(Archived document, may contain errors)
441 June 26, 1985 WHY ROMANIA NO LONGER DESERVES TO BE A MOST
FAVORED NATION INTRODUCTION We were outfoxed." This is how David
Funderburk, the recent United States Ambassador to Romania,
describes U.S. relations with that Soviet bloc country.
Bucharest has enjoyed special treatment from Washington for
decades ostensibly as a reward for improving the human rights
condition of Romanians and for pursuing a foreign po licy
independent of the line that Moscow imposes on the rest of Eastern
Europe. It is now, however the judgment of Funderburk and an
increasing number of experts that while the U.S. has lived up to
its part of the deal and granted Bucharest generous credi t and
trade benefits, Bucharest has reneged on its part. The past decade,
for instance, has seen steady deterio ration rather than
improvement of Romanian human rights. Emigration remains carefully
controlled and very restricted. And Romania's claim of fol lowing
an independent foreign policy is an elaborate charade Funderburk's
charges are very serious.
In short, for two decades the U.S has been swindled in its
bargain with Romania. It thus is time to rethink this deal. The
place to start is with the Most F avored Nation (MFN) trade status,
which Romania has enjoyed with the U.S. since 1975, something of
enormous economic and symbolic benefit to Bucharest. The Reagan
Administration should reverse a policy that has failed to improve
the lot of Romanians or to help the U.S. diplomatically. The
Administration should ask Congress to deny Romania Most Favored
Nation privileges now that MFN is up for its annual review.
ROMANIA'S RECORD Romania's human rights record is among the
worst in the Soviet bloc, surpassed p erhaps only by the USSR
itself. The regime persecutes religious believers; it uses
psychiatric hospitals for political purposes; censorship is
ubiquitous; free labor unions are totally forbidden. The situation
has deteriorated seriously since MFN was gran ted in 19
75. Jeri Laber, Executive Director of the U.S.
Helsinki Watch Committee, for instance, told the House Foreign
Affairs Subcommittee on Human Rights and International
Organizations in 1982 that his Conmitteels IIreports are becoming
increasingly d ifficult to compile because reliable information
about events in Romania is becoming increasingly scarce. Romania is
a closed society."
To be sure, since 1962 when Romania first resisted pressure to
integrate with the Commusist bloc economies completely u nder
Soviet control, Bucharest has appeared to be something of a
maverick in foreign affairs. It has made overtures to China; it
maintains relations with Israel; it sent its team to the 1984
Los'Angeles Olympics. These gestures of seeming independence fro m
the USSR however, must be balanced against such other factors as:
Romania is believed to reexport to the USSR American goods whose
sale to Moscow is banned; Romania has been campaigning for
increased Soviet presence in the Middle East negotiations; and t h
e Romanian secret service, the CIE, is totally integrated within
the Soviet KGB In fact, according to former CIE Deputy Director and
special advisor to President Nicolae Ceausescu, General Ion Mihai
Pacepa, who defected to the U.S. in 1978, all significan t
information gathered by the CIE is offered directly to the XGB.
Pacepa also estimates that Itof intelligence officers Every
cooperative or joint venture with Western companies is intensively
used to infiltrate to the West numerous intelligence officers a n d
agent for the purpose of illegally obtaining Western technology.I1
the Romanian trade personnel abroad (in 1978 70 percent were The
Soviet presence in Romania, meanwhile, is much more extensive than
some State Department officials are willing to admit. U.S.
Ambassador Funderburk, for example, has testified that by
checking schools, registries, and license plates the U.S. Embassy
in Romania found Ifan ungodly numberi1 of Soviets--including Soviet
agepts in factories monitoring Romanian exports to the Sovi et
Union.
And now comes the revelation that some 20,000 Biblks sent by the
World Reformed Alliance to the Hungarian Reformed Church in Romania
were turned into toilet paper. This is one more insult to Romanian
citizens who are virtually forbidden to practice their various
religions 1. I. M Pacepa and Michael Ledeen Romania 'Reaps Rewards
of Hi-Tech Thefts Human Events March 16, 1985 2. The Washineton
Post, May 15, 1985 2I WHY MFN STATUS FOR ROMANIA?
In 1962, Romania surprised the international community by
refusing to become fully integrated with the Council for Mutual
Economic Assistance (COMECON) of the Soviet bloc. Because of its
domestic energy resources, Romania apparently felt that it could
develop a policy somewhat different from MOSCOW'S. The leadership
hope d to gain some'support from a populatipn not only deeply
anti-Russian but basically anti-communist.
