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3 April 2002, Volume 4, Number 7
THE SECURITATE ROOTS OF A MODERN
ROMANIAN FAIRY TALE: THE PRESS, THE FORMER SECURITATE, AND THE HISTORIOGRAPHY
OF DECEMBER 1989
By Richard Andrew Hall
Many analysts and observers of Romania lost interest in and
shut down their investigations of Romania's December 1989 Revolution relatively
early -- most in 1990, some "held out" until 1991. They either made
up their minds and settled on a particular theory or became irretrievably
cynical, assuming a Straussian-like stance that nothing new could come out or
be written about the December 1989 events and resigning their audiences to
platitudes like "We may never know." Perhaps most destructive of all
has been the common, schizophrenic approach of declaring that, "The truth
will never be known," but then displaying a very fixed and rather
immovable understanding of those events. This is not only disingenuous; it has
set back serious study of the December 1989 events. Moreover, it provides a
convenient rationale for avoiding the ambiguity and challenge that come with
seeking to make sense of this landmark event. Ten years of declaring that
"We may never know" has predictably proven a self-fulfilling
prophecy.
But as William Faulkner once said of his mythical
Yoknapatawpha County (as apt a metaphor for Romania as there ever was),
"The past is never dead; it's not even past." This certainly applies
to the Romanian Revolution of December 1989. The December 1989 events remain
"living history" -- the "present past" as Timothy Garton
Ash would say -- and have continued to be the subject of controversy throughout
the postcommunist era (see Siani-Davies, 2001). Thanks in large part to
communications developments such as the Internet, few modern events have
offered themselves so well to tracing the evolution of their historiography in
their aftermath as the December 1989 events.
Blind partisanship, selective analysis, and a smug reluctance
to reexamine earlier claims in the light of new evidence have driven the
"mystery" of the Revolution of December 1989. Many who have written
on the December events have simply failed to "stick with the story,"
and have certainly failed to keep their minds and options open. Romanian
journalists, politicians, and other interested parties have routinely assimilated
the revelations and arguments of former "Securitate" and
"Militia" members with little hesitation -- all because the claims in
question have dovetailed with their post-December 1989 political suspicions,
prejudices, and interests. Similarly, they have routinely failed to reassess
their understanding of the December 1989 events after previously undeclared
former Securitate members publicly admitted their past ties. The public
admission of Securitate ties should at the very least compel investigators to
examine what an individual stated about the December 1989 events PRIOR to the
admission. Unfortunately, in Romania it has not, and this has created tragic
consequences for popular and scholarly understanding of the December 1989
events.
In the following three-part article, I examine three cases
that illustrate these costly mistakes. In the first, I discuss the case of
Gheorghe Ionescu Olbojan, a former Securitate officer who, prior to his public
acknowledgement of this fact, disseminated disinformation designed to inflate
the army's culpability for the December 1989 bloodshed in the interests of
reducing the culpability assigned to the Securitate. In the second part, I
explore the early history of the "tourist" myth, a scenario
fabricated by the Securitate whose travels -- including into the work of
respected Western scholars -- have been truly stunning. In the final part, I
examine the hallucinatory revelations of former Militia officer Petre Olaru,
whose claims in 1999 became the centerpiece of revisionist theories exonerating
the former Securitate. This last example is evidence that this is far from a
simply "historical" topic, but instead continues to this day.
ION CRISTOIU'S 'ZIG-ZAG' AS GATEWAY
In the early 1990s, perhaps no mainstream publications served
more as a haven for former Securitate officers and informers than the weeklies
edited by Ion Cristoiu, in particular "Zig-Zag" and "Expres
Magazin." The Timisoara revolutionary Marius Mioc has gone so far as to
call Cristoiu "the spearhead of the campaign to falsify the history of the
revolution" (Mioc, 2000a). Cristoiu's two most famous alumni are
undoubtedly 1) Pavel Corut, a former Securitate officer who wrote under this
name and the pseudonym "Paul Cernescu" for "Expres Magazin"
during 1991 and 1992; and 2) Angela Bacescu, who since writing for
"Zig-Zag" during the spring and summer of 1990 has been a mainstay
for the notorious "Europa," a veritable mouthpiece of the former
Securitate (see Hall, 1997; for background on Corut, see Shafir 1993). Both
strove during their tenure at Cristoiu's publications to minimize and negate
the Securitate's role in the deaths of over 1,100 people in December 1989,
particularly the Securitate's responsibility for the so-called post-22 December
"terrorism" that claimed almost 90 percent of those who died during
the events.
Nevertheless, in the early 1990s, Cristoiu's
"Zig-Zag" and "Expres Magazin" were widely regarded as
pillars of opposition to the rump Communist Party-state bureaucracy that made
up the National Salvation Front (FSN) regime of President Ion Iliescu --
including a large proportion of the former Securitate. To the extent that
Cristoiu and his publications became the object of suspicion and cynicism
within the opposition, it was because of an alleged slipperiness and
inconsistency in his treatment of Iliescu -- he was accused of cozying up to
the regime when it appeared to benefit his interests (based on my own
experience in discussions with various journalists and intellectuals in Romania
between 1991 and 1994).
Probably no publication played a larger role in 1990 in
rewriting the history of December 1989 than "Zig-Zag," edited at the
time by Ion Cristoiu. Because those analysts who have commented on the role of
"Zig-Zag" in 1990 have focused almost exclusively on the change in
coverage -- a turn toward more favorable coverage of the FSN and President
Iliescu after former Ceausescu court poet Adrian Paunescu took over editorship
of the weekly from Cristoiu for a time during late 1990 and early 1991 -- it is
important to note that much of the most damaging revisionism began long BEFORE
Paunescu became senior editor. As Marius Mioc notes, in an interview with Lucia
Epure of the Timisoara daily "Renasterea Banateana" in September
1990, the notorious Ceausescu court poet Corneliu Vadim Tudor was asked which
paper he enjoyed reading most (Mioc, 2000a). His response: "'Zig-Zag.' I
like this boy, Ion Cristoiu." The reason for Tudor's appreciation of
Cristoiu's journal is "easy to understand," according to Mioc, since
that weekly "was the first [publication] that, after December 1989 (and
especially after the May 1990 elections), began the campaign to rehabilitate
the pro-Ceausescu theory of the revolution" (Mioc, 2000a). Indeed, in June
1990 when "Romania Mare" -- a publication that at the time was
supportive of the Iliescu regime -- first began to appear, Tudor would list his
favorite publications. At the top of the list with five out of five stars was
"Zig-Zag," a publication that under Cristoiu had developed a reputation
as a critic of Ion Iliescu and the FSN!
It is hard to state with certainty what exactly Cristoiu's
role was in having his publications serve as a conduit for revisionist
Securitate disinformation. This much is clear, however: Cristoiu was not
unwitting for long about the backgrounds of the former Securitate personnel who
came to work for him. Asked point blank about the Bacescu case in a book-length
interview in 1993, Cristoiu was unrepentant. He claimed that he realized from
the beginning that Bacescu was writing to defend the interests of the former
Securitate but, since "there was something true in what the Securitate was
saying," he allowed her to publish (Iftime, 1993, p. 126). Cristoiu stated
that he had "no regrets" and denied that it was accurate to assert
that "Zig-Zag" had been "manipulated," even though he
admitted that Bacescu had shown up "without need of money...and she
brought a lot of documents with her." Cristoiu justified Bacescu's
sympathetic presentation of the Securitate in the December events as follows:
"Until April, 1990, the Securitate had been presented as
a force of evil.... [Thus] [i]t was an absolutely new theme [to write that the
Securitate had been innocent of the charges against them]. A shocking point of
view in a period when the government was still glorifying the Revolution and
always talking about martyrs..." (Iftime, 1993, p. 126).
Only in this way, Cristoiu concludes, was it possible to
learn that "not a single terrorist had existed" in Sibiu -- the city
in which Nicolae Ceausescu's son, Nicu Ceausescu, the so-called "Little
Prince," was party first secretary -- a story which he maintains "was
later confirmed" (Iftime, 1993, p. 127).
Despite Bacescu's unambiguous ties to the former Securitate
since she transferred to "Romania Mare" and then permanently to
"Europa" in late 1990, to my knowledge -- short of Marius Mioc -- no
Romanian writer has gone back to compare what Bacescu wrote after leaving
"Zig-Zag" with what she wrote while at "Zig-Zag" or to
scrutinize the validity of the allegations she made about the December 1989
events in the pages of that weekly. Significantly, for example, the article
written by Bacescu to which Cristoiu alludes as exonerating the Securitate in
the Sibiu events was reprinted VERBATIM in Tudor's "Romania Mare"
after she transferred to that publication in the second half of 1990 (Bacescu,
1990 a and b). Clearly, the publication of an article exonerating the
Securitate by someone who did little to hide her connections to the former secret
police -- first in a publication bitterly critical of the Iliescu regime and
then in a publication supportive of the very same regime -- should have raised
alarm bells and led to scrutiny of her claims. In the confused, stultifying,
and slightly surreal context of post-Ceausescu Romania, however, it did not do
so.
