself denied that this was the case.[88] Later that year, he was putting out another nationalist organ, calledCurajul ("The Courage"). With an article he published there in October 1934, and taken up in full by the more notoriousUniversul, he invited his brother to "change Romanian foreign policy guidelines".[89] This caused the publication to be censored and sequestered, but it reemerged in November asVeghea ("The Vigil"), immediately focusing its criticism onIon Manolescu-Strunga, the country's Minister of Industry.[90] On February 7, 1935, news came out that the Colonel had (re)launched the Nazi Party and was putting out manifestos in Romanian and German.[91][92] As reported by the European press, the Premier greatly disapproved of this action.[91][92] During the subsequent scandal, the Colonel denied that he had anything to do with the relaunch, and described the manifestos as forgeries.[91] Over the following months, his party no longer active, Tătărescu again expressed his support for Jewish quotas, as proposed by the nationalist ideologueAlexandru Vaida-Voevod. Although he had earlier denounced Vaida as a "plutocratic and demagogic centrist",[66] in early March 1935, he signed a cooperation agreement with Vaida's supporters within the PNȚ, who soon after established their own far-right group, calledRomanian Front. The pact had Vaida's followers focused on campaigning in Transylvania and theBanat, while Tătărescu was taking charge of all other regions, as head of theNumerus Valachicus National Movement (its central office located at the old PNSR headquarters on Precupeții Vechi).[93]
TheMagyar Party'sKeleti Újság reported that the Front's early gathering inTimișoara was endorsed and attended by the clandestine PNSR. A poster carrying Tătărescu's signature "features a call for all those who feel that they belong to the Romanian National Socialist Party to travel to Timișoara and participate in the public gathering at which Alexandru Vaida will repeat his speech from last Sunday." The speech and the program outlined "admittedly Romanian Hitlerism."[94] Tătărescu urged his brother's cabinet to make such principles into an official policy,[95] but also expressed his rejection of racial antisemitism: "I am not an enemy of the Jews. I am only against those Jews who camefrom Galicia andfrom Russia".[96]
The Romanian Nazi cell was still putting outVeghea, published by Tătărescu and a professional journalist, Mănescu. According to one account, reporting Mănescu's own stories, this enterprise was financed by the Jewish breadmakers Sever and Max Herdan, who hoped to tone down its antisemitism.[97] The group disappeared a while after, with Mănescu fully unemployed by September 1937.[97] In early 1936,Dreptatea also identified the Colonel and Ilie Rădulescu as the two-man team behind a "propaganda rag" calledRomânizarea ("Romanianization"). It noted that, after his experience with the "hilarious Hitlerian party", Tătărescu had quit Nazism, though not the camp of "far-right extremists", and had "learned how to grow enviably rich in his little brother's shadow."[98] In March 1936, the Colonel attempted to sue his own brother for having bannedCurajul.[99] Around that time, Cleja, signing himself as "Ion C. Șbîru", argued for a corporatist variety he described as "national-social solidarism", producing a government program and hoping to ally the entire public around "Nation, County and King".[100] He tried to register his own organization, first as the "National Socialist Christian Peasants' Party",[101] and later asSolidarismul group.[102]
In mid 1936,Alexandru Talex, who represented the rivalCrusade of Romanianism, identified Tătărescu as one of the figures on the "fragmented" right-wing. According to Talex, the PNSR had no "program of social demands", being reduced to a "combat against 'the kikes' and for the Romanians' own gilded future."[103] During thegeneral election of December 1937, the PNSR's tetragram was adopted by a Nationalist Soldiers' Front (FON), led by GeneralIoan Popovici.[104] This new faction also proclaimed the need for Jewish quotas and nationalization as the "primacy of national labor"; it also demanded that all top administrative positions be assigned to World War I veterans.[105] The FON's leadership included Colonel Tătărescu, who, in January 1938, successfully negotiated an alliance between the FON and Goga's new group, theNational Christian Party.[106] FON members were reportedly critical of paramilitary displays, with one of its propagandists recounting that he had seen a village's youth "split into four groups, each group wearing its own colored shirts. They were all armed, ready to tear into one another."[107] By then, the former Saxon affiliates of the PNSR had themselves split into two groups: a radicalGerman People's Party, in practice led by Fabritius; and a moderate Front of German Unity, led by Roth.[108] They were challenged by a dissident wing, founded byWaldemar Gust andAlfred Bonfert from remnants of NEDR units.[109] In the early stages of World War II, deemed a moderate by Hitler and theVoMi, Fabritius was removed from his positions in the Saxon community.[110]