During the 1960s, Ceausescu came to realize that nationalism was
a powerful means of gaining popular support foreign policy with
nationalist overtones that deviated on occasion from the Soviet
line. This policy was aided at the beginning by a growing economy.
But since the 1970s, Romania's energy supplies have been shrinking,
and the country now must import oil.
Romanian oil imports were 12,395,000 tons, and in 1984, 10
million tons, mostly from the Middle East. Prior to 1975 Romania
exported to the Soviet Union as much as 4 million tons of oil
annualiy, but now it is seeking to import about 6 million tons from
the USSR. As such Bucharest no longer is so eco n omically
independent of Moscow He thus developed a In 1983 Interpreting
Romania's foreign policy moves to be a sign of liberalization,'the
U.S. in 1975 waived for Romania the section of the 1974 Trade Act
known as the Jackson-Vanik Amendment. This amendme n t prohibits
granting MFN treatment, government credits or investment
guarantees, or the negotiation of commercial agreements to a
communist country tkat fails to. promote human rights, particularly
the right to emigrate. The President may waive the prohib ition
annually, subject to congressional approval, and extend MFN status
to a communist country since 1975 and on Hungary since 1978.
Presidents and Congresses have waived the ban on Romania 3.
Robert King, in Hoover Institution negligible 1,000 his Histor v of
the Romanian Communist Partv (Stanford, California Press, 1980),
states that the Party's membership in August 1944 was a 4. See
RFE/RL, Situation ReDort 5, March 13, 1985, pp. 7-10 5. A careful
reading of the amendment indicates that it was intended t o cover
more than one particular human right, freedom of emigration.
Section 402 of the 1974 Trade Act states its objectives to be "to
assure the continued dedication of the United States to fundamental
human rights It then defines the means for achieving these
objectives citing emigration as a condition for the extension of
trade benefits On May 23, 1985 Congressman Mark Siljander (R-MI)
introduced H.R. 2596, which would deny MFN status to countries that
discriminate on ethnic, cultural, or religious grou n ds 3- I The
waiver originally was granted to Romania in an effort ''to create a
viable framework and favorable atmosphere for the development of
trade and economic cooperation 1 And more recently, another aspect
was clarified by Gary Matthews, Deputy Assi s tant Secretary for
Human Rights and Humanitarian Affairs: "This administration and the
three preceding it have looked to Romania's relatively independent
foreign policy as a significant factor in the evolution of Eastern
European relations with the Soviet s I7 As examples, Matthews lists
Romania's dissent from the Soviet line on such Warsaw Pact and
COMECON issues as: Romania's Warsaw Pact military participation is
more limited than that of other members; it sent a team to the 1984
Olympics; it has maintain e d diplomatic relations with Israel
since 1967; it hosted Israeli Prime Minister Perez in February
1985; its votes in the U.S. General Assembly have diverged more
from Soviet positions than those of other Eastern European
countries; and it has allowed cons iderable Jewish emigration.
For such actions, Romania has benefited from U.S. extension of
MFN status. Politically, MFN bolsters the image of Ceausescu, one
of the Eastern bloc's most ruthless dictators and the only true
Stalinist left in power. Economical ly, total two-way trade between
the U.S. and Romania increased from about 450 million in 1976 to
over $1.21 billion in 1984, though U.S. exports to Romania have
held virtually steady from $249 million in 1976 to $246 million in
19
84. Romania has received U.S. government Export-Import Bank and
Commodity Credit Corporation credits to purchase U.S. exports, and
is eligible for political risk insurance from the Overseas Private
Investment Corporation. U.S. imports provide Romania with products
needed to help its disastrous economic situation coal, electric
machinery, chemicals, and cattle hides.
These include grains and seeds Western economic concessions,
however, provide no incentives to Ceausescu to decentralize
Romania's economy or to pay heed to the human rights of its
citizens. Instead, MFN and other concessions allow him to continue
his harsh, repressive policies HUMAN RIGHTS SITUATION Romania is
generally considered to be one of the most egregious human rights
offenders in Eastern Europe. Nor has the s i tuation improved over
the past few years. A severely deteriorating economy, a 6. Hearings
before the Subcommittee on Trade of the Committee on Ways and
Means, House of Representatives, June 22 and July 9, 1979, p. 43 7.