THE CASE OF GHEORGHE IONESCU OLBOJAN
Less well known than the comparatively high-profile cases of
Corut and Bacescu is the case of Gheorghe Ionescu Olbojan. Olbojan's treatment
by the Romanian press corps differs little from that of Corut and Bacescu. Like
Corut and Bacescu, in the early 1990s Olbojan was writing in the pages of Ion
Cristoiu's publications -- specifically "Zig-Zag" in 1990. By the
late 1990s, journalists who wrote about Olbojan's publications did not hesitate
to identify him as a former Securitate officer. A reviewer of Olbojan's 1999
book, titled "The Black Face of the Securitate," and Ion Mihai Pacepa
in the satirical weekly "Catavencu" described Olbojan's allegations
that Ceausescu was overthrown by the Soviet Union in conjunction with Hungary,
Yugoslavia, and Israel, and bluntly stated that Olbojan was a disgruntled
former Securitate officer ("Catavencu," 23 July 1999). Filip Ralu, a
journalist working for the daily "Curierul national," was even more
specific: Olbojan, he wrote, was a DIE (Foreign Intelligence Directorate)
officer ("Curierul national," 19 March 2001).
Why so bold and so sure, we might ask. Because it was no
longer a secret: Olbojan had admitted in print -- at least as early as 1993 --
that he indeed served in the former Securitate. On the dust jacket of his 1994
book "Pacepa's Phantoms," a polemic apparently in response to
criticisms of his earlier book, "Goodbye Pacepa," his editor proudly
touts the "latest raid effected by former Securitate officer Gh. Ionescu
Olbojan" (Olbojan, 1994). Inside, Olbojan describes how he was recruited
in the 1970s while at the Bucharest Law Faculty, finished a six-month training
course at the famous Branesti Securitate school, and worked at an
"operative unit" of the "Center" from 1978 to 1982 and then
at the famous Securitate front company "Dunarea" until being forced
-- he claims -- to go on reserve status in 1986 after violating certain
unspecified "laws and regulations of security work" (Olbojan, 1994,
pp. 17-19). According to Olbojan, as early as the fall of 1990 -- at a time
when he was writing a series on the makeup of the former Securitate and when
Cristoiu would address him with the words, "Olbojan, did you bring me the
material?" -- he "pulled back the curtain of protection behind which
he had been hiding for so long" and revealed to a fellow journalist his
Securitate background (Olbojan, 1994, pp. 14-15). There is thus no doubt here:
It is not a question of supposition or innuendo by this or that journalist --
Olbojan has publicly admitted to a Securitate past.
APRIL 1990: OLBOJAN WRITES ON THE REVOLUTION
In the ninth issue of "Zig-Zag," which appeared in
April 1990 -- an issue in which Angela Bacescu wrote a famous piece revising
the understanding of the deaths of a group of Securitate antiterrorist troops
at the Defense Ministry during the December events, a piece that was vigorously
contested by journalists in the military press (for a discussion, see Hall,
1999) -- Olbojan wrote an article entitled "Were The Corpses In The
Refrigerated Truck DIA Officers?" (Olbojan, 1990). In the article, Olbojan
attacked the official account regarding the identity of 40 bodies transported
by the Securitate and by the Militia from Timisoara to Bucharest on 18-19
December 1989 for cremation upon the express orders of Elena Ceausescu. The FSN
regime maintained that these were the cadavers of demonstrators shot dead
during antiregime protests, but Olbojan now advanced the possibility that they
might have been the corpses of members of the army's elite defense intelligence
unit, DIA.
Olbojan's "basis" for such an allegation was that
nobody allegedly had come forward to claim the corpses of the 40 people in
question and therefore they could not have been citizens of Timisoara. Mioc
counters that this is preposterous, and that unfortunately this myth has
circulated widely since Olbojan first injected it into the press (Mioc, 2000b)
-- despite the publication of correct information on the topic. Mioc
republished a list with the names, ages, and home addresses of the (in reality)
38 people in question and noted that it was published in the Timisoara-based
"Renasterea Banateana" on 2 March 1991, the Bucharest daily
"Adevarul" on 13 March 1991, the daily "Natiunea" (also
published in Bucharest) in December 1991, as well as in the daily
"Timisoara" on 29 November 1991 -- but significantly was refused
publication in Tudor's "Romania Mare"!
THE IMPLICATIONS AND INTENTIONS OF OLBOJAN'S APRIL 1990
REAPPRAISAL OF THE TIMISOARA EVENTS
On the face of things -- in the spring 1990 context of a
publication that appeared courageous enough to stand up to the rump party-state
bureaucracy and with no public knowledge about Olbojan's past -- Olbojan's
article could be interpreted as a laudable, if poorly executed, effort at
investigative journalism or at worst as innocuous. But context can be
everything, and it is in this case. It seems significant that Olbojan considers
his April 1990 "Zig-Zag" article important enough to reproduce in its
entirety in his 1994 book "Pacepa's Phantoms" and then discuss the
impact the article had upon getting people to rethink the December 1989 events
and how later works by other authors (including those with no connection to the
former Securitate but also including the previously-mentioned notorious former
Securitate officer Pavel Corut) confirmed his allegations (Olbojan, 1994, pp.
276-299).
The importance of suggesting that the cadavers transported to
Bucharest for cremation were the bodies of army personnel and not average
citizens may not be readily apparent. To make such a claim insinuates that the
Iliescu leadership was/is lying about the December events and therefore should
not be believed and may be illegitimate. It also insinuates that the events may
have been more complicated and less spontaneous than initial understandings and
the official history would have us believe: If those who were transported to
Bucharest for cremation were not average citizens but army personnel, then is
it not possible that Timisoara was a charade, a manipulation by forces within
the regime -- perhaps with outside help -- to overthrow Ceausescu and simulate
both revolutionary martyrdom and political change?
Moreover, it was significant that Olbojan maintained that the
cadavers belonged not just to any old army unit but specifically to DIA. The
army's DIA unit -- a unit which appeared to benefit organizationally from the
December events, including having its chief, Stefan Dinu, for a time assume the
command of the Romanian Information Service's (SRI) counterespionage division
(until his former Securitate subordinates appear to have successfully
undermined him and prompted his replacement) -- would during the 1990s become a
common scapegoat for the post-22 December "terrorism" that claimed
over 900 lives in the Revolution and initially had been blamed uniformly upon
the Securitate (see, for example, Stoian, 1993 and Sandulescu, 1996). If the 40
cadavers were indeed DIA officers, then anything was possible with regard to
the post-22nd "terrorism" -- including that DIA, and not the
Securitate's antiterrorist troops, had been responsible for the tremendous loss
of life. Indeed, in his 1994 book "Pacepa's Phantoms," Olbojan claims
just that: In December 1989, there allegedly had been no Securitate
"terrorists," the "terrorists" had been from DIA, and it is
they who were thus culpable for the bloodshed (Olbojan, 1994, pp. 276-291).
Nor can it be said that the timing of Olbojan's publication
was of inconsequence here: The trial of the Securitate and Militia officers
charged with the bloody repression of demonstrators in Timisoara in December
1989 had begun the previous month and was still in progress at the time of the
article's appearance. Olbojan's allegation clearly had implications for the
verdicts of this trial. Mioc has noted of Olbojan's account: "[T]he theory
of the 'mystery' of the 40 cadavers would become the departure point for
efforts to demonstrate the presence of foreign agents in Timisoara" (Mioc,
2000a). Indeed, during the Timisoara trial, reputed Securitate
"superspy" Filip Teodorescu had attempted to implant this idea and
would later reveal that among those his forces had arrested during the
Timisoara events were two armed, undercover DIA officers in a Timisoara factory
-- the massive influx of foreign agents supposedly having eluded the
"underfunded and undermanned" and "Ceausescu-distrusted"
Securitate (Teodorescu, 1992). For Mioc, Olbojan's echoing of Teodorescu's
attempts to muddy the historical waters of the birthplace of the Revolution,
and Olbojan's specific effort to sow wholly unnecessary confusion about the
identity of the 40 cremated corpses (an issue which no one had considered the
least bit suspicious until that time) cannot be separated from Olbojan's
admitted collaboration with the Securitate and his warm praise of that
institution throughout most of the 1990s.
OLBOJAN'S CASE AS TYPICAL RATHER THAN ABERRANT
Significantly, even at the time, Olbojan's account sparked
innuendo in the press regarding his past, his credibility, his capacity for the
truth, and his agenda in writing such an article. Unfortunately, but very
tellingly, these accusations came not from the civilian press -- of any
political stripe -- but from the military press. Colonel V. Gheorghe wrote in
early May 1990 that Olbojan's account was merely "yet another face of the
diversion," the latest in an emerging campaign attempting to exonerate the
Securitate for the bloodshed, blame the army, plant the idea that the December
1989 Revolution was little more than a coup d'etat engineered from abroad, and
cast doubt upon the spontaneity and revolutionary bravery of those who
protested against Ceausescu and participated in the December events (Gheorghe,
1990).