In early 1938, Carol staged a self-coup and, late that year, introduced his own sole legal party, theNational Renaissance Front (FRN); it counted Theodor Vlădescu as one of its propagandists,[111] and Cleja as a member of the FRN structures inȚinutul Someș.[112]Românizarea was still appearing under this new constitutional arrangement. Directed by Alexandru Bertea, it had Ștefan Tătărescu and Martinescu-Asău among the chief contributors.[113] In 1938, the pseudonymous author Teodor Martas, tentatively identified as Martinescu-Asău,[114] issued a brochure introducing Romanians toCharles Maurras'integral nationalism.[115] As leader of a German People of Romania Group, Brandsch announced in January 1939 the "corporative absorption" of his ethnic community into the FRN.[116] Fabritius, who had overseen this move, was assigned a position on the FRN's national Directorate—in theone-party election of June 1939, he encouraged Germans to only vote for German candidates; Gust, meanwhile, joined the FRN Superior National Council.[117] At a time when Carol was seeking a rapprochement with Germany, Col. Tătărescu was involved in agricultural cooperation, being personally congratulated by the German Embassy for his "perfect collaboration".[118]
Carol II's change of direction came shortly before Romania was forced by Germany and theSoviet Union to make large territorial concessions. Stranded in Soviet territory following theoccupation of Bessarabia in July 1940, Cecan was imprisoned by theNKVD. He was shot by his captors during theSoviet retreat of 1941.[55][119] As the Carol regime tried to organize a defense of the borders with a general mobilization, Petringenaru Moțu was found to be running adraft evasion racket, benefiting as many as 1,200 youths; he was arrested and put on trial in August 1940.[120] The same month, aSecond Vienna Award assignedNorthern Transylvania toHungary; in the aftermath, Cleja joined the refugee colony in Bucharest.[121]
In September, Carol was pushed to abdicate, upon which the Iron Guard set up a "National Legionary State". The Guardist episode lasted to thecivil war of January 1941, whenIon Antonescu became the unchallenged dictator, orConducător. Antonescu sealed Romania's alliance with theAxis Powers, but was under pressure from Berlin to form a new version of the Iron Guard; as an alternative, Romanian government officials proposed to set up a new National Socialist Party. This project was never put into practice, "but not for lack of adherents."[122] According to one later report, the sociologistMihai Ralea was one of the people advocating a PNSR under Antonescu's presidency.[123] In late 1941, Martinescu-Asău was a contributor toPan M. Vizirescu's "workers' magazine",Muncitorul Național-Român;[124] he himself was leader of the Labor and Light (Muncă și Lumină) organization, which networked withMaria Antonescu within the Patronage Council.[125] Among the former PNSR leaders, Vlădescu enjoyed a very good rapport with Ion Antonescu, being allowed to "Romanianize" to his name a Bucharest factory, and being sponsored in publishing a propaganda book that he presented to Hitler as a gift.[17] By that moment, Ștefan Tătărescu had retired from national politics, managing the cooperatives inVâlcea County. In September 1943, his penchant for corruption angered Antonescu, who ordered his extrajudicial arrest in an internment camp.[126]
The Colonel staged his return after asuccessful anti-Antonescu coup in August 1944. He rallied with Gheorghe Tătărescu'sNational Liberal dissidence, which had embraced cooperation with theRomanian Communist Party. In June 1945, as leader of the party's chapter inBucharest Sector 3, Ștefan commended the coup leaders for having taken Romania out of the "unnatural war", and proposed that the "social idea" ofRomanian liberalism was naturally aligned with communism.[127] The following year, as chairman of the Decorated Veterans' Union, he was collecting money for the reconstruction ofStalingrad, which had been destroyed by German andRomanian troops in thebattles of 1942–1943.[128] Vlădescu also joined the Tătărescus' party in early 1946—this reappearance of "two tried Nazi combatants" was noted byDreptatea, along with the paradox of their communist alliance.[17]
The regime soon introduced caps on economic activity which directly affected the Colonel: in 1947, he was forced to declare the taxable goods he had stored in his building on Precupeții Vechi Street, Bucharest, including 300 kilograms ofalum, 200 kilograms ofcalcium chloride, and another 200 kilograms ofaluminium sulfate.[129] Following theSoviet occupation of Romania, Roth and Brandsch reunited in an effort to protect the Germans against thepolicy of deportation. They were both arrested in 1948, and died while in custody.[130] Returning to politics as a National Peasantist, Tașcă died inSighet prison in 1951.[131] The Colonel and all of his three brothers were all imprisoned by the newcommunist regime after 1948: General Alexandru Tătărescu died in confinement in 1951; Gheorghe died shortly after being released, in 1955. Freed in 1957, Ștefan survived until 1970.[3]