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On This Day, 1945

Devil Doc

When Death smiles, Corpsmen smile back
Joined
Oct 16, 2005
Messages
11,595
Location
New England
It was on this day in 1945 that the Yalta Conference began, during which President Franklin D. Roosevelt of the United States, Prime Minister Winston Churchill of Great Britain, and Premier Joseph Stalin of the Soviet Union met to plan the final defeat and occupation of Nazi Germany. It was the last time the three men would ever meet, and one of the last times that any Western leader negotiated with Stalin as an ally.

Yalta was a resort in the Crimea that was once the site of Czar Nicholas's summer cottage. It was there that Roosevelt, Churchill, and Stalin spent eight days and nights hashing out the future of the world. The meeting was totally secret, with no news reporters allowed, and there were no leaks to the press of anything that went on there.

At the time, Roosevelt and Churchill believed that they had to persuade Stalin to help fight against the Japanese, and they also wanted him to help establish the United Nations. So they were willing to make the concession that he could continue to occupy Eastern Europe, as long as he allowed free elections there.

Roosevelt's health was failing at the time. He'd given a speech on a battleship the previous summer, during which his words were slurred, and he seemed to lose the grasp of his message. Roosevelt died of a stroke a little more than two months after the Yalta Conference. Some historians have suggested that Roosevelt's health ruined his ability to negotiate effectively, but others have argued that Stalin just had the better hand. He had effectively won the war on the Eastern Front with Germany, and Roosevelt and Churchill desperately needed his help. They weren't in a position to challenge him.

After the conference, Stalin completely ignored his commitment to democracy and installed Communist Party dictatorships in Poland, Hungary, East Germany, Bulgaria, Yugoslavia, and Albania, and the Cold War began.


Doc
 
...and the rest is history. Funny how many of our lives were shaped by that conference. Thanks, Doc. :thumbs: :thumbs:
 
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