- Romanian Bridgehead
The Romanian Bridgehead ( _pl. Przedmoście rumuńskie) was an area in southeastern
Poland , now located inUkraine . During the Polish Defensive War of 1939 (at the start ofWorld War II ), onSeptember 14 the Polish Commander in ChiefMarshal of Poland Edward Rydz-Śmigły ordered all Polish troops fighting east of theVistula (approximately 20 divisions still retaining cohesion) to withdraw towardsLwów , and then to the hills along the borders withRomania and theSoviet Union .The plan was a fall back plan in case it was impossible to defend the Polish borders, and assumed that the Polish forces would be able to retreat to the area, organise a successful defence until the winter, and hold out until the promised French offensive on the Western Front started. Rydz-Śmigły predicted that the rough terrain, the
Stryj andDniestr rivers, valleys, hills and swamps would provide natural lines of defence against the German advance. The area was also home to manyammunition dump s that were prepared for the third wave of Polish troops, and was linked to the Romanian port ofConstanţa , which could be used to resupply the Polish troops.This plan is one of the reasons the
Polish-Romanian Alliance was not activated by Poland. Poland and Romania had been allied since1921 and the defensive pact was still valid in 1939. However, the Polish government decided that it would be much more helpful to have a safe haven in Romania and a safe port of Constanţa that could accept as many Allied merchant ships as required to keep Poland fighting. ThePolish Navy and merchant marine were mostly evacuated prior toSeptember 1 ; they were to operate from French and British ports and deliver the supplies through Romania.However, the Soviet invasion of Poland on
September 17 (following theMolotov-Ribbentrop Pact ) made all those plans obsolete. As a result, Polish units were ordered to evacuate Poland and reorganise in France.Up to 120,000 Polish troops withdrew through the Romanian Bridgehead area to neutral Romania and
Hungary . The majority of those troops joined the newly-formedPolish Armed Forces in the West in France and the United Kingdom in 1939 and 1940. Until theUnited States entered the war and Germany attacked the Soviet Union ("Operation Barbarossa "), the Polish army was one of the largest forces of the Allies.Kwan Yuk Pan, [http://www.ft.com/cms/s/0d441dfa-ecf1-11d9-9d20-00000e2511c8.html Polish veterans to take pride of place in victory parade] ,Financial Times ,May 25 ,2007 . Last accessed on31 March 2006 .]The Romanian government also received the treasury of the
National Bank of Poland in 1939. One part of it, consisting of 1,261 crates containing 82,403 kg of gold, was loaded aboard a commercial ship in the port ofConstanţa , and transported to Western Europe. The transport was escorted by ships from theRomanian Navy , in order to prevent an interception by Sovietsubmarine s in theBlack Sea . The second part of the treasury, totaling 3,057,450 kg, was deposited in theRomanian National Bank . It was returned to Poland onSeptember 17 ,1947 .ee also
*Polish Defensive War
*Western Betrayal
*Molotov-Ribbentrop Pact
*Polish contribution to World War II
*Romania during World War II
*Sarny Fortified Area References
*pl icon [http://www.wprost.pl/ar/?O=66711 Dariusz Baliszewski, "Most honoru", "Tygodnik Wprost", Nr. 1138,
19 September 2004 , retrieved on24 March 2005
*Michael Alfred Peszke , "The Polish Underground Army, The Western Allies, And The Failure Of Strategic Unity in World War II", McFarland & Company, 2004, ISBN 0-7864-2009-X, [http://books.google.com/books?vid=ISBN078642009X&dq=Poland+Romania+alliance&pg=PA27&lpg=PA32&sig=AFJHdK22StNfkR6-FTg5mNubYQw&q=Romania&id=zhb2doihL1wC&start=5&sig=OQWxfyGl5ivRPfXT7FvW2ZWMyD4 Google Print] , pp. 27–32
* Toma Virgiliu, [http://www.romanialibera.ro/a108486/1939-agresorii-in-ofensiva.html "Agresorii în ofensivă"] , in "România Liberă ",October 13 ,2007
* Wojciech Włodarkiewicz, "Przedmoście rumuńskie 1939"; Bellona,Warsaw ,2001 . ISBN 83-11-09255-9
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