Everything about The Yalta Conference totally explained
The
Yalta Conference, sometimes called the
Crimea Conference and
codenamed the
Argonaut Conference, was the wartime meeting from
4 February 1945 to
11 February 1945 between the heads of government of the
United States, the
United Kingdom, and the
Soviet Union—
President Franklin D. Roosevelt,
Prime Minister Winston Churchill, and
Premier of the Soviet Union Joseph Stalin, respectively.
The conference
On
February 4th to
11 February 1945 the
Big Three (Roosevelt, Churchill, Stalin) convened near
Yalta, on the
Crimean Peninsula. It was the second of three wartime conferences among the major Allied Power leaders. It had been preceded by the
Tehran Conference in 1943, and it was followed by the
Potsdam Conference, which
Harry S Truman attended in place of the late Roosevelt, later in 1945.
Premier Stalin, insisting his doctors opposed any long trips, opposed Roosevelt's suggestion to meet on the
Mediterranean. He offered, instead, to meet at the
Black Sea resort of Yalta, in the Crimea. Each leader had an agenda for the Yalta Conference: Roosevelt asked for Soviet support in the U.S.
Pacific War against
Japan, specifically invading Japan; Churchill pressed for free elections and democratic governments in
Eastern Europe (specifically
Poland); and Stalin demanded a
Soviet sphere of political influence in Eastern Europe, as essential to the USSR's national security.
Moreover, all three leaders were trying to establish an agenda for governing post-war
Germany. In 1943
William Christian Bullitt, Jr.'s thesis prophesied the "flow of the Red amoeba into Europe". The Front Line at the end of December 1943 remained in Russia, but by August 1944 Soviet forces were inside Poland and parts of Romania in their relentless drive West. By the time of the Conference, Marshall
Georgy Zhukov was forty miles from
Berlin. Stalin's position at the conference was one which he felt was so strong that he could dictate terms. Moreover, Roosevelt had hoped for Stalin's commitment to participate in the
United Nations.
Regarding the first item of the Soviet agenda for Eastern Europe,
Poland immediately arose; Stalin stated the Soviet case:
Accordingly, Stalin stipulated some of his Polish demands were not negotiable: the Russians would keep the territory they'd already annexed in eastern Poland, and Poland was to be compensated for that by extending its Western borders at the expense of Germany. Stalin promised free elections in Poland despite the recently-installed Communist puppet government. However the Western Powers soon saw that Stalin wouldn't honour his free elections promise. The elections, held in January 1947 resulted in Poland's official transformation to a
socialist state by 1949; they were considered rigged to favour pro-Soviet political parties.
Roosevelt wanted the USSR to enter the
Pacific War with the
Allies. One Soviet precondition for a declaration of war against Japan was a USA–USSR recognition of Mongolian independence from the then Nationalist China. The agreement was effected without diplomatic negotiations with China. Some six months after the Yalta Conference, the USSR attacked Japanese forces before a
formal declaration of war against Japan and the Red Army seized northern parts of the Japanese archipelago. Later this was disputed between Russia and Japan; Russia didn't sign the
San Francisco Peace Treaty with Japan and no separate peace treaty had been signed between Russia and Japan as of 2008.
Roosevelt met Stalin's price hoping the USSR could be dealt with via the
United Nations. Later, many Americans considered the agreements of the Yalta Conference were a 'sellout', encouraging Soviet expansion of influence to Japan and Asia, and because Stalin eventually violated the agreements in forming the
Soviet bloc. Furthermore the Soviets had agreed to join the United Nations, given the secret understanding of a voting formula with a veto power for permanent members of the
Security Council, thus ensuring that each country could block unwanted decisions. It is possible that Roosevelt's failing health (Yalta was his last major conference before dying of
cerebral hemorrhage) was partially to blame for such poor judgment. At the time the Red Army had occupied and held much of Eastern Europe with military three times greater than Allied forces in the West.
The Big Three ratified previous agreements about the post-war occupation zones for Germany: three zones of occupation, one for each of the three principal Allies: The Soviet Union, Great Britain, and the U.S.A. (France later received one also, when the USA and the UK ceded parts of their zones). Berlin itself, although in the Russian zone would also be divided into three sectors (and eventually became a
Cold War symbol because of the division's realization via the
Berlin Wall, built and manned by the Soviet-backed East German government).
Also, the Big Three agreed that all original governments would be restored to the invaded countries (with the exception of the French government which was regarded as collaborationist in Romania and Bulgaria the Soviets had already liquidated most of the governments| the
Polish government-in-exile were excluded by Stalin) and that all civilians would be repatriated. Democracies would be established and all countries would hold free elections and European order restored per this statement:
Major Points
Key points of the meeting are as follows:
- There was an agreement that the priority would be the unconditional surrender of Nazi Germany. After the war Germany would be split into three occupied zones.