Mioc notes accurately that "[I]n order for the
[Olbojan's] disinformation to succeed, the article was written in an
anti-Iliescu and anticommunist style," but he seems to imply that this was
an exception (Mioc, 2000b). As the next two parts of this three-part article
will demonstrate, far from being an exception, such an approach -- in fact the
dovetailing and entangling of Securitate disinformation with the agenda of the
anti-Iliescu/anticommunist opposition -- was all too common and ultimately a
key cause of the destruction of the truth about the December 1989 Revolution
and the Securitate's institutional responsibility for the tremendous loss of
life in those events.
(Richard Andrew Hall received his Ph.D. in Political Science
from Indiana University in 1997. He currently works and lives in northern
Virginia. Comments on this article can be directed to him at hallria@msn.com)
SOURCES Bacescu, A., 1990a
"Adevarul despre Sibiu," [The Truth On Sibiu] in "Zig-Zag,"
(Bucharest) 19-26 June.
Bacescu, A., 1990b "Noi lumini asupra evenimentelor din
decembrie 1989," [New Light On The December 1989 Events] in "Romania
Mare," (Bucharest) 21 August.
"Curierul national," (Bucharest) 2001, Internet
edition, http://domino.kappa.ro/e-media/curierul.nsf.
Gheorghe, V., 1990, "Inca o fateta a diversiunii,"
in "Armata poporului," (Bucharest), 3 May.
Hall, R. A., 1997, "The Dynamics of Media Independence
in Post-Ceausescu Romania," in O'Neil, P.H. (ed.), Post-Communism and the
Media in Eastern Europe, (Portland, OR: Frank Cass,), pp. 102-123.
Hall, R. A., 1999, "The Uses of Absurdity: The Staged
War Theory and the Romanian Revolution of December 1989," in "East
European Politics and Societies," Vol. 13, no.3, pp. 501-542.
Iftime, C., 1993, Cu Ion Cristoiu prin infernul contemporan [With
Ion Cristoiu Through The Contemporary Inferno], (Bucharest: Editura Contraria).
"Catavencu," (Bucharest), 1999 (Internet edition),
http://www.catavencu.ro.
Mioc, M., 2000a "Ion Cristoiu, virful de lance al
campaniei de falsificare a istoriei revolutiei,"
http://timisoara.com/newmioc.51.htm
Mioc, M., 2000b "'Misterul'celor 40 de cadavre,"
http://timisoara.com/newmioc/53.htm
Olbojan Ionescu, G., 1990 "Mortii din TIR-ul Frigorific
-- ofiteri DIA?" [Were The Corpses In The Refrigerated Truck DIA Officers?]
in "Zig-Zag,", no. 23, 23-29 April.
Olbojan Ionescu G., 1994, Fantomele lui Pacepa [Pacepa's
Phantoms], (Bucharest: Editura Corida).
Sandulescu, Serban, 1996, Decembrie '89: Lovitura de Stat a
Confiscat Revolutia Romana [December '89: The Coup d'ðtat Abducted the Romanian
Revolution], (Bucharest: Editura Omega Press Investment).
Shafir, M., 1993, "Best Selling Spy Novels Seek To
Rehabilitate Romanian 'Securitate,'" in "Radio Free Europe/Radio
Liberty Research Report," Vol. 2, no. 45, pp. 14-18.
Siani-Davies, P., 2001, "The Revolution after the
Revolution," in Phinnemore, D. Light, D. (eds.), Post-Communist Romania:
Coming to Terms with Transition (London: Palgrave), pp. 1-34.
Stoian, I., 1993, Decembrie '89: Arta Diversiunii, [ December
'89: The Art Of Diversion], (Bucharest: Editura Colaj).
Teodorescu, F., 1992, Un Risc Asumat: Timisoara, decembrie
1989, [An Assumed Risk: Timisoara, December 1989] (Bucharest: Editura Viitorul
Romanesc).
Compiled by Michael
Shafir
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17 April 2002, Volume 4, Number 8
THE SECURITATE ROOTS OF A MODERN
ROMANIAN FAIRY TALE: THE PRESS, THE FORMER SECURITATE, AND THE HISTORIOGRAPHY
OF DECEMBER 1989
By Richard Andrew Hall
Part 2: 'Tourists Are Terrorists and Terrorists are
Tourists with Guns...' *
The distance traveled by Securitate disinformation on the
December 1989 events can be breathtaking. Bubbling up through the springs of
popular rumor and speculation, it flows into the tributaries of the media as
peripheral subplots to other stories and eventually wends its way -- carried
upon the waves of consensus and credibility that flow from its acceptance among
prominent Romanian journalists and intellectuals -- into the writings of
Western journalists, analysts, and academics. Popular myths, which either have
their origins in disinformation disseminated by the former Securitate, or which
originated in the conspiratorial musings of the populace but proved propitious
for the former secret police and thus were appropriated, nurtured, and
reinjected into popular discourse, are today routinely repeated both inside and
outside Romania. Frequently, this dissemination occurs without the faintest
concern over, or knowledge of, the myth's etymology or much thought given to
the broader context and how it plays into the issue of the Securitate's
institutional culpability.
Take, for example, the "tourist" myth -- perhaps
the former Securitate's most fanciful and enduring piece of disinformation.
This myth suggests that in December 1989, Soviet, Hungarian, and other foreign
agents posing as "tourists" instigated and/or nurtured anti-Ceausescu
demonstrations in Timisoara, Bucharest, and elsewhere, and/or were responsible
for the "terrorist" violence after 22 December that claimed over 900
victims, or almost 90 percent of those killed during the Revolution. The
implication of such allegations is clear: It questions the spontaneity -- and
hence, inevitably, to a certain degree, the legitimacy -- of the anti-Ceausescu
demonstrations and the overthrow of the Ceausescu regime; it raises doubt about
the popular legitimacy of those who seized power during the events; and it
suggests that those who seized power lied about who was responsible for the
terrorist violence and may ultimately have themselves been responsible for the
bloodshed.
A robust exegesis of the "tourist" hypothesis was
outlined on the eve of the 10th anniversary of the December 1989 events in the
pages of the daily "Ziua" by Vladimir Alexe. Alexe has been a
vigorous critic of Ion Iliescu and the former communists of the National
Salvation Front (FSN) who took power in December 1989, maintaining that they
overthrew Ceausescu in a Soviet-sponsored coup d'etat:
"The outbreak of the December events was preceded by an
odd fact characteristic of the last 10 years. After 10 December 1989, an
unprecedented number of Soviet 'tourists' entered the country. Whole convoys of
Lada automobiles, with approximately four athletic men per car, were observed
at the borders with the Moldovan Socialist Republic, Bulgaria, and Hungary. A
detail worthy of mention: The Soviet 'tourists' entered Romania without
passports, which suggests the complicity of higher-ups. According to the
statistics, an estimated 67,000 Soviet 'tourists' entered Romania in December
1989" ("Ziua", 24 December 1999).
It is worth noting that Alexe considers elsewhere in this
series of articles from December 1999 that the Russian "tourists"
were an omnipresent, critical, and catalytic factor in the collapse of
communism throughout ALL of Eastern Europe in December 1989.
Nor has the "tourist" hypothesis been confined
strictly to the realm of investigative journalism. Serban Sandulescu, a bitter
critic of Ion Iliescu and the former communists who seized power in December
1989, led the third parliamentary commission to investigate the December 1989
events as a Senator for the National Peasant Party Christian Democratic
(PNTCD). In 1996, he published the findings of his commission as a book titled
"December '89: The Coup d'Etat That Abducted The Romanian
Revolution." He commented on the "tourists" as follows:
"From the data we have obtained and tabulated it appears
that we are talking somewhere in the neighborhood of 5,000-6,000 'tourists'....
Soviet agents [who] came under the cover of being 'tourists' either in large
organized groups that came by coach, or in smaller groups of 3-4 people that
fanned out in Lada and Moskvich automobiles. They covered the whole country,
being seen in all the important cities in the country. They contributed to the
stoking of the internal revolutionary process, supervising its unfolding, and
they fought [during the so-called 'terrorist' phase after 22 December]..."
(Sandulescu, 1996, pp. 35, 45).
DECEMBER 1989: NICOLAE CEAUSESCU INITIATES THE 'TOURIST'
MYTH
Not surprisingly, the "tourist" myth originated
with none other than Nicolae Ceausescu. This myth inevitably implies
illegitimate and cynical "foreign intervention," and Ceausescu used
it to make sense of what were -- probably genuinely, for him -- the
unimaginable and surreal antiregime protests which began in Timisoara on 15
December 1989.
In an emergency meeting of the Romanian equivalent of the
politburo (CPEX) on the afternoon of Sunday, 17 December 1989 -- the afternoon
on which regime forces were to open fire on the anti-Ceausescu demonstrators in
Timisoara, killing scores and wounding hundreds -- Ceausescu alleged that
foreign interference and manipulation were behind the protests:
"Everything that has happened and is happening in Germany,
in Czechoslovakia, and in Bulgaria now, and in the past in Poland and Hungary,
are things organized by the Soviet Union with American and Western help"
(cited in Bunea, 1994, p. 34).