Hearings before the House Foreign A f fairs Subcommittee on Human
Rights and International Organizations, May 14, 1985 4corrupt
bureaucracy, an omnipresent secret police network, and the cult of
personality' surrounding the Ceausescu family have resulted in
increasing misery for Romanian citi z en Helsinki Watch Committee,
a nongovernmental organization that monitors human rights, in a May
14, 1985, report to Congress. In every area Romania disregards
international human rights standards and even its own laws. In its
1984 Countrv ReBorts on Huma n Riuhts Practices the State
Department emphasized that Itin the area of human rights major
discrepancies persist between Romania's Constitution, law public
pronouncements and international commitments on the one hand and
the civil liberties and human righ t s actually allowed by the
regime on the other.Iv8 So says the U.S To stifle dissent, for
example, Ceausescu's regime employs such tactics as: beatings,
jailing, incarceration in psychiatric hospitals torture, even
political murder. In April 1984, for exam p le, Father Geza Palfi
was beaten to death by security police for suggesting that
Christmas should not be a workday. Amnesty International continues
to receive reports of people who are imprisoned or harassed forsthe
nonviolent exercise of their right to f reedom of expression.
Relidous Persecution The State Department knows of many cases of
Romanians forbidden from traveling to attend religious gatherings
and funerals.
International League for Human Rights cites cases ofloreligious
leaders singled out for repression by administrative action The
Among them Father Calciu-Dumitreasa, a Romanian Orthodox priest and
professor of theology, was released from prison in August 1984,
after serving a ten-year sentence for nonviolent human rights
activity.
Since then he has been placed under virtual house arrest. He is
unemployed, deprived of outside contacts, denied a passport, and
subject to strict surveillance 8. Countrv ReDorts on Human Riphts
Practices, Department of State, February 1984, p 10
77. It may be argue d, however, that Romanian law does not
guarantee any human rights once the provisos are read in the proper
context. See Juliana Geran Pilon, "The Romanian Distinction between
Negative and Positive Liberty Studies in Soviet Thought 23 (1982
pp. 131-140 9. S ee the prepared statement of Amnesty
International, USA, on Amnesty International's Concerns in Romania,
to the House Subcommittee on Human Rights and International
Organizations, May 14, 1985 10. Cited in the Testimony of the
International League for Hum a n Rights before the Subcommittee on
Human Rights and International Organizations by Nina Shea, Program
Director, on May 14, 1985, p. 6 5 8 Reverend Istvan Tokes, an
internationally respected theologian and a senior official of the
Hungarian Reformed Churc h , after strong official pressure, was
fired in November 1983 as professor at the Protestant Theological
Seminary, and in May 1984 was dismissed from his post as Assistant
Bishop. He is under continuing surveillance Felicia Russo has been
harassed repeated l y by authorities since she converted to the
Pentecostal Church. She was expelled from the university and denied
a passport for which, church sources report, she is paid
approximately $4 a month She now can get only menial jobs The
League also reports that on April 26, 1985, Reverend Petru Popescu,
known for his criticisms of the state's anti-religious policies,
disappeared from a train station platform; his whereabouts are
unknown. On April 19, Constantin Sfatcu, a Baptist lay leader was
imprisoned for dis tributing Radu Filipescu, a Romanian engineer,
is currently in prison for distributing leaflets critical of the
regime.
These are but a few examples of the routine repression of
Romanians attempting to practice their religion.
The latest and perhaps most dramatic example of Romania's
blatant disregard for religious liberty is the revelation that some
20,000 Bibles sent by the World Reformed Alliance to the Hungarian
Reformed Church in Romania never reached the approximately 1 m
illion church members. Instead the Bibles were sent to the paper
mill in Braila to be recycled into toilet paper. Since many
original words and lethers remained intact, the fate of the Bibles
became known in the West.
Meanwhile, religious believers in Roma nia are deprived of
Bibles in violation of the Helsinki Accords and the peace treaties
after World War 11 Nor is the situation likely to improve. For at
the 13th Congress of the Romanian Communist Party last November,
Ceausescu vowed to take firm measures against various mystical and
obscurantist manifestations.lI Indeed, the Romanian administrative
body dealing with religious matters is known as ''the Department of
Cults.Il Remession of Minorities The New York-based Committee for
Human Rights in Romania h as been monitored effectively the
increasingly desperate situation of the 11. Further information on
Romania's religious persecution may be obtained from Rev. Dr.
