Background After the failure of the
Tatarbunary Uprising, the Soviets promoted the newly created
Moldavian Autonomous Oblast existing within the
Ukrainian SSR on part of the territory between the
Dniester and
Bug rivers, into the
Moldavian Autonomous Soviet Socialist Republic (Moldavian ASSR), on 12 October 1924, as a way to primarily prop up Soviet propaganda efforts in Bessarabia, but also to exert pressure on Bucharest in the negotiations on Bessarabia, and even to help a possible Communist revolution in Romania. On 24 August 1939, the Soviet Union and
Nazi Germany signed a 10-year non-aggression treaty, officially known as the
Molotov–Ribbentrop Pact. However, the pact contained a secret protocol, revealed only after Germany's defeat in 1945, according to which the states of
Northern and
Eastern Europe were divided into German and Soviet
spheres of influence. The secret protocol placed the province of Bessarabia, back then controlled by Romania, in the Soviet "sphere of influence." Thereafter, both the Soviet Union and Germany invaded their respective portions of Poland, while the Soviet Union occupied and
annexed Lithuania,
Estonia, and
Latvia in June 1940, alongside
waging war upon Finland.
Establishment On 26 June 1940, four days after the end of the
Battle of France, the Soviet Union
issued an ultimatum to the
Kingdom of Romania, demanding that the latter cede its territories of
Bessarabia and
Bukovina. After the Soviets agreed with Germany that they would limit their claims in Bukovina, which was outside the
Molotov–Ribbentrop Pact's secret protocols, to Northern Bukovina, Germany urged Romania to accept the ultimatum, which Romania did two days later. On 28 June, Soviet troops entered the area, and on 9 July, the Moldavian Soviet Socialist Republic was formed and applied to the
Supreme Soviet for formal incorporation into the Soviet Union. On 2 August 1940, the Supreme Soviet unanimously approved the dissolution of the old Moldavian ASSR, while it organized the Moldavian SSR. The new SSR included six full counties and small parts of three other
Moldavian counties of
Bessarabia (approximately 65 percent of its entire territory), together with the six westernmost
raions of the Moldavian ASSR (approximately 40 percent of its entire territory). Considering that, ninety percent of the territory of the MSSR was situated west of the river
Dniester, which had been the border between the USSR and Romania before 1940, and ten percent east. Northern and southern parts of the territories occupied by the Soviet Union in June 1940 (the current
Chernivtsi Oblast and
Budjak), which were more heterogeneous ethnically, were transferred to the Ukrainian SSR, despite their population also including 337,000 Moldovans. Consequently, the strategically important Black Sea coast and Danube frontage were handed to the Ukrainian SSR, considered more reliable than the Moldavian SSR, which could have been claimed by Romania. In the summer of 1941, Romania joined Hitler's Axis in the
invasion of the Soviet Union, recovering Bessarabia and Northern Bukovina, and also occupying the territory to the east of the Dniester, dubbed "
Transnistria."
Pro-Soviet partisans remained active in both regions. By the end of
World War II, the Soviet Union had reconquered all of the lost territories, reestablishing Soviet authority there.
Stalinist period Repressions and deportations On 22 June 1941, during the initial days of the
German invasion of the Soviet Union, 10 people were summarily executed in
Răzeni by Soviet authorities and buried in several
mass graves. In July 1941, after
Operation Barbarossa, a commemorative plaque was installed in Răzeni. Furthermore, a
dekulakization campaign was directed towards the rich Moldavian peasant families, whose members were rounded up and systematically deported to distant regions of the Soviet Union, such as Kazakhstan and Siberia. For instance, in just two days, from 6 to 7 July 1949, over 11,342 Moldavian families were deported by the order of the Minister of State Security, Iosif Mordovets under a plan named "Operation South." Additionally, as a part of
religious persecutions during the Soviet Union's occupation, numerous priests and other religious figures were targeted with a campaign of state-sponsored violence. After the
Soviet occupation began, the religious life underwent a persecution similar to the one in Russia between the two
World Wars. Religious minorities, 700 families, especially
Jehovah's Witnesses, were deported to Siberia in
Operation North in April 1951. The number of the ethnic
Bessarabia Germans also decreased from over 81,000 in 1930 to under 4,000 in 1959 due to voluntary wartime migration (90,000 were transferred in 1940 to
German-occupied Poland) and forced removal as collaborators after the war.