That Ceausescu saw "tourists" specifically playing
a nefarious role in stimulating the Timisoara protests is made clear by his
order at the close of this emergency meeting:
"I have ordered that all tourist activity be interrupted
at once. Not one more foreign tourist will be allowed in, because they have all
turned into agents of espionage.... Not even those from the socialist countries
will be allowed in, with the exception of [North] Korea, China, and Cuba.
Because all the neighboring socialist countries are untrustworthy. Those sent
from the neighboring socialist countries are sent as agents" (cited in
Bunea, 1994, p. 34).
A CHRONOLOGY OF THE 'TOURISTS' ITINERARY AND ACTIVITIES
ACCORDING TO TOP SECURITATE AND PARTY OFFICIALS IN THE IMMEDIATE AFTERMATH OF
DECEMBER 1989
Filip Teodorescu, who as head of the Securitate's
Counterespionage Directorate (Directorate III) had been dispatched to Timisoara
and was later arrested for his role in the repression there, maintained in
March 1990 at his trial that he detained "foreign agents" during the
Timisoara events ("Romania libera," 9 March 1990). In a book that
appeared in 1992, Teodorescu described as follows the events in Timisoara on
Monday, 18 December -- that is, after the bloody regime repression of
anti-Ceausescu demonstrators the night before:
"There were few foreigners in the hotels, the majority
of them having fled the town after lunch [on 17 December] when the clashes
began to break out. The interested parties remained. Our attention is drawn to
the unjustifiably large number of Soviet tourists, be they by bus or car. Not
all of them stayed in hotels. They either had left their buses or stayed in
their cars overnight. Border records indicate their points of entry as being
through northern Transylvania. They all claimed they were in transit to
Yugoslavia. The explanation was plausible, the Soviets being well-known for
their shopping trips. Unfortunately, we did not have enough forces and the
conditions did not allow us to monitor the activities of at least some of these
'tourists'" (Teodorescu, 1992, p. 92).
Teodorescu appears here to be attempting to account for the
fact that on Monday, 18 December 1989 -- presumably as a consequence of
Ceausescu's tirade the afternoon before about the malicious intent of virtually
all "tourists" -- Romania announced, in typically Orwellian fashion,
that it would not accept any more tourists because of a "shortage of hotel
rooms" and because "weather conditions are not suitable for
tourism" (Belgrade Domestic Service, 20 December 1989). Ironically, the
only ones exempted from this ban were "Soviet travelers coming home from
shopping trips to Yugoslavia" (!) (AFP, 19 December 1989).
Radu Balan, former Timis County party boss, picks up the
story from there. While serving a prison sentence for his complicity in the
Timisoara repression, in 1991 Balan told one of Ceausescu's most famous
"court poets," Adrian Paunescu, that on the night of 18-19 December
-- during which in reality some 40 cadavers were secretly transported from
Timisoara's main hospital to Bucharest for cremation (reputedly on Elena
Ceausescu's personal order) -- he too witnessed the role of these "foreign
agents":
"We had been receiving information, in daily bulletins,
from the Securitate, that far more people were returning from Yugoslavia and
Hungary than were going there and about the presence of Lada automobiles filled
with Soviets. I saw them at the border and the border posts, and the cars were
full. I wanted to know where and what they were eating and how they were
crossing the border and going through cities and everywhere. More telling, on
the night of 18-19 December, when I was at a fire at the I.A.M. factory, in
front of the county hospital, I spotted 11 white 'Lada' automobiles at 1 a.m.
in the morning. They pretended to ask me the road to Buziasð.The 11 white Ladas
had Soviet plates, not Romanian ones, and were in front of the hospital"
("Totusi iubirea," no. 43, 24-31 October 1991).
Nicu Ceausescu, Nicolae's son and most likely heir and party
secretary in Sibiu at the time of the Revolution, claimed that he also had to
deal with enigmatic "tourists" during these historic days. From his
prison cell in 1990, Nicu recounted how on the night of 20 December 1989, a top
party official came to inform him that the State Tourist Agency was requesting
that he -- the party secretary for Sibiu! -- "find lodgings for a group of
tourists who did not have accommodation." He kindly obliged and made the
appropriate arrangements (interview with Nicu Ceausescu in
"Zig-Zag,", no. 20, 21-27 August 1990).
Nor was Gheorghe Roset, head of the Militia in the city of
Caransebes at the time of the Revolution, able to elude a visit from the
"tourists" during these days. Writing from his prison cell in January
1991, he recounted:
"Stationed on the night of 20-21 December 1989 at headquarters,
I received the order to issue an authorization for repairs for a Lada
automobile that had overturned in Soceni, in Caras-Severin county, an order
that was approved by the chief of the county Militia with the clarification
that the passengers of this car were military personnel from the USSR. I was
more than a little surprised when this car arrived in Caransebes and I saw that
it was part of a convoy of 20 cars, all of the same make and with 3-4
passengers per car. Lengthy discussions with the person who had requested the
authorization confirmed for me the accident and the fact that this convoy of
cars was coming from Timisoara, on its way to Bucharest, as well as the fact
that these were colleagues of ours from the country in question. He presented a
passport in order to receive the documents he had requested, although not even
today can I say with certainty that he belonged to this or that country. A
short time after the convoy left on its way, it was reported to me that five of
the cars had headed in the direction of Hateg, while the more numerous group
headed for Bucharest" ("Europa," no. 20, March 1991).
A September 1990 open letter authored by "some officers
of the former Securitate" -- most likely from the Fifth Directorate
charged with guarding Ceausescu and the rest of the Romanian communist
leadership -- and addressed to the xenophobic, neo-Ceausist weekly
"Democratia" (which was edited by Eugen Florescu, one of Ceausescu's
chief propagandists and speechwriters), sought to summarize the entire record
of the "tourists" wanderings and activities in December 1989 as
follows:
"11-15 [December] -- a massive penetration of so-called
Hungarian tourists takes place in Timisoara and Soviet tourists in Cluj;
15-16 [December] -- upon the initiative of these groups,
protests of support for the sinister 'Priest [Father Laszlo Tokes of
Timisoara]' break out;
16-17-18 [December] -- in the midst of the general state of
confusion building in the city, the army intervenes to reestablish order;
-- this provides a long-awaited opportunity for the
'tourists' to start -- in the midst of warning shots in the air -- to shoot and
stab in the back the demonstrators among whom they are located and whom they
have incited;...
19-20-21 -- a good part of the 'tourists' and their brethren
among the locals begin to migrate -- an old habit -- from the main cities of
Transylvania, according to plan, in order to destabilize: Cluj, Sibiu, Alba
Iulia, Targu Mures, Satu Mare, Oradea, etc." ("Democratia," no.
36, 24-30 September 1990).
The authors of this chronology then maintain that this scene
was replicated in Bucharest on 21 December, causing the famous disruption of
Ceausescu's speech and the death of civilians in University Square that
evening.
Not to be out-done, Cluj Securitate chief Ion Serbanoiu
claimed in a 1991 interview that, as of 21 December 1989, there were over 800
Russian and Hungarian tourists, mostly driving almost brand-new Lada
automobiles (but also Dacia and Wartburg cars), in the city (interview with
Angela Bacescu in "Europa," no. 55, December 1991). In February 1991
during his trial, former Securitate Director General Iulian Vlad, not
surprisingly, also spoke of "massive groups of Soviet tourists...the
majority were men...deploy[ing] in a coordinated manner in a convoy of
brand-new Lada automobiles" (see Bunea, 1994, pp. 460-461), while the
infamous Pavel Corut has written of "the infiltration on Romanian
territory of groups of Soviet commandos ("Spetsnaz") under the cover
of being tourists" (Corut, 1994).
REBUTTING THE 'TOURIST' MYTH
I vividly recall early on in my research of the December 1989
events being told emphatically, and not for the last time, by a journalist at
the Cluj weekly "Nu" -- a publication staunchly critical of the
Iliescu regime -- that the guest lists of Romanian hotels for December 1989
were nowhere to be found because they contained the secrets of the Revolution.
Certainly, this rumor has intersected with the "tourist" myth and has
been used as confirmation of the latter.
Significantly, Marius Mioc has sought to investigate the
reality of this matter in Timisoara (Mioc, 2000). The numbers provided to the
17 December Timisoara Association (which Mioc heads) by all of Timisoara's
hotels and by the State Tourist Agency for Timisoara lay bare two of the key
components upon which the "tourist" myth has relied: a) that the
records of the December 1989 manifests do not exist, and b) that there was an
unusually dramatic increase in the number of foreign tourists staying in
Romanian hotels during this period. In fact, the opposite proves to be true,
the number of foreign tourists -- and specifically those from other
"socialist" countries -- declined in December 1989 both in comparison
to the previous December and in comparison to November 1989!