Alexander Havadtoy, minister at the Calvin Church in Fairfield,
Connecticut, and Professor at the Yale University Divinity School
62.5 million Hunsarian nationals in Romania (out of a total
population of 20 million).
Hungarian has been stopped. Hungarian schools are being closed.
The government routinely assigns Hungarian graduates of universitie
s and trade schools to jobs outside the community, creating an
acute shortage of Hungarian teachers and language experts in the
Hungarian areas. of the Hungarian minority in an interview in
October 1984 In the past year, all television broadcasting in The
persecuted dissident Karol Kiraly summarized the situation The
atmosphere of terror is beyond description permeates every aspect
of everyday life and extreme measures are taken with respect to
education housing, cultural and religious activities, in total
disregard of established laws and regulations. The fear which the
secret police has managed to instill in every citizen makes even
the simplest act become incredibly risky and complicated. Making a
long distance telephone call to Hungary, for example is i t self
already considered a suspicious activity Distrust is so prevalent
that no one dares communicate to anyone someone ri5k their jobs,
their homes or anything they might hold dear It The most arbitrary
Those who dare to trust Emiaration: The Dark Stow ll Illegalll
emigration is forbidden. To attempt it and fail is an offense
punishable with up to three years in jail.
Legal emigration has many facets. Since the early 1960s,
according to General Pacepa, Ceausescu has been engagea in what
amounts to #Iselling Romanians1# as an export commodity. That is in
exchange for emigrants Romania has received from the governments of
Israel and West Germany thousands of dollars in cash along with low
interest credits issued through-the CIE for increased emigration
quotas . Since 1972, charges Pacepa, hundreds of millions of
dollars have been received for bartering Romanian Jews and Germans
behind political scenes and have been deposited in a personal
account of Ceausescu, some in the Romanian Foreign Trade Bank, some
in Sw i tzerland 12. See, for example, the extensive testimony of
Laszlo Hamos, Chairman of the Committee for Human Rights in
Romania, in Hearing of the International Trade Subcommittee of the
Senate Committee on Finance, August 8, 1984, pp. 159-239 13. Shea,
OD. cit, p. 12 14. Human Events, p. 225 7- The number of Romanians
allowed to emigrate to the U.S. is not an accurate indicator of the
situation 1975 to 4,545 last year reportedly are criminals
lldumpedll on the U.S agents instructed to infiltrate the emigre
community, or dissidents forcibly exiled. Bona fide emigrants, by
contrast, are encountering increased harassment.
Inordinate delays are standard. Applicants for permission to
emigrate often are fired from their jobs, demoted to lower paying
jobs, evicted from their homes or,,given inadequate housing, or
denied medical care and other benefits. Their children, meanwhile,
are not allowed to enroll in schools The figure has grown from 980
in But many of those allowed to leave The U.S. was ready to deny
MFN st a tus in 1983 after Ceausescu announced in November 1982 the
possible imposition of an education tax on prospective emigrants to
reimburse the state for the cost of educating those seeking to
leave. Ronald Reagan announced that MFN status would end if the p o
licy were not canceled. Only days before the deadline, the tax was
rescinded. In retrospect, many observers agree with Jeri Laber of
the U.S. Helsinki Committee that the controversial tax was likely a
ploy. Explains Laber: "By first imposing the education tax and then
lifting it, the Romanian government is distracting attention from
other impediments to freedom of emigration and from its worsening
human rights record in general things which endangered MFN long
before the education tax became an issue.
What is worse, the tax seems to have returned through the back
door in the form of bribes has documented reports of government
agents demanding bribes of up to 3,200 from individuals before they
are permitted to emigrate. This is confirmed by Western diplomat i
c sources. These payments, charges League Program Director Nina
Shea, "are a substitute for the Education Tax The International
League for Human Rights Remession of Workers The Ceausescu regime
tolerates virtually no expression of worker dissatisfaction. I n
August 1977, a large-scale strike by 35,000 coal miners in the Jiu
valley in southwest Romania was swiftly, brutally 15. Over the
years, Rabbi Jacob Birnbaum, head of the Center for Russian and
East European Jewry in New York, has documented the harassm ent of
Jewish prospective emigrants in particular. He also notes that
1983-1984 saw the resurgence of the rash of anti-Semitic writings
in 19
80. A long, insidious article in the Communist Youth League
newspaper Scinteia Tineretului in April 1983, for exam ple,
discusses a Jewish "plot against the specificity of the Romanian
spirit See Senate Hearing, 90. cit, August 8, 1984, pp 153-1 59 and
476-489 asuppressed native villages; the leaders were arrested form
a Free Trade Union of Romanian Workers was also q uickly
quashed.