- Stalin agreed that France might have a fourth occupation zone in Germany and Austria but it would have to be formed out of the American and British zones.
- Germany would undergo demilitarization and denazification.
- German reparations were partly to be in the form of forced labor of German soldiers, to be used to repair damage Germany inflicted on its victims. (see also Eisenhower and German POWs)
- Creation of a reparation council which would be located in Russia.
- The status of Poland was discussed.It was agreed to reorganize the communist Provisional Government of the Republic of Poland that had been set up by the Red Army.
- The Polish eastern border would follow the Curzon Line, and Poland would receive territorial compensation in the west from Germany.
- Citizens of the Soviet Union and of Yugoslavia were to be handed over to their respective countries, regardless of their consent.
- Roosevelt obtained a commitment by Stalin to participate in the United Nations.
- Stalin requested that all of the 16 Soviet Socialist Republics would be granted United Nations membership, this was taken into consideration but 14 republics were denied.
- Stalin agreed to enter the fight against the Empire of Japan within 90 days after the defeat of Germany.
- A "Committee on Dismemberment of Germany" was to be set up. The purpose was to decide whether Germany was to be divided into several nations, some examples of partition plans are shown below:
Image:Duitslanddefinitief.png | The eventual partition of Germany into Allied Occupation Zones:
Image:Duitslandchurchill.png | Partition plan from Winston Churchill:
Image:Duitslandroosevelt.png | Partition plan from Franklin D. Roosevelt:
Image:Germany Morgenthau Plan.png | Morgenthau Plan:
Legacy
Yalta was the last great conference before the end of the war in Europe and the death of President Roosevelt, and the last trip Roosevelt took abroad. To observers he appeared already ill and exhausted. Arguably, his most important goal was to ensure the Soviet Union's participation in the United Nations, which he achieved at the price of granting veto power to each permanent member of the Security Council. Another of his objectives was to bring the Soviet Union into the fight against Japan, as the effectiveness of the
atomic bomb had yet to be proven. As a reward, Soviet Union was allowed to seize the southern part of
Sakhalin and
Kuril Islands, which used to be under Japanese sovereignty (since the end of the Russo-Japanese War of 1905), and some other privileges in colonial China remained intact.
The Red Army had already removed Nazi forces from most of Eastern Europe, so Stalin obtained his goals: a significant sphere of influence as a buffer zone. In this process, the freedom of small nations was sacrificed for the sake of stability.
Allegations about
Yalta would play a significant role in
United States politics during the
Cold War. American conservatives alleged that decisions reached at Yalta were a betrayal of the Eastern European nations that resulted in their domination by the Soviet Union. During the
McCarthy period, Yalta was a centerpiece of accusations that the
Democrats were "soft on communism."
The alternative opinion is that there was little Roosevelt or Churchill could have done to prevent Stalin from dominating the Eastern European nations short of war with the Soviet Union, since the Red Army already controlled those Eastern European territories. With the war in the Pacific theater continuing, and the atomic bomb still two months from completion, Roosevelt likely wanted to improve his negotiating position once the atomic bomb was introduced. Stalin had agreed at Yalta to the principle of a liberated Europe, which stated that liberated peoples would have the right to democratic self government. Stalin also agreed that Poland would hold democratic, free elections as soon as feasible. In the alternative opinion, the problem wasn't the Yalta Conference Agreement itself, but rather Stalin's violation of the Yalta Conference Agreement. The western countries violated Yalta when in 1946 they refused to provide reparations to the Soviet Union from their occupation zone of Germany. The currency reform and the unification of American, British, and French occupation zones violated Yalta.
Yalta has often been assessed with hindsight. Historians have often commented that Stalin had shown himself to be immoral, as demonstrated in his purge of the Soviet army in the 1930s and, more recently, his reluctance to help the insurrection in 1944
Warsaw Uprising, and therefore couldn't have been trusted. However in October 1944 Stalin and Churchill had agreed in the
Percentages Agreement how to divide their respective spheres of influence. Stalin would keep to the majority of this agreement including, most profoundly, denying Soviet support for communist guerrillas in Greece, which Stalin had agreed was part of the British sphere of influence in that agreement. There was also the fact that, at the end of the day, Stalin could have chosen not to allow the Allies into Berlin. It was well within Soviet territory, and he could have said no if he wanted to. The argument that he did so because he wanted to avoid war is flawed, since there was a much greater chance of a war between the Soviet Union and the Western Allies over Poland. Therefore, at the time, there was nothing to suggest for certain that the situation would turn out the way it did.
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