Of course, as we have seen, proponents of the
"tourist" myth have also suggested that many of the alleged foreign
agents posing as tourists "avoided staying in hotels." But this still
raises the question of why the Securitate allowed them into the country in the
first place and why they then seemed unable to follow their movements and
prevent their activities. A 1991 open letter by "a group of [Romanian
Army] officers from the Timisoara garrison" perhaps provides the best
riposte to the dubious logic underlying the "tourist" hypothesis:
"If they [the tourists] appeared suspect to the special
forces of the Securitate and military counterintelligence, why did they not
attempt to keep them under surveillance? During this period, did the Securitate
and the counterintelligence officers not know how to do their jobs? Did they
somehow forget why they were paid such weighty sums from the state
budget?" ("Romania libera," 15 October 1991).
One must also ask: If it was precisely Soviet tourists who
were most suspected at the time of being up to no good in the country, then why
was it precisely they who were the sole group among "tourists" in the
country at the time to be permitted to stay and go about their business
unhindered?
HOW THE 'TOURISTS' ENTRY INTO THE HISTORIOGRAPHY OF
DECEMBER 1989 PARALLELS THE EXIT OF THE SECURITATE
In commenting in August 1990 upon how the details of the
state's case against him had changed since early in the year, Nicolae
Ceausescu's son, Nicu, ironically highlighted how Securitate forces had begun
to fade away from the historiography of the December 1989 events. In the August
1990 interview from his prison cell with Ion Cristoiu's "Zig-Zag"
(mentioned above), Nicu discusses the "tourists" for which he was
asked to find accommodations in the context of a group of mysterious passengers
who had arrived by plane from Bucharest on the evening of 20 December 1989. We
know that in the period immediately following these events, the then-military
prosecutor, Anton Socaciu, had alleged that these passengers from Bucharest
were members of the Securitate's elite USLA unit (Special Unit for
Antiterrorist Warfare) and were responsible for much of the bloodshed that
occurred in Sibiu during the December events (for a discussion, see Hall, 1996).
In August 1990, however, Nicu wryly observed:
"...[T]he Military Prosecutor gave me two variants. In
the first part of the inquest, they [the flight's passengers] were from the
Interior Ministry. Later, however, in the second half of the investigation,
when the USLA and those from the Interior Ministry began, so-to-speak, to pass
'into the shadows,' -- after which one no longer heard anything of them -- they
[the passengers] turned out to be simple citizens..." (interview with Nicu
Ceausescu in "Zig-Zag," no. 20, 21-27 August 1990).
The impact of this "reconsideration" by the
authorities could be seen in the comments of Socaciu's successor as military
prosecutor in charge of the Sibiu case, Marian Valer (see Hall 1997a, pp.
314-315). Valer commented in September 1990 that investigations yielded the
fact that there were 37 unidentified passengers on board the 20 December flight
from Bucharest and that many of the other passengers maintained that "on
the right side of the plane there had been a group of tall, athletic men,
dressed in sporting attire, many of them blond, who had raised their
suspicions." While investigations revealed that during this time there
"were many Soviet tourists staying in Sibiu's hotels," they also
established that "military units were fired upon from Securitate
safehouses located around these units as of the afternoon of 22 December, after
the overturning of the Ceausescu regime." He thus carefully concludes:
"As far as the unidentified passengers are concerned,
there are two possible variants: Either they were USLA fighters sent to defend
Nicu Ceausescu, or they were Soviet agents sent to act with the intent of
overthrowing the Ceausescu regime" ("Expres," no. 33, September
1990).
Thus, as the "tourists" began to enter the
historiography of the December 1989 events, so the Securitate -- specifically
the USLA -- began to disappear.
HOW THE 'TOURIST' MYTH NEVERTHELESS GAINED MAINSTREAM
CREDIBILITY AND ACCEPTANCE
How, then, did the "tourist" myth gain credibility
and acceptance in the Romanian press, given its rather obvious pedigree in the
remnants of the Ceausescu regime, especially among former high-ranking
Securitate officers and others most in need of an alibi/diversion to save their
careers and avoid the possibility of going to jail? Although the reference to
"tourists" during the December events probably entered the lexicon of
mainstream reporting on the Revolution as early as April 1990 -- not
insignificantly, first in the pages of Ion Cristoiu's weekly "Zig-Zag,"
it appears -- it was in particular journalist Sorin Rosca Stanescu who gave the
theme legitimacy in the mainstream press.
Without specifying the term "tourists" -- but
clearly speaking in the same vein -- Stanescu was probably the first to
articulate the thesis most precisely and to tie the Soviet angle to it. In June
1990 in a piece entitled "Is The Conspiracy of Silence Breaking
Down?" in the sharply anti-government daily "Romania libera,"
Stanescu wrote:
"And still in connection with the breaking down of the
conspiracy of silence, in the army there is more and more insistent talk about
the over 4,000 Lada cars with two men per car that traveled many different
roads in the days before the Revolution and then disappeared"
("Romania libera," 14 June 1990).
Stanescu's article was vigorously anti-FSN and anti-Iliescu
and left little doubt that this thesis was part of the "unofficial"
history of the December events, injurious to the new leaders, and something
they did not wish to see published or wish to clarify.
But it was Stanescu's April 1991 article in "Romania
libera," entitled "Is Iliescu Being Protected By The KGB?," that
truly gave impetus to the "tourist" thesis. Stanescu wrote:
"A KGB officer wanders in France. He is losing his
patience and searching for a way to get to Latin America. Yesterday I met him
in Paris. He talked to me after finding out that I was a Romanian journalist.
He fears the French press. He knows Romanian and was in Timisoara in December
1989. As you will recall, persistent rumors have circulated about the existence
on Romanian soil of over 2,000 Lada automobiles with Soviet tags and two men in
each car. Similar massive infiltrations were witnessed in December 1990, too,
with the outbreak of a wave of strikes and demonstrations. What were the KGB
doing in Romania? Witness what the anonymous Soviet officer related to me in
Paris:
'There existed an intervention plan that for whatever reason
was not activated. I received the order to enter Romania on 14 December and to
head for Timisoara. Myself and my colleague were armed. During the events, we
circulated in the military zone around Calea Girocului [Giriocul Road]. Those
who headed toward Bucharest had the same mission. Several larger cities were
targeted. We were to open fire in order to create a state of confusion. I
never, however, received such an order. I left Romania on 26 December.'
I don't have any reason to suspect the validity of these
revelations. This short confession is naturally incomplete, but not
inconclusive. What purpose would this elaborate, but aborted, KGB plan have
had? The only plausible explanation is that it wasn't necessary for KGB agents
to intervene. The events were unfolding in the desired direction without need
for the direct intervention of the Soviets. But this leads to other questions:
What did the Ceausescu couple know, but were not allowed to say [prior to their
hurried execution]? Why is Securitate General Vlad being held in limbo? To what
degree has President Iliescu maintained ties to the Soviets? What are the
secret clauses of the Friendship Treaty recently signed in Moscow? Is Iliescu
being protected by the KGB or not? Perhaps the SRI [the Securitate's
institutional successor, the Romanian Information Service] would like to
respond to these questions?"
Stanescu's April 1991 article did not go unnoticed -- despite
its nondescript placement on page eight -- and has since received recognition
and praise from what might seem unexpected corners. For example,
previously-discussed former Securitate Colonel Filip Teodorescu cited extensive
excerpts from Stanescu's article in his 1992 book on the December events, and
he added cryptically:
"Moreover, I don't have any reason to suspect that the
journalist Sorin Rosca Stanescu would have invented a story in order to come to
the aid of those accused, by the courts or by public opinion, for the results
of the tragic events of December 1989" (Teodorescu, 1992, pp. 92-94).
Radu Balan, former Timis County party secretary, imprisoned
for his role in the December events, has also invoked Stanescu's April 1991
article as proof of his revisionist view that "tourists" rather than
"non-existent 'terrorists'" were to blame for the December 1989
bloodshed:
"...[W]hile at Jilava [the jail where he was imprisoned
at the time of the interview, in October 1991], I read 'Romania libera' from 18
April. And Rosca Stanescu writes from Paris that a KGB agent who deserted the
KGB and is in transit to the U.S. stated that on 18 December [1989] he had the
mission to create panic on Calea Girocului [a thoroughfare in Timisoara]. What
is more, on the 18th, these 11 cars were at the top of Calea Girocului, where I
saw them. I was dumbfounded, I tell you. I didn't tell anybody. Please study
'Romania libera,' the last page, from 18 April 1991" ("Totusi
iubirea," no. 43, 24-31 October1991).
In this regard, it would be irresponsible to totally discount
the relevance of Rosca Stanescu's past. Since December 1989, Stanescu has
undeniably been a vigorous critic of, and made damaging revelations about, the
Securitate's institutional heir, the SRI, and the Iliescu regime, and he has
frequently written ill of the former Securitate and the Ceausescu regime.
Nevertheless, in 1992 it was leaked to the press -- and Rosca Stanescu himself
confirmed -- that from the mid-1970s to the mid-1980s he was an informer for
the Securitate (for a discussion, see Hall, 1997b, pp. 111-113). What was
significant, however, was precisely for which branch of the Securitate Rosca
Stanescu had been an informer: the USLA.