According to Amnesty International, two leaders of the movement,
Iona Cana and Gheorghe Brasoveanu, were confined to psychiatric
institutions,l,while a third was sentenced to eighteen months
imprisonment Thousands of workers were fire& or s ent back to
their An attempt in 1979 to A new decree now places those entering
the labor force in what amounts to indentured servitude. All first
assigned jobs for at least five wages peophe were sent into the
countryside ing Students are forced to work a r e forced to remain
at their years or forfeit half of the Last summer, three million
young to help with the harvest Censorship Censorship has been
intensified in recent years from its already high level government,
Romania may be the only East European cou ntry without a samizdat
or underground literature register their typewriters deemed Itin
the interest of the state The author of a book critical of the
Ceausescu regime, Adevarul (The Truth), was arrested in June 19
84. He has not been heard from since Bec ause all publications
are controlled by the Citizens are required to These can be
confiscated if that is Assassinations I A critic of the Romanian
regime does not escape the long arm of Ceausescu's ire even by
exile or emigration 19
82. His would-be assas sin, Matei Haiducu, revealed to the
French secret service the details of his mission. This is not the
only such emigrants for Romanian intelligence; in February 1981,
parcel bombs were sent to the homes of prominent Romanian exiles in
Paris and Cologne, i n juring two of them and a police bomb expert:
in July 1981, Emil Georgescu, an outspoken Romanian program editor
at Radio Free Europe in Munichrwas stabbed 22 times Paul Goma, the
dissident writer expelled to France in 1977, was targeted for
assassination in case. In 1980, West Germany arrested a man who
spied on Romanian I Other Radio Free Europe 16. Vladf Georgescu,
Istoria Romanilor (The History of the Romanians Los Angeles
American Romanian Academy of Arts and Sciences p. 3
36. See pp. 310-345 for an ex cellent summary of Romania's
current situation and policies 17. AI Annual Report 1981 (London p.
314 18. RFE/RL Situation Rebort 7, April 9, 1985, p. 14 9personnel
who have been beaten or tahgeted for assassination include Monica
Lovinescu and Sergiu Mano liu.
In July 1978 General Ion Pacepa was instructed personally by
Ceausescu to conduct secret assassinations by mailing plastic
explosives to exiles critical of the Ceausescu regime and defected.
Since his 1978 defection, he has been the target of at least seven
assassination attempts Pacepa refused The repression of Romanian
citizens, even beyond Romania's borders, makes it seem especially
inappropriate for the U.S. to bestow preferential MFN status on the
Ceausescu regime.
HOW INDEPENDENT OF THE USSR IS ROMANIA?
Romania's political behavior is surely motivated mainly by a
need to compensate for domestic economic and human rights
shortcomings and to rally some popular support for the ruling
Communist Party.
Romania's ruthle ss internal repression, in fact, is a key
reason for MOSCOW'S tolerance of Romania's occasional gestures
defying the Soviet foreign policy line. According to Romanian-born
political science professor Aurel Braun, now of the University of
Toronto, Moscow i s willing to condone some dissent, provided that
the country is governed with an igon, Leninist fist and that the
USSR can reap other benefits.
More important, some of Romania's seemingly independent moves
actually may support MOSCOW'S policies. While it i s true, for
instance, that Ceausescu appeared to have upset Moscow by asserting
that no state has the right to intervene in Poland, he also
strongly condemned the activities of the Solidarity trade union
movement in language echoing MOSCOW~S. And though i t has received
little attention, Romania approved the imposition of martial law in
Poland.
In Middle East matters, Romania also hardly displeases
Moscow.
Romania supports an international conference organized by the
U.N., in which the Soviet Union and the Palestine Liberation
Organization would participate. Earlier this year, Ceausescu told
The Jerusalem Post that he favored increased Soviet involvement in
the Middle East.
