Mihai Antonescu (18 November 1904 – 1 June 1946) was a politician who served as Deputy Prime Minister and Foreign Minister during World War II, executed in 1946 as a war criminal.
As a minister, he drifted to the far right, and established contacts with the Nazi Germany Nazi Party. Antonescu subsequently became one of Ion Antonescu's most trusted advisors, especially when the Iron Guard's leader, Horia Sima (who was also deputy prime minister), became increasingly uncooperative. He was effective in censorship governmental critics and enforcing blatant Anti-Semitism in the Mass media.
When the Iron Guard was suppressed and removed from power in January 1941 as a result of the Legionnaires' Rebellion and Bucharest Pogrom, Mihai Antonescu was promoted to Deputy Prime Minister and Minister of Foreign Affairs, making him the second most powerful man in the country ( see Romania during World War II).
Throughout 1941, Antonescu would approve the pogrom against the Jews of Iași, stop the emigration of Jews from Romania, and remove the Romanian government's protection of Romanian Jews outside the country, thus leaving them in German-occupied areas at the mercy of the Nazis. He also approved the slaughter of Jews in Bessarabia and Bukovina, and the deportation of the survivors to concentration camps in Transnistria. In November 1941, he was awarded the Order of the Star of Romania, Grand Cross class.Decretul Regal nr. 3.069 din 7 noiembrie 1941 pentru conferiri de decorații, publicat în Monitorul Oficial, anul CIX, nr. 266 din 8 noiembrie 1941, partea I-a, p. 6.996.
Antonescu believed Benito Mussolini was powerful enough to stand up to Hitler, and that Italy could successfully negotiate an armistice with the Western Allies. Under Antonescu's plan, the four states and other European nations would turn against Hitler and join the Allies against Germany. In his capacity as foreign minister, Antonescu strengthened Romania's ties with Italy and paid a visit to Mussolini in June 1943, at which time he discovered that Mussolini agreed with certain aspects of his plan but was less than enthusiastic in regard to actually implementing it. Antonescu subsequently increased his efforts to improve Romania's relations with the United States and Great Britain. As such, he stopped the deportations of Romania's Jews, allowed Jewish emigration to non-Axis nations, and repatriated those who had survived Transnistria.
On 23 August 1944, as Soviet forces drew closer and closer to Romania, King Michael dismissed the government of Ion Antonescu, declared the nation's surrender, and had Mihai Antonescu arrested. He was subsequently handed over to the new authorities, tried by a Communist Party-influenced Bucharest People's Tribunal, and found guilty of war crimes. He was executed by a firing squad, together with Ion Antonescu, , and Gheorghe Alexianu, near the Jilava Prison. His resting place is unknown.
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