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Yalta, Casablanca, Potsdam
The most important meetings of the Second World War were held between
the United Kingdom, the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics and the
United States of America. The most important gatherings of the rulers of
these countries were at Casablanca, in 1943, at Yalta, in 1945, and at
Potsdam, in 1945.
During these meetings, Winston Churchill, representing the UK, Iosif
Stalin, representing the USSR, Franklin Roosevelt and later Harry
Truman, representing the US, decided the fate of the post war world. The
discussions and the agreements of these conferences, as well as the
pacts between the countries shaped the world in the second half of the
20th century. Also, the three leaders decided what was the price every
Axis countries and their satellites had to pay for war damages.
After the outbreak of the Second World War, the UK and the USSR joined
power with the US in order to defeat Hitler and fascist Germany, as well
as Japan. The leaders of these three countries took action, although
they also planned for the future of the world, in the conferences of the
Second World War.
Casablanca was the first of the conferences, in 1943. Stalin, however,
did not attend this meeting. It was at this meeting that the term
unconditional surrender first came about. The leaders agreed that the
Axis could only surrender in an unconditional form.
Iosif Stalin first met Churchill and Roosevelt in Teheran, November and
December 1943. At this conference, it was agreed that the UK and the US
would invade Germany. Also, it was decided that the USSR would help in
the invasion of Japan. Post war Polish frontiers were also discussed at
this time.
German forces were declining by the time the Quebec meeting of August
1944 was held. Here, the leaders stress again plan for defeating Japan.
They also made plans about a free French Government and for dividing
Germany into four parts.
Yalta and 1945 brought the plans for the finalization of the occupation
of Germany and its division into four parts. These were going to be
controlled by Great Britain, United States, The Soviet Union, and
France. The three agreed upon a provisional government for Poland.
A few months after the Yalta conference, Franklin Roosevelt died. Harry
Truman, the vicepresident, assumed the presidency of the United States.
Truman, Stalin, Churchill decided Germany s fate at the Potsdam
conference in August 1945 and issued ultimatum to Japan.
Before all three conferences, the powers made pacts with each other. At
Yalta, Roosevelt gave away Eastern Europe to USSR, although Great
Britain did not agree completely with this. “Critics would accuse
Roosevelt of a "sell-out" at Yalta, of giving away Eastern Europe to
Stalin, of "secret deals" with a ruthless dictator. Bert Andrews in the
New York Herald Examiner wrote about four secret deals: Russia s demand
for $20 billion in reparations from Germany, for Poland to the Curzon
line, for 3 seats in the United Nations, for territory in the Far East
including Outer Mongolia, south Sakhalin Island, the Kuriles.â€Â
(history.acusd.edu/gen/20th/coldwar1.html). Also, Roosevelt wanted the
USSR to join to the United Nations and to confirm the Teheran agreement
that Russia will declare war on Japan. “La Ialta, preşedintele
american urmărea două obiective majore. Primul era să obţină de la
Stalin, în schimbul oricăror concesii, adeziunea U.R.S.S. la
Organizaţia Naţiunilor Unite. A doua, ca Stalin să confirme
angajamentul făcut la Teheran, că va intra în război împotriva
Japoniei. (…) Duminică, 11 februarie, cei trei mari s-au desparţit.
Roosevelt încântat de marile concesii obţinute;(…) concesii
plătite cu o parte a Europei şi o altă parte din Asia. (…) Stalin -
fericit ca obÅ£inuse ce nici măcar nu sperase.â€Â
(www.itcnet.ro/history/archive/mi1999/current12/mi40.htm.)
At the Potsdam conference, among other things decided, the damage of war
was also discussed. All three powers agreed to make Germany unable of
starting a war conflict ever again as well as making it pay war damage.
Germany’s satellite countries, on the other hand, just had to pay for
reparations. “The Berlin (Potsdam) Conference, July 17-August 2, 1945
(a) Protocol of the Proceedings, August l, 1945
B. ECONOMIC PRINCIPLES.
11. In order to eliminate Germany s war potential, the production of
arms, ammunition and implements of war as well as all types of aircraft
and sea-going ships shall be prohibited and prevented. Production of
metals, chemicals, machinery and other items that are directly necessary
to a war economy shall be rigidly controlled and restricted to Germany s
approved post-war peacetime needs to meet the objectives stated in
Paragraph 15. Productive capacity not needed for permitted production
shall be removed in accordance with the reparations plan recommended by
the Allied Commission on Reparations and approved by the Governments
concerned or if not removed shall be destroyed. (…)
XI. REVISED ALLIED CONTROL COMMISSION PROCEDURE IN RUMANIA, BULGARIA,
AND HUNGARY.
The three Governments took note that the Soviet Representatives on the
Allied Control Commissions in Rumania, Bulgaria, and Hungary, have
communicated to their United Kingdom and United States colleagues’
proposals for improving the work of the Control Commissions, now that
hostilities in Europe have ceased.