Though Romania has yet to exchange ambassadors with Nicaragua
Bucharest was one of the first to recognize Nicaragua's communist
19. See Ion Pacepa's comments on these acts in Le Matin, February
4, 1985 20. Aurel Braun, Romanian Foreinn Policv Since 1970: The
Political and Militarv Limits of Autonomv (New York: Praeger, 1978
10 - regime. According to a Czechoslovak report, Romania has joined
other Warsaw pact countries in sending 28 tons gf food and medicine
to Nicaragua aboard a Soviet Aeroflot plane.
Romania also has sent military aid to Nicaragua.
Romania generally has backed, with political and material ai
Marxist and other radical leftist movements throughout the
world.
This policy, probably motivated by Ceausesculs attempts to
become a world leader, suits Moscow very well It is believed that
Most dangerous to the U.S. and the West is the integration of the
Romanian secret service within the Soviet bloc intelligence
services.
To be sure, the Romanian CIE no longer technically reports to
Moscow.
But General Pacepa reports that the CIE has extensive ties to
the Soviet KGB. Experts be lieve that the CIE is a very important
ally in the KGBIs espionage network, including inside the U.S. In
addition the CIE has secret agreements with the Hungarian,
Yugoslav, and Bulgarian secret services for smuggling high
technological commercial and mil itary equipment into Romania and
for sending drugs and arms abroad. In 1977 and 1978 alone, the
Romanians sold Western smugglers more than 200 pounds of
narcotics.
Romanials voting record at the U.N. is cited by some State
Department officials as an exampl e of Bucharest's independence
from Moscow. In 1983, for example, while the U.S. and Soviet Union
voted together 13.8 percent of the time in the General Assembly,
Romania voted with the U.S. 16.3 percent of the time. But in 1984,
Moscow actually voted with the U.S. 13.2 percent of the time
compared to 10.1 percent for Romania.
In view of its growing economic dependence on the Soviet Union
Romania can be expected to toe the Moscow line even more
carefully.
Ceausescu has been seeking increased fuel supplies from the
Soviet Union. Radio Free Europe researcher Paul Gafton notes that
Moscow llseems to be maintaining a deliberate gap between its oil
exports and Romania's expectations in this domain, an obvious e c
onomic lever aimed at influencing Romania I s political behavior
The Soviet presence in Romania, meanwhile, apparently is mounting.
Reports Ambassador Funderburk 21. Cetka, August 6, 1979; cited in
RFE/RL Situation ReDort 3, February 8, 1985, p 7 22. RFE/ RL
Situation ReDort 3, February 8, 1985 23. Human Event p. 230 24
RFE/RL Situation ReDort 5, March 13, 1985 11 Our guys observed a
large Soviet presence in Romania that was not welcome news to some
officials in Washington.
On our own initiative, we looked in registries, checked schools,
traced license plates and came up with an ungodly number of
resident Soviets, including Soviet agents in factorkes monitoring
Romanian exports to the Soviet Union.
Funderburk also cites evidence that Romania has transferred to
the Soviet Union technology obtained from the U.S. This is
confirmed by Commerce Department officials.
CONCLUSION At one time, it might have made sense for the U.S. to
grant favors to Romania in the hopes of getting something in return
decade, however, the U.S has waited patiently for Bucharest to live
up to its end of the deal.
Europe's most repressive nation--except for the USSR. Romanian
human rights are systematically abused, and emigration is rigidly
restricted. and torture of political dissident s, harassment of
would-be emigrants and religious believers, assassinations, and a
fraudulent emigration record that includes a large number of forced
exiles, criminals, and agents of the secret police For a Instead,
Romania remains probably Eastern Routi n ely in Romania there are
psychiatric incarcerations Romania's much-touted "independent" road
in foreign affairs meanwhile, is a charade. The Romanian secret
service, its high technology espionage efforts, its illegal drug
trafficking efforts are all close l y integrated with the KGB. Many
of Romanials actions moreover, directly benefit Moscow,
including-its attempts to involve I the Soviet Union in Middle East
negotiations and the reported transfer to the Soviet Union of high
technology obtained from the U.S . I As such, the U.S. should start
treating Romania as the hard-line Stalinist state that it is.
Ceausescu regime by giving it the gift of Most Favored Nation
trade status government that the U.S. no longer is fooled and no
longer will Washington should no t enhance the I I To deny MFN to
Romania would signal to the Romanian I encourage Bucharest's
repressive internal policies and foreign policy deceptions.
Juliana Geran Pilon, Ph.D.
Senior Policy Analyst 25. The Washington Post, May IS, 1985
12