Collectivisation Collectivisation was implemented between 1949 and 1950, although earlier attempts were made since 1946. During this time, a large-scale
famine occurred: some sources give a minimum of 115,000 peasants who died of famine and related diseases between December 1946 and August 1947. According to
Charles King, there is no evidence that it was provoked by Soviet
requisitioning of large amounts of agricultural products and directed towards the largest ethnic group living in the countryside, the Moldavians. Contributing factors were the recent war and the drought of 1946.
Khrushchev and Brezhnev and
Ivan Bodiul during the republic's
golden jubilee, 1976 With the regime of
Nikita Khrushchev replacing that of
Joseph Stalin, the survivors of
Gulag camps and of the deportees were gradually allowed to return to the Moldavian SSR. The political thaw ended the unchecked power of the
NKVD–
MGB, and the
command economy gave rise to development in areas such as education, technology and science, health care, and industry. Between 1969 and 1971, the clandestine
National Patriotic Front was established by several young intellectuals in Chișinău, led by Mihail Munteanu, vowing to fight for the secession of Moldavia from the Soviet Union and union with Romania. In December 1971, following an informative note from Ion Stănescu, the President of the Council of State Security of the
Romanian Socialist Republic, to
Yuri Andropov, the chief of KGB, three of the leaders of the
National Patriotic Front,
Alexandru Usatiuc-Bulgăr,
Gheorghe Ghimpu and
Valeriu Graur, as well as a fourth person,
Alexandru Șoltoianu, the leader of a similar clandestine movement in Northern
Bukovina, were arrested and later sentenced to long prison terms. In the 1970s and 1980s, Moldavia received substantial investment from the budget of the USSR to develop industrial, scientific facilities, as well as housing. In 1971, the
Soviet Council of Ministers adopted a decision "About the measures for further development of
Kishinev city" that secured more than one billion
roubles of investment from the USSR budget. Subsequent decisions directed enormous wealth and brought highly qualified specialists from all over the USSR to develop the Soviet republic. Such an allocation of USSR assets was partially influenced by the fact that
Leonid Brezhnev, the effective ruler of the USSR from 1964 to 1982, was the First Secretary of the
Communist Party of Moldavia from 1950 to 1952. These allocations stopped in 1991 with the
Belavezha Accords, when the nation became independent.
Perestroika celebrations in the Moldavian SSR in 1980 Although Brezhnev and other CPM first secretaries were largely successful in suppressing
Moldavian nationalism,
Mikhail Gorbachev's administration facilitated the revival of the movement in the region. His policies of
glasnost and
perestroika created conditions in which national feelings could be openly expressed and in which the Soviet republics could consider reforms independently from the central government. The Moldavian SSR's drive towards independence from the USSR was marked by civil strife as conservative activists in the east —especially in Tiraspol—as well as communist party activists in Chișinău worked to keep the Moldavian SSR within the Soviet Union. The main success of the national movement from 1988 to 1989 was the official adoption of the
Moldovan language on 31 August 1989, by the
Supreme Soviet of Moldova, the declaration in the preamble of the
declaration of independence of a Moldavian–Romanian linguistic unity, and the return of the language to the pre-Soviet
Latin alphabet. In 1990, when it became clear that Moldavia was eventually going to secede, a group of nationalist pro-Soviet activists in
Gagauzia and
Transnistria proclaimed themselves as separate from the Moldavian SSR in order to remain within the USSR. The
Gagauz Republic was eventually peacefully incorporated into Moldavia as the
Autonomous Territorial Unit of Gagauzia, but relations with Transnistria soured. Its sovereignty was declared on 23 June 1990 on its territory.
Independence On 17 March 1991,
Moldova, the
Baltic states, the
Armenian Soviet Socialist Republic, and the
Georgian Soviet Socialist Republic boycotted the
1991 Soviet Union referendum with 98.72% in favor without any official sanction. On 23 May 1991, the Moldavian parliament changed the name of the republic to the
Republic of Moldova. The Gagauz declared the
Gagauz Republic on 19 August 1990. They had previously declared a Gagauz ASSR within Moldova on 12 November 1989. Independence was quickly followed by civil war in
Transnistria, where the
central government in Chișinău battled with
separatists, who were supported by pro-Soviet forces and later by different forces from
Russia. The
conflict left the breakaway regime (
Pridnestrovian Moldavian Republic) in control of Transnistria – a situation that
persists today. The Soviet Union
ceased to exist on 26 December 1991, and Moldova was officially recognized as an independent state. == Relationship with Romania ==