THE 'TOURISTS' MYTH TRAVELS WESTWARD
Almost inevitably, the "tourist" thesis has made
its way into Western academic literature. For example, in a book lauded by
experts (see for example, Professor Archie Brown's review in "Slavic
Review," Winter 1998), Jacques Levesque invokes as "rare
evidence" that the Soviets were responsible for igniting and fanning the
flames of the Timisoara uprising the following:
"...testimony of an imprisoned Securitate colonel who
was freed in 1991 [he is referring to the aforementioned Filip Teodorescu]. He
writes that the Securitate had noted the arrival of 'numerous false Soviet
tourists' in Timisoara in early December, coming from Soviet Moldova. He also
reports that a convoy of several Lada cars, with Soviet license plates and
containing three to four men each, had refused to stop at a police checkpoint
in Craiova. After the Romanian police opened fire and killed several men, he
claims that the Soviet authorities recovered the bodies without issuing an
official protest. To the extent that this information is absolutely correct, it
would tend to prove the presence of Soviet agents in Romania (which no one
doubts), without, however, indicating to us their exact role in the
events" (Levesque, 1997, p. 197).
Levesque seems generally unaware of or concerned with the
problematic nature of the source of this "rare evidence" and thus
never really considers the possibility that the Securitate colonel is engaging
in disinformation. This is indicative of how upside-down the understanding of
the December 1989 events has become in the post-Ceausescu era -- and of the
influence of the far-reaching and generally unchallenged revisionism of the
events within Romania itself -- that Western writers invoking the thesis seem
to accept the claims at face value, never even enunciating any doubt about why
the Securitate source in question might seek to make such an argument.
* A memorable phrase from Andrei Codrescu's PBS special
"Road Scholar" of the early 1990s.
(Richard Andrew Hall received his Ph.D. in Political Science
from Indiana University in 1997. He currently works and lives in northern
Virginia. Comments can be directed to him at hallria@msn.com.)
SOURCES
AFP, 19 December 1989, in FBIS-EEU-89-242,
19 December 1989.
Belgrade Domestic Service, 1400 GMT 20 December 1989, in
FBIS-EEU-89-243, 20 December 1989.
Brown, A., 1998, "Review of Jacques Levesque, The Enigma
of 1989: The USSR and the Liberation of Eastern Europe," in "Slavic
Review," Vol. 57, no. 4 (Winter), pp. 882-883.
Bunea, M., 1994, Praf in ochi: Procesul celor 24-1-2 [Mud in
the Eyes: The Trial of the 24-1-2], (Bucharest: Editura Scripta).
Court, P., 1994, Cantecul Nemuririi [Song of Immortality],
(Bucharest: Editura Miracol).
"Democratia" (Bucharest), 1990.
"Europa," (Bucharest), 1991
"Expres," (Bucharest), 1990.
Hall, R. A., 1996, "Ce demonstreaza probele balistice
dupa 7 ani?" [Seven Years Later What Does the Ballistic Evidence Tell Us?]
in "22" (Bucharest), 17-23 December.
Hall, R. A. 1997a, "Rewriting the Revolution:
Authoritarian Regime-State Relations and the Triumph of Securitate Revisionism
in Post-Ceausescu Romania," (Ph.D. Dissertation, Indiana University).
Hall, R. A., 1997b, "The Dynamics of Media Independence
in Post-Ceausescu Romania," in O'Neil, P. H. (ed.) Post-Communism and the
Media in Eastern Europe, (Portland, OR: Frank Cass), pp. 102-123.
Levesque, J., 1997, The Enigma of 1989: The USSR and the
Liberation of Eastern Europe, (Berkeley: University of California Press).
Mioc, Marius, 2000, "Turisti straini in timpul
revolutiei," [Foreign Tourists During the Revolution]
timisoara.com/newmioc/54.htm.
"Romania libera" (Bucharest), 1990-91.
Sandulescu, S., 1996, Decembrie '89: Lovitura de Stat a
Confiscat Revolutia Romana [December '89: The Coup d'ðtat Abducted the Romanian
Revolution], (Bucharest: Editura Omega Press Investment).
Teodorescu, F., 1992, Un Risc Asumat: Timisoara, decembrie
1989, [An Assumed Risk: Timisoara, December 1989] (Bucharest: Editura Viitorul
Romanesc).
"Totusi iubirea" (Bucharest), 1991.
"Ziua" (Bucharest), 1999.
"Zig-Zag" (Bucharest), 1990.
Compiled by Michael
Shafir
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1 May 2002, Volume 4, Number 9
THE SECURITATE ROOTS OF A MODERN
ROMANIAN FAIRY TALE: THE PRESS, THE FORMER SECURITATE, AND THE HISTORIOGRAPHY
OF DECEMBER 1989
By Richard Hall
Nothing is perhaps more indicative of the smug ignorance or
delusional wishful thinking of rigidly partisan critics of Ion Iliescu and
those who seized power in December 1989 than the coverage of the case of former
Militia Sergeant Petre Olaru, which broke upon the Romanian press scene in
April 1999. Tragically, the result of such blindly partisan analysis has been
similar to that seen in the cases discussed in the first two episodes of this
article -- in their zeal to target and tar Iliescu and other members of the
"nomenklatura" with the greatest share of blame for the December 1989
bloodshed, these critics have eagerly embraced and promoted the wildest and
most ridiculous fabrications of the former Securitate and Militia, fabrications
designed to exonerate these institutions and their employees for the repression
and bloodshed of December 1989.
Those who are inclined to view the December 1989 events as a
"dead story" that lost its importance in Romanian politics after the
early 1990s, or who claim that the historiographical revisionism in the media
has had little impact on public opinion, generally tuned out reporting on the
revolution -- out of fatigue and cynicism -- rather early on, and thus tend to
be unfamiliar with more recent developments on this front. For example, a poll
by the Center for Rural and Urban Sociology (CURS) on the eve of the 10th
anniversary of Ceausescu's overthrow, revealed just how far media revisionism
of the understanding of what happened in December 1989 has advanced. As the
daily "Ziua" announced, a bare 11 percent of those questioned
continued to believe -- in what not even the author of the piece could struggle
to present in neutral terms -- in the "myth of the terrorists" --
those accused of responsibility for the over 900 deaths that followed
Ceausescu's flight from power on 22 December 1989 and who were originally
portrayed as Securitate members (most likely from the Special Unit for
Anti-Terrorist Warfare -- USLA -- and the Fifth Directorate) fighting on behalf
of Ceausescu ("Ziua," 17 November 1999). That almost 90 percent of
those polled could admit to having changed their mind on this issue -- for
during the events, nobody expressed doubt as to the either the existence, or
the identity, of the "terrorists" -- must say something about the
impact of media coverage, since from the beginning of the post-Ceausescu era
debunking the "myth of the terrorists" has been at the forefront of
reporting on the December 1989 events.
Nor, as the so-called "Olaru case" demonstrates, is
it true to say that December 1989 has lost its value as an instrument in
fighting contemporary political battles. For at least a year and a half -- from
late 1997 through early 1999 -- former Militia Sergeant Petre Olaru, and those
who promoted his claims, attempted to influence the administration of President
Emil Constantinescu and the leadership of institutions of the Romanian state,
as the following discussion of the case elucidates.
'ZIUA' BREAKS THE 'OLARU CASE': 'THE MOST SPECTACULAR
INVESTIGATION OF DECEMBER '89 TO DATE'
On 5 April 1999, the so-called "Olaru case" first
came into the public eye at a specially convened news conference at the Hotel
Bucuresti ("Ziua," 6 April 1999). Presenting what they maintained was
incontrovertible proof that the December 1989 events were from start to finish
part of a KGB-engineered coup d'etat were: Sorin Rosca Stanescu, editor in
chief of the daily "Ziua"; Serban Sandulescu, a senator representing
the ruling National Peasant Party Christian Democratic (PNTCD), vice president
of the Senate's Defense Committee, and head of the third parliamentary
commission to investigate the December 1989 events; and Stefan Radoi, a former
"Ziua" advisor and assistant to Sandulescu in his capacity as head of
the aforementioned parliamentary commission.
The three explained how former Militia Sergeant Petre Olaru
had approached President Emil Constantinescu in late 1997 with evidence of the
KGB's role in the December 1989 events; how the state secretary for the
Interior Ministry, General Teodor Zaharia, had conducted three hypnosis
sessions with Olaru in order to "maximize Olaru's 'complete memory'";
and how in a meeting the previous night at the Presidential Palace,
Constantinescu had allegedly asked Radoi to investigate the allegations of KGB
involvement. As proof of Olaru's revelations they apparently showed excerpts
from a fourth hypnosis session conducted with Olaru (which was shown on the
Prima TV station). The next morning's edition of "Ziua" printed a
copy of a letter the newspaper had sent to a whole series of Western embassies
and well-known Western media outlets and watchdog organizations -- including
CNN and Reporteurs sans Frontiers -- requesting "international protection
for the witness Petre Olaru" ("Ziua," 6 April 1999).
