When the State Department made public the Yalta record (TIME, March 28), Senate Democrats hastened to defend Franklin D. Roosevelt’s secret concessions to the U.S.S.R. by blaming his military ...
As their armies poised for victory, the so-called Big Three - US President Franklin Roosevelt, British Prime Minister Winston Churchill and Soviet leader Joseph Stalin - agreed to meet in Yalta ...
On February 4, 1945, Churchill, Roosevelt and Stalin met in Livadia Palace, in the Crimean resort of Yalta, with a single item on the agenda: to plan for the final defeat of Nazi Germany and the ...
and President Franklin Roosevelt, met at a Crimean resort at Yalta in Ukraine. Among the issues that were discussed was the fate of Germany after its defeat in the war. View these videos to see ...
In February 1945, President Roosevelt makes the arduous journey of 14,000 miles to Yalta to meet again with Churchill and Stalin. The Americans and British are deeply concerned with Stalin's ...
His work amounts to a re-conceptualizaion, placing British statecraft and its European concerns at centerstage in the Yalta contest of wills, rather than a secondary drama to that featuring Stalin ...
The Yalta Agreement he signed in 1944 with Stalin failed to bring lasting peace as FDR had naively hoped it would. Russia and communist China initiated proxy wars with the U.S. in Korea and ...