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Introduction

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Hungary

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In 1918 the Austro-Hungarian Monarchy collapsed as a result of losing World War I. On October 31, 1918, the success of the Aster Revolution in Budapest brought the left-liberal Count Mihály Károlyi, an Entente devotee, to power as Prime Minister. On 13 November 1918 in Belgrade he signed an armistice with the Entente, establishing demarcation lines for the territory that was to remain under Hungarian administration. By the terms of the armistice, Serbian and French troops advanced from the South, taking control of the entire Banat and Croatia, at the same time Czechoslovakia took control of Upper Hungary and of Carpathian Ruthenia and Romanian troops were allowed to advance to the Mures river. However, the demarcation lines did not hold for long [1], the Serbians occupying Pecs as soon the 14'th of November [2]. The armistice limited the size of the Hungarian army to eight Divisions. Károlyi however, yielded to Woodrow Wilson's pacifism by ordering the full disarmament of the Hungarian Army [citation needed] and proclaimed the advent of the First Republic, of which he was President. By February 1919 the government had lost all popular support, having failed on domestic and military fronts. On March 21, after the Entente military representative demanded more and more territorial concessions from Hungary, Károlyi turned over the government to the Socialist Party of Hungary, a coalition of Social Democrats and Communists. Although Károlyi believed he was handing power to the Social Democrats, it was the Communists, led by Béla Kun, who were actually in control. The new government proclaimed the Hungarian Soviet Republic and promised equality and social justice.

The Communists, or "Reds," came to power largely thanks to being the only group with an organized fighting force, and they promised that Hungary would defend its territory without conscription (possibly with the help of the Soviet Red Army). Initially, most soldiers of Hungary's Red Army were armed factory workers from Budapest. Later the Hungarian Red Army became a truly national army, the ranks of which were filled out of patriotic rather than ideological reasons.

Romania

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In 1916, Romania entered World War I on the side of the Entente, with the main goal of uniting all territories with a Romanian national majority into one state (see Treaty of Bucharest (1916)). In 1918, after the communists took power in Russia and signed a separate peace in the Treaty of Brest-Litovsk with the Central Powers, Romania was left alone on the Entente's Eastern Front, a situation that far surpassed its military capabilities. Therefore, it sued for peace, and reached an understanding with the Central Powers in May 1918 in the Treaty of Bucharest. Alexandru Marghiloman signed the Treaty of Bucharest with the Central Powers on May 7, 1918. However, this treaty was never signed by King Ferdinand.

The situation in Romania at the end of 1918 was dire. Romania was suffering from the consequences of the punitive war reparations [3] imposed by the Central Powers, Dobrogea was under Bulgarian occupation and a large German army under the command of field marshal August von Mackensen was on its way to retreat through the country. The Romanian army was demobilized and could cont only on four full-strength Divisions while further eight Divisions were at peace-time strength. The army had to keep the order and protect Basarabia from hostile actions of the Soviet Union, for which purpose it used the four battle-able Divisions, while at the same time counter the Bulgarian presence in Dobrogea and supervise the retreating German forces.

On 10 November 1918, taking advantage of the Central Powers' precarious situation, Romania reentered the war on the side of the Entente with the same objectives as in 1916. King Ferdinand called for the mobilization of the Romanian Army and ordered it to attack over the Carpathian mountains into Transylvania. The end of World War I that followed very soon did not bring the end of fighting for the Romanian Army. The fighting continued later that year and into 1919 during the Hungarian–Romanian war.

Outline of the war

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The war is divided here into three phases, mirroring the main operations of the Romanian Army.[2] In the war's first phase, the Romanian Army advanced, against only light resistance, up to the Western Carpathian Mountains. In the second phase, after the communists took power in Hungary, the Romanian Army overcame the Hungarian Red Army to reach the Tisza river. Finally, in the third phase, the Romanian Army destroyed the Hungarian Army and occupied Budapest, ousting the communist regime of Béla Kun.

  1. ^ Priscilla Mary Roberts - World War I: A Student Encyclopedia [1]
  2. ^ József Breit - Hungarian Revolutionary Movements of 1918-19 and the History of the Red War. Vol. I: Main Events of the Károlyi Era (Budapest. 1929), pp. 115-16.
  3. ^ Meddling in Middle Europe: Britain and the 'Lands Between', 1919-1925 [2], Miklos Lojko Central European University Press, 2006