The three Governments agreed that the revision of the procedures of the
Allied Control Commissions in these countries would now be undertaken,
taking into account the interests and responsibilities of the three
Governments which together presented the terms of armistice to the
respective countries, and accepting as a basis, in respect of all three
countries, the Soviet Government s proposals for Hungary as annexed
hereto. “ (http://www.yale.edu/lawweb/avalon/decade/decade17.htm)
At Yalta the Leaders agreed that the Axis countries would have to pay $
20,000,000,000 for reparations. Of this, half went to USSR. It was a
fare price, since the Russians had almost half (20,000,000) of the
55,000,000 casualties of World War II. “It was agreed at Yalta that
the sum of $20,000 million should be taken as a basis for further
discussions, half of it being claimed by USSR for itself and Poland. At
Potsdam, the Russians, whose need for reparations in kind of cash was
intense, secured agreement for removals from their zone of occupation to
meet Russian and Polish reparation claims, but nothing was settled about
the extent of the claims. The western allies were likewise to be
entitled to dismantle and remove property in their zones in order to
meet their claims and those of the remaining allies.†(Peter
Calvocoressi, World Politics Since 1945, sixth edition, Longman
Publishers, page 15)
The situations that emerged from the Potsdam and Yalta conferences were
the same: Europe would be divided into two influence spheres. Roosevelt
and Churchill, however, could only agree to the influence zones, since
the Russian army was already in these countries. The “Iron Curtainâ€Â
was the demarcation line between the Occident and the countries of
Central and Eastern Europe. East of the Iron curtain you could find
Poland, Yugoslavia, Czechoslovakia, Hungary, Romania, Bulgaria, the USSR
and Eastern Germany. “It has been argued that the division of Europe
and the resulting Russian overlordship in Eastern Europe were the
consequence not of historical accident, but of agreement, notably
agreement at Yalta by Roosevelt and Churchill to give Stalin a position
of power which otherwise he could not have achieved. This argument
cannot be sustained. Roosevelt and Churchill conceded at Yalta nothing
that it was in their power to withhold. The Russians armies were already
in occupation of positions in Europe from which they could not be
expelled (…) [Stalin] created a satellite empire in witch the
component states retained their separate juristic identities (…) but
were subjected to Russian purposes by the realities of Russian military
power and the modalities of Communist Party and police rule and unequal
economic treaties. There was soon little difference between former foes
like Hungary, Romania and Bulgaria, and wartime allies like Poland,
Czechoslovakia and Yugoslavia.†(Peter Calvocoressi, World Politics
Since 1945, sixth edition, Longman Publishers, page 231)
Before the Potsdam conference, the US senators who had recently visited
Europe believed that most of the continent would change democracy for
communism after the war.
(http://www.trumanlibrary.org/teacher/potsdam.htm#intro). A communistic
Europe would have been the Russian ideal for the post war situation. At
Potsdam, Truman was left to defend the principles of democracy. Although
not an experienced diplomat, the US president had a powerful ace: the
atomic bomb." The Potsdam Conference, a meeting of the victorious
leaders of the Allies in Europe, attempted to confront the delicate
balance of power of the opposing governmental structures, democracy and
communism. Held in an unbombed suburb of Berlin, it commenced July 17
lasting to August 2. Soviet Premier Joseph Stalin, British Prime
Minister Winston Churchill, and President Truman began the conference
for their respective countries. On the agenda was the partitioning of
the postwar world and resolving the problems of the war in the Far East.
This included hammering out the details regarding the division of
Germany; the movement of populations from Czechoslovakia, Austria, and
Italy; the creation of a Council of Foreign Ministers to administer the
agreed upon zones of occupation; and issuing a proclamation demanding
unconditional surrender from the Japanese government. Truman, despite
his relative inexperience in dealing with foreign diplomats, was holding
a trump card that would give him confidence in making demands of the
other leaders...the atomic bomb. The most powerful and destructive
armament to date, the atomic bomb was solely in the hands of the United
States government. “
(http://www.trumanlibrary.org/teacher/potsdam.htm#intro).
The three conferences were extremely important to the shape of the
world, as we knew it for more than 40 years, since 1945 to 1989. The
post war Europe was decided at Yalta and Potsdam and those decisions had
an impact on the whole world. The meeting of the Second World War will
always be remembered as shapers of the world.
Cited Works:
Peter Calvocoressi, World Politics Since 1945, sixth edition, Longman
Publishers, pages 15 and 231
http://www.trumanlibrary.org/teacher/potsdam.htm#intro
http://www.yale.edu/lawweb/avalon/decade/decade17.htm
http://www.itcnet.ro/history/archive/mi1999/current12/mi40.htm
At Yalta, the American president followed two major objectives. The
first one was to obtain from Stalin, in exchange for any concessions,
the adhesion of USSR to the United Nations. The second, to get Stalin to
confirm that he will go to war against Japan. (…) Sunday, February
11th, the three leaders left. Roosevelt, happy with the concessions he
had made;(…) concessions paid by with a part of Europe and another
part of Asia. (…) Stalin-happy that he gained what had not even hoped
for.
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