Olaru had an amazing story to tell. December 1989 had found
Olaru as a simple policeman in the village of Crevedia in Dambovita county in
the south of the country, not far from Bucharest. Actors, journalists, and
intellectuals had reportedly made a habit of staying in summer houses on Lake
Crevedia. On 14 December 1989 -- therefore a day prior to the first
demonstrations in Timisoara that were to spark Ceausescu's downfall -- Olaru
claimed he made "a routine inspection" of film director George
Vitanidis' house ( Olaru in "Ziua," 6 April 1999). Olaru said that
Vitanidis had been suspected of engaging in illegal currency transactions and
that this was the motivation for the inspection of his premises. To his
astonishment, Olaru claimed, among Vitanidis's undergarments he allegedly found
an unopened letter, sealed with the insignia of the Soviet Union on the back.
When Olaru opened and read the letter, he discovered that it
was a detailed description of plans for a Soviet-backed coup d'etat, including
the names of those who were to act in conjunction with the plan. It spoke of a
"group of 60 excursionists with cars who were in Buzau and would disperse
to the specified place" -- in other words, of "tourists." It
even specified how many people it was anticipated would die in the unfolding of
the coup: "there will be 30,000-40,000 deaths," the letter read, but
hastened to add, "it will be worth it." Vitanidis, the letter went on
to say, had been selected to film the historic events, because the Soviets'
original choice, film director Sergiu Nicolaescu, had changed his mind.
According to Olaru, he informed his superiors and later that
day Securitate Director General Iulian Vlad came to Crevedia, leafed through
the letter, and took possession of it, instructing Olaru not to mention its
contents to anyone. Then, a week later, on 21 December -- thus in the midst of
the upheaval and bloodshed in Timisoara -- army Chief of Staff General Stefan
Guse showed up in Crevedia to try to find out the contents of the letter, of
which by now he had heard. Ceausescu was overthrown the next day...but this was
only the beginning of Olaru's ordeal.
PETRE OLARU: THE MOST SOUGHT-AFTER MAN IN POST-CEAUSESCU
ROMANIA
After Ion Iliescu, Petre Roman, and many of the others
mentioned in the letter seized power in December 1989, Olaru claimed he became
a focal point of attention among the country's new leaders. Prior to writing to
President Constantinescu in late 1997, Olaru maintains that he was approached
by a series of political celebrities, all either wanting to know the contents
of the letter Olaru had allegedly seen (and of which he was no longer in
possession) or warning him of the trouble he would encounter if he ever
disclosed its contents. Olaru alleged that he was repeatedly offered large sums
of money and other inducements, but consistently rejected the offers.
A copy of the "Report to Emil Constantinescu" Petre
Olaru submitted to the Romanian president in late 1997 detailed the alleged
approaches and threats as the following synopsis shows:
January 1990: Prime Minister Petre Roman comes to Crevedia
and tells Olaru, "Sir, you are the man who can destroy NUMBER ONE [i.e.
Iliescu]," and offers him help.
May-June 1990: General Nicolae Militaru, also mentioned in
the letter as a co-conspirator, tries on several occasions to get Olaru to come
to Sinaia to "discuss some problems." Olaru refuses to meet with him.
Early 1991: Director Sergiu Nicolaescu travels to Crevedia
and tells Olaru, "...don't talk about anything with anyone -- even in the
future."
March 1993: General Adrian Nitoi tries to ply Olaru with
whiskey, but Olaru keeps mum.
June 1993: General Gheorghe Ionescu Danescu, minister of the
interior, demands to know what Olaru knows; Olaru tells him he does not know
anything.
September 1994: General Iulian Vlad tells Olaru not to worry,
he won't talk.
August 1995: Colonel Stoica calls on Olaru to offer him a
position in the Romanian Intelligence Service (SRI), but Olaru rejects it.
Summer 1995: Editor Ion Cristoiu offers Olaru 5 million lei
to reveal what he knows, but in vain.
1995: Greater Romania Party (PRM) Chairman Corneliu Vadim
Tudor's sister and Defense Minister Taracila contact Olaru trying to get him to
talk, but to no avail.
February 1996: Corneliu Vadim Tudor offers Olaru 100 million
lei to talk and then offers an additional 200 million lei when Olaru won't
accept. Olaru continues to refuse to talk.
May 1996: Former Foreign Minister Adrian Severin contacts
Olaru.
June 1996: Former Minister of Finance Florin Georgescu comes
calling.
May-October 1996: General Buzea from the SRI tries to arrange
a meeting with SRI General Marcu; Olaru refuses.
June-July 1996: General Suceava wishes to get in touch with
Olaru.
Summer 1996: General Tepelea tries the same, also
unsuccessfully.
September 1996: General Dumitru Iliescu of the Presidential
Guard and Protection Service offers Olaru a transfer, an embassy post, or early
retirement. Olaru turns him down on all accounts.
1997: Journalist Petre Mihai Bacanu of "Romania
libera" unsuccessfully attempts to get Olaru to talk.
March 1997: Petre Roman comes calling again.
April 1997: The so-called "Refrigerator King,"
Novolan, an influential member of the ruling Party of Social Democracy in
Romania (PDSR) local branch, approaches Olaru.
May 1997: Two men sent on the orders of "Cotroceni"
by Interior Minister Dejeu contact Olaru. ("Ziua," 6 April 1999,
emphasis in the original)
It would appear that Olaru had become -- without a doubt --
the most sought-after man in Romania!
SKEPTICISM AND CYNICISM GREET OLARU'S REVELATIONS FROM SOME
CORNERS
On 7 April, "Ziua" published the response of
Presidential Adviser for Defense and National Security Dorin Marian to the
claims made by Olaru and promoted by the daily "Ziua,"
("Ziua," 7 April 1999). Marian acknowledged that he had known of the
"Olaru case" since late 1997. In November 1997, Sandulescu and Radoi
had met with President Constantinescu to discuss the case. In December 1997,
Olaru had sent his report to the Presidency. In his statement, Marian
highlighted the reasons he had informed President Constantinescu in the fall of
1998 that he had concluded that Olaru's claims were "baseless" and
"an ingenious combination of speculation that circulated in the mass
media, especially during 1990 and 1991."
Marian pointed out that there was no extant copy of the
document Olaru claimed to have come across in Vitanidis's home. Moreover, he
noted it would be highly unusual that a letter detailing such prized secrets
should have displayed such amateurish "tradecraft," without any
effort at concealing names and operational instructions in "code
words." The dates on which certain events were said to have transpired
strained credulity -- for example, General Guse is known to have been in
Timisoara from the 17 until the morning of 22 December and thus could not have
been in Crevedia on 21 December as Olaru maintained.
Marian also commented that Olaru appeared to have displayed
an amazingly insubordinate attitude for a Romanian noncommissioned officer
faced with the repeated orders and threats of military and political superiors:
"If these events had really happened, it is hard to believe that he would
still be working for the Interior Ministry!" In four months of tapping
Olaru's phone, Marian stated that Olaru received no threats and that in the
conversations Olaru did have with notable personages they appeared not to know
or recall who Olaru was. Finally, Marian expressed skepticism as to why Olaru
was subjected to hypnosis rather than a lie-detector machine, and was cynical
about the fact that Olaru had requested of the Presidency that he be granted an
ambassadorial post abroad as a "means of enforcing his protection."
Cornel Nistorescu, editor in chief of the daily
"Evenimentul Zilei," a competitor of "Ziua," and a
sometimes protagonist in journalistic controversies with "Ziua"
director Rosca Stanescu, was also having none of Olaru's hypnotic or uninduced
recollections. In editorials on 7 and 8 April, he wrote sarcastically of his
own dream, how he and Nicolae Ceausescu had bathed together and Ceausescu had
invited him to travel in the presidential helicopter ("Evenimentul Zilei,"
7 and 8 April 1999). Nistorescu suggested that claims as outlandish as Olaru's
were not even worthy of a bad spy novel.
Nistorescu also noted how this was not the first he had heard
of Olaru. He too had been aware of Olaru's existence and allegations for some
time: for one and a half years Olaru's tale had been persistently and
skillfully floated his way. As early as the summer of 1997, he revealed, two
individuals had attempted to put him in touch with Olaru. The question was why?
Nistorescu observed. According to Nistorescu, "one gets the feeling that
insistent efforts are made to march [us] in the direction of Olaru's
tale."
'ZIUA' AND COMPANY STRIKE BACK: 'OLARU'S ORDEAL CONTINUES'
In response to the dismissive remarks of Presidential Adviser
Dorin Marian and presumably to the cynical commentary of the likes of Cornel
Nistorescu, Sorin Rosca Stanescu, Senator Sandulescu, and Stefan Radoi sought
to fight back. Rosca Stanescu penned an editorial entitled, "Who is being
duplicitous? Dorin Marian or Costin Georgescu? Or Both?," in which he
insinuated that Marian and perhaps even SRI Director Georgescu -- who had
failed to comment on the validity of Olaru's charges -- were either too
fearful, compromised, or complicit to admit the KGB's role in the December 1989
events ("Ziua," 9 April 1999). Sandulescu and Radoi maintained that
"Sergeant Olaru isn't crazy!" and "Ziua" published even
more details of what they claimed was evidence that "Olaru's ordeal
continued even into 1998" ("Ziua," 8 and 9 April 1999).
