Battle of Tighina | |||||||
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Part of the Transnistria War | |||||||
Transnistrian forces during the battle | |||||||
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Belligerents | |||||||
Moldova Supported by: Romania |
Transnistria Russia | ||||||
Commanders and leaders | |||||||
Mircea Snegur Pavel Creangă[1] Tudor Dabija-Cazarov[1] Constantin Antoci[2] |
Igor Smirnov Alexander Lebed |
The Battle of Tighina, also known as the Battle of Bender or the Battle of Bendery (Romanian: Bătălia de la Tighina; Russian: Битва за Бендеры, romanized: Bitva za Bendery), was fought between 19 and 21 June 1992 between Moldova, backed by volunteers, military advisors and bought weapons from Romania; and the Pridnestrovian Moldavian Republic (PMR, commonly known as Transnistria), an unrecognized breakaway state that declared independence from Moldova and relied on direct military support from Russia. The battle occurred in Tighina, now better known as Bender, a mostly ethnic Russian city at the western bank of the Dniester River. This is different from the rest of currently Transnistrian-controlled lands, which are located at the eastern bank of it. Bender is the Russian name of the city and Tighina is the Romanian one.[3]
Tighina was one of the points of greatest fighting during the whole Transnistria War together with Dubăsari, and the battle that occurred in the city was the bloodiest and biggest single incident in the conflict.[3] Transnistria throughout the war had help from Russian regular troops and from the 14th Guards Army, which provided the Armed Forces of Transnistria with weapons and ammunition, this being vital to the separatist victory in Tighina. As a response to the presence of Russian troops in Moldovan territory, the President of Moldova Mircea Snegur requested retaliation against Russia from the United Nations (UN), receiving weak international support. Thus, on 21 July 1992, Moldova and Russia signed a ceasefire agreement that ended the Transnistria War. As a result of it, a so-called peacekeeping Russian military mission was installed in Transnistria and the latter started drifting apart from Moldovan institutions, becoming more independent from Moldova.[4]
In Transnistria, the Battle of Tighina was referred to as the "Stalingrad of today" by Transnistrian media at the time and was often compared to the Eastern Front of World War II, in which Nazi Germany invaded the Soviet Union (USSR). Russia was and is seen today as a "savior", while the Moldovan and Romanian forces were and are seen as "nationalists" and "fascists". On the other hand, in Moldova, the Battle of Tighina is nowadays seen as a provocation by "criminal" and "paramilitary" separatists made in order to disrupt the peace negotiation process of the conflict.[3]
See also
References
- 1 2 Budeanu, Gheorghe (2 March 2012). ""Reglementarea diferendului transnistrean nu poate fi realizată prin federalizarea R. Moldova"". Point (in Romanian).
- ↑ Greadcenco, Oxana (23 July 2016). "Ion Costaș: Are nevoie Moldova de armată?/ OPINIE". Moldova.org (in Romanian).
- 1 2 3 Baidaus, Eduard (2018). "Portraying heroes and villains: Moldovan and Transnistrian print media during the 1992 war in the Dniester Valley". Canadian Slavonic Papers. 60 (3–4): 497–528. doi:10.1080/00085006.2018.1520419. S2CID 158812133.
- ↑ Munteanu, Angela; Munteanu, Igor (2008). "Transnistria: a paradise for vested interests". SEER: Journal for Labour and Social Affairs in Eastern Europe. 10 (4): 51–66. doi:10.5771/1435-2869-2007-4-51. JSTOR 43293238.