The social, economic, and political effects caused by hybrid leaders at the helm of Romania’s institutions
Romania has suffered from a lack of true leadership, from the Revolution to the present day. The leaders of the ruling parties after 1989—parties that formed successive governments—were pseudo-leaders, hybrid figures from entanglements of international intelligence services, who played “CHESS” with the countries of the Eastern Bloc. Immediately after the Revolution, the entire intelligence apparatus in Romania remained anchored to and guided by Moscow.
In the early 1990s, you may recall the struggle between intelligence services influenced by Moscow and those aligned with the West—and even the Middle East! Bucharest was literally burning. Street clashes and institutional buildings on fire filled the city center, where people had died in December 1989 and into mid-January 1990. It became the “battleground” of foreign intelligence maneuvers. Experiments were conducted, backstage battles raged, and civilian forces were mobilized with precision: miners and the infamous Mineriads!
Romania’s domestic security system, after 1989, adopted two new faces with the establishment of the SRI (Romanian Intelligence Service) and the CIE, later renamed the SIE (Foreign Intelligence Service). Former DSS officers were split between the two new agencies. Unfortunately, with the help of so-called political leaders who succeeded each other in power—leaders with skeletons in their closets—these intelligence services began to be sabotaged, depersonalized, and deprofessionalized.
Politicians appointed civilians to lead these intelligence and information services. By the end of 2004, the great „purge” of former cadres had concluded! The „Băsescu system” had been implemented down to the last detail by none other than Băsescu himself—a product of the system with all his frustrations. In short, all civilian heads of both services had ties to Moscow, London, Berlin, Paris, or even Tel Aviv. Just like the “heads of state” or party leaders, they served foreign interests.
Do you recall—just as an example—that under Băsescu’s presidency, the destruction of Arpechim was completed, Oltchim fell entirely into Russian hands, and he, as president, refused to allow Romania to become a hub for transnational gas supplied by Russia to Europe? In reality, he simply executed the orders he was given.
During his presidency, the independent guild of magistrates also disappeared. Criminal cases were fabricated by intelligence services and handed over to magistrates for execution, who were collaborators under the Băsescu-Macovei-Kövesi laws. The separation of powers and institutions in the state vanished! As a result, Romania staged a form of democracy.
The importance of intelligence services is vital, and their professionalization is essential in any state. However, in Romania, involvement in political life has become commonplace—a murky, reciprocal entanglement! Politicians, parliamentarians, ministers, and a wide array of nobodies benefit from intelligence reports, supposedly under “legal provisions.” Meanwhile, these intelligence agencies „benefit” from leadership decisions and strategies influenced by spineless leaders, under the orders of politically connected individuals with foreign allegiances. Examples: Băsescu and Iohannis are the most blatant and visible!
Sadly, in Romania, the political spectrum and intelligence services are deeply entangled in top-level schemes, creating organized chaos designed to mask personal enrichment by the protagonists. Such unjustified enrichment among those mentioned above has visibly demotivated the operational levels of the state’s structures. Both groups have long stepped outside the bounds of the CONSTITUTION.
This country had only one exception, in the person of senior statesman Teodor Meleșcanu, who upheld the bar of morality and professionalism as Minister of Foreign Affairs, Minister of National Defense, President of the Senate, and – most notably – as Director of SIE. And this is not just our opinion; it is the sentiment of people who continued to value his work even after Meleșcanu retired from state institutional activities. People from within the country and abroad, from all areas of activity, including both domestic and foreign intelligence circles!
To achieve this, they ensured the dependence of Constitutional Court judges, who have become mere tools to sweep aside the dust of unconstitutional decisions and effects! The Constitutional Court itself has become unconstitutional!
In conclusion, as long as the heads of intelligence services and political leaders do not return to the framework of the CONSTITUTION, Romanian society cannot normalize. In December 1989, we rushed to set up a “fair trial” (whose sentences and proceedings remain unfinished even today!). We killed the DICTATOR. More than 35 years later, it seems as if, on cue, all state institutions are turning a blind eye to the DICTATOR in Cotroceni. Romania does not need masters! The people need authentic leaders to defend the state’s sovereignty. We no longer want TRAITORS!
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