If 1990-97 had seen a parade of political celebrities making
a pilgrimage to Crevedia trying to get Olaru to talk or remain silent, the year
1998, according to the details published by "Ziua," was even busier.
After writing to President Constantinescu, Olaru claimed, he had been contacted
by the following personages in 1998, as insistent as ever about the information
Olaru held and willing to offer even larger sums of money than in previous
years:
-- Novolan, the PDSR "Refrigerator King," returns
-- this time offering 200 million lei.
-- The director of Antena-1 TV in Targoviste offers Olaru
$40,000-$50,000 to talk.
-- General Victor Atanasie Stanculescu offers "unlimited
amounts of money or gold."
-- General Paul Sarpe of the army's Defense Intelligence unit
threatens Olaru's son.
-- More representatives of the PRM seek out Olaru.
-- Two more unidentified generals offer Olaru 400-500 million
lei. ("Ziua," 9 April 1999).
"Ziua" continued to defend the veracity of Olaru's
story in the days that followed. It published portions of Olaru's three
hypnosis sessions with General Teodor Zaharia on 7, 12, and 22 November 1998.
Sorin Rosca Stanescu became more explicit in his accusations against those who
had cast doubt on Olaru's account. In an editorial entitled "Fear of the
KGB," he excoriated the "cowardly fear of the government," and
its wishful thinking that the KGB would "simply go away." He claimed
that by now the SRI had weighed in -- although he did not say whether it had
been SRI Director Costin Georgescu, whom he had criticized for his silence in
an earlier editorial -- and that the SRI had informed him that "they don't
believe Marian's theory that Olaru is crazy" ("Ziua," 14 April
1999). Rosca Stanescu even insinuated that Dorin Marian himself might possibly
have KGB ties -- thus explaining his reluctance to believe Olaru or take
Olaru's charges seriously.
Stefan Radoi also stepped out of the shadows, so to speak.
When "Ziua" first broke the Olaru story on 6 April 1999, Rosca
Stanescu had mentioned Radoi as a former "information officer" until
1982, who had in 1990 become a close confidant of Corneliu Coposu, the
long-persecuted head of the outlawed National Peasant Party during the
communist era. In an interview with "Ziua" on 18 April 1999, Radoi
admitted more precisely that he had been a member of the information service of
the Securitate's USLA between 1979 and 1982. In the interview, Radoi alleged
that "KGB and GRU agents were openly involved in the December 1989 coup
d'etat," that the "terrorists" in December 1989 had acted to
"create enough panic in order for the 'luminaries' of the 'revolution'
[i.e. Iliescu, et al.] to seize power," and that the USLA troops accused
of being the "terrorists" during the events had never fired on
anyone, as they had never been trained in guerrilla warfare, contrary to what
had been alleged ("Ziua," 19 April 1999). According to Radoi, Zaharia
had been frightened by what he heard during the hypnosis sessions with Olaru --
thus causing him to abscond with the documents and tapes of the sessions -- and
that "many of those mentioned on the Olaru list want to kill him."
Radoi's admission that he had been an USLA officer was
significant -- especially in light of the fact that Rosca Stanescu himself
happens to have been an informer for the USLA (between 1975 and 1985). Given
that it was precisely the USLA that had been accused during the December events
as being responsible for the lion's share of the bloodshed, it is difficult to
regard their past as wholly irrelevant to the fact that they were now promoting
a story that exonerated the USLA -- even if indirectly -- of being the
"terrorists" and thus of responsibility for the bloodshed. In light
of Radoi's position as an advisor to Senator Serban Sandulescu, Radoi's account
of the December 1989 events and his claims regarding role of the KGB and GRU
provided some insight as to the possible influence Radoi may have had upon
Sandulescu in the latter's capacity as head of the parliamentary commission
investigating the December 1989 events. Sandulescu had published his
conclusions on those events in a 1996 book entitled "The Coup d'etat that
Abducted the Revolution," a work that alleged that the December 1989
events were essentially a Soviet-engineered coup (Sandulescu, 1996).
THE BENEFICIAL CONSEQUENCES OF PROFESSIONAL AND ECONOMIC
COMPETITION IN THE PRESS SCORE A VICTORY FOR COMMON SENSE
If the "Olaru case" was evidence of the
still-troubling cultural and institutional legacies of the communist era, it
was also evidence of the intrinsic benefits of the journalistic and personal
competition characteristic of the postcommunist era (for a good overview of
trends in the Romanian media's postcommunist development, see Gross, 1996). As
we have seen, Cornel Nistorescu was having none of Rosca Stanescu's latest,
proclaimed journalistic coup. But more important and promising from the
journalistic point of view was the investigative response of the journalists at
the daily "Cotidianul."
On 14 April 1999, "Cotidianul" published an
interview with Dimitrie Vitanidis, the son of the man in whose house Olaru
claimed he had found the "key to the secrets of the revolution" --
the letter with Soviet insignia unearthed during a "routine
inspection." The interview was with George Vitanidis's son precisely
because the director was no longer in a position to defend himself -- he had
died in 1994. According to Dimitrie Vitanidis, no one -- including the staff
from "Ziua" and the "officer" Radoi who had promoted the allegations
against his father -- had bothered to contact his family. The younger Vitanidis
dwelt on the fact that if the letter had existed, as Olaru suggested, the KGB
would have had to have been complete idiots. But he also said that the
Vitanidis's chauffeur mentioned by Olaru did not in fact exist, and that there
had been no such search of the house at Crevedia -- mainly because the house
was uninhabited in December 1989 because it was too cold to stay in during the
winter.
Approximately a week later, on 20 April 1999, an extraordinary
news conference took place in Crevedia. Present were the mayor of Crevedia, the
next-door neighbor of the Vitanidis home in Crevedia, and a group of peasants
from a neighboring village who had had run-ins with the police officer Olaru
during the Ceausescu era. The Vitanidis family neighbor, Ionel Dumitru, stated
that he did not recall either the house-search or the existence of the alleged
Vitanidis chauffeur mentioned by Olaru. The peasants recounted Olaru's
less-than-stellar human rights record prior to December 1989. The town mayor
opined that he believed Olaru had been "'helped' to invent this
subject." Irina Dumitrescu of "Cotidianul," who rather cynically
noted Radoi's previous affiliation with the USLA, remarked that no one from
"Ziua," Prima TV, or Senator Sandulescu's staff was in attendance at
the news conference ("Cotidianul," 21 April 1999; see also
"Evenimentul Zilei," 21 April 1999).
BUT ROMANIA'S MODERN FAIRY TALE HAS DEEP ROOTS...
It is practically surreal that well over a decade after the
December 1989 events, a well-known and perceptive critical intellectual and
journalist from Romania could unabashedly argue to a Western audience in the
pages of the journal "East European Politics and Societies" that
accounts of the December 1989 events fall into two categories: those advocated
by the remnants of the communist party-state (including the Securitate) and
those advocated by "critical intellectuals, journalists, and
representatives of the re-founded 'historical parties.'" According to Dan
Pavel -- himself apparently a believer of Olaru's tall tale (see his article in
"Ziua." 20 April 1999) -- "critical intellectuals, journalists,
and representatives of the re-founded 'historical parties'" differ in
their assessment of December 1989 because they have "asserted that Iliescu
and his group were the masterminds of those bloody events (more than 1,000
victims) involving 'terrorists' that nobody ever saw in trials" (Pavel,
2001, p. 184). Pavel's clear-cut dichotomy of good versus evil and truth versus
falsehood makes for a good morality play. Unfortunately, it bears little
resemblance to reality and is, hence, deeply misleading. Perhaps most
distressing of all, it is indicative of just how poorly many who have the
capacity -- wanted or unwanted -- to shape public opinion in Romania know the
story of what the former Securitate and its sympathizers have argued about
December 1989, as this three-part article has demonstrated.
(Richard Andrew Hall received his Ph.D. in Political Science
from Indiana University in 1997. He currently works and lives in northern
Virginia. Comments can be directed to him at hallria@msn.com.)
SOURCES
"Cotidianul" (Bucharest), 1999,
web edition, http://www.cotidianul.ro.
"Evenimentul zilei" (Bucharest), 1999, web edition,
http://www.evenimentulzilei.ro.
Gross, P., 1996, Mass Media in Revolution and National
Development: The Romanian Laboratory, (Ames: Iowa State Press).
Pavel, D., 2001, "The Textbooks Scandal and Rewriting
History in Romania--Letter from Bucharest," in "East European
Politics and Societies," Vol. 15, no. 1 (Winter) pp., 179-189.
Sandulescu, S., 1996, Decembrie '89: Lovitura de Stat a
Confiscat Revolutia Romana [December '89: The Coup d'ðtat Abducted the Romanian
Revolution], (Bucharest: Editura Omega Press Investment).
"Ziua" (Bucharest), 1999, web edition,
http://www.ziua.net.
Compiled by Michael
Shafir