Abstract

This article aims to further problematize the relationship between patterns of demobilization, fascism and veterans’ activism, on several inter-related counts. We argue that the relationship between fascism and war veterans was not a fixed nexus, but the outcome of a complex political constellation of socio-economic and political factors that necessitates a case-by-case in-depth discussion. Also, we argue that these factors were both national and transnational in nature. Finally, we contend that researchers need to employ a synchronic as well as a diachronic perspective, thus accounting for various stages and forms of mobilization of war veterans over time. To substantiate these claims, the current article focuses on a relevant but largely neglected case study: the demobilization of soldiers and war veterans’ political activism in interwar Romania. It is argued that, contrary to assumptions in historiography, demobilization in Romania was initially successful. Veterans’ mobilization to fascism intensified only in mid-to late 1930s, stimulated by the Great Depression, leading to a growing ideological polarization and the political ascension of the fascist Legion of ‘Archangel Michael’. To better grasp the specificities of this case study, the concluding section of the article compares it to patterns of veterans’ activism in postwar Italy.

Highlights

  • In August 1924, a scuffle took place in the Italian town of Collodi

  • We argue that the relationship between fascism and war veterans was not a fixed nexus, but the outcome of a complex political constellation of socio-economic and political factors that necessitates a case-by-case in-depth discussion

  • You did not come to the March on Rome!’1 That squadristi could, on occasion, draw a line between themselves and nationalist former servicemen can be taken as a useful reminder that war veterans were not the only constituency of fascist militias

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Summary

Iordachi and Sciarrino

In August 1924, a scuffle took place in the Italian town of Collodi. Local fascists and veterans from the Associazione Nazionale Combattenti [anc; National Servicemen’s Association] had come to blows, after one of the former taunted the latter by yelling: ‘What have you fighters accomplished? Had it not been for us, you would have been lost. After the signing of the Treaty of Bucharest by a new collaborationist government led by Alexandru Marghiloman, Averescu entered politics and started an assiduous public campaign for the reconstruction of the army, punishment for those guilty of Romania’s military disaster and ‘collaborationists’ and the reorganization of the country’s socio-political life.[58] Unanimously regarded as one of Romania’s leading war heroes, in the first postwar years the General attracted the consensus of the majority of former servicemen He directed the spirit of the trenches and veterans’ calls for political renewal towards a set of far-reaching reforms. Reforma Agrară din 1921 în România (Bucureşti: Editura Academiei Republicii Socialiste România, 1975); David Mitrany, The Land and the Peasant in Rumania: The War and Agrarian Reform, 1917–1921 (New York: Greenwood Press, 1968), 189

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