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Shaping the Post-war World -- The Yalta and Potsdam Conferences

The conferences at Yalta and Potsdam were the two most important peace conferences of World War II. The major powers at the conferences were the United States, Great Britain, and the Soviet Union.

The conference at Yalta took place from February 4-11, 1945. Yalta is located on the southern coast of

Ukraine. The "Big Three" at Yalta were US President Franklin Delano Roosevelt, Soviet Premier Joseph Stalin, and British Prime Minister Winston Churchill. Coming into the conference the Soviet Union held the strongest military position in Europe. They controlled Rumania, Bulgaria, and most of Poland and Hungary, Yugoslavia, and Czechoslovakia, and had moved within 100 miles of Berlin.

It was determined that it was necessary to develop a new world peace-keeping organization, the United

Nations. This came on the heels of the failure of the League of Nations, which had been developed after WWI.

The United States, Soviet Union, and Great Britain would be the heads of the new organization. The Soviet

Union wanted sixteen votes in the organization, one for each individual Soviet Republic, but ended up with three. They agreed to ask France and China to help sponsor their new meeting in San Francisco on April 25,

1945 for a future conference to complete plans for the formation of the United Nations.

At this time, the United States was still at war with Japan, with no clear end in sight. This was before a successful atom bomb test, so the United States asked the Soviet Union to declare war against Japan. Stalin agreed to declare war on Japan within three months of Germany's surrender, in exchange for control of the southern half of Sakhalin Island, the Kuril Islands, and the rights to Manchurian Ports of Dairen and Port Arthur.

What to do with Germany was also discussed at the Yalta Conference. It was decided to divide Germany into four separate zones of control, one each under the three Great Powers and France. Stalin wanted Germany to stay permanently divided, but Churchill said that a healthy Europe must include a prosperous Germany. Stalin also wanted reparations to compensate the Soviet Union for its 20 million dead and for the destruction of 1000 towns and cities and a harsh punishment so that Germany could never make war again. He favored complete deindustrialization of Germany. All German industry would go to the allies as reparations. The Soviet Union then suggested the removal of German heavy industry by the allies, allied control of the German economy, annual payments to the allies by Germany for ten years, and 80% of German heavy industry to be confiscated by the allies. Churchill did not want the German people to be left poor and hungry as a result of reparations.

Roosevelt agreed with the idea of reparations, but said that enough industry must be left in Germany for the people to live on.

Stalin also promised to establish governments with free democratic elections in Eastern European countries occupied by the Soviets in exchange for Soviet control of Poland. An agreement was reached to reorganize

Poland's government to be more democratic and to include members of Poland's government-in-exile in

London, which was supported by the western powers.

After the Yalta Conference many critics of Roosevelt believed that the U.S. gave up too much to the Soviet

Union. However, at the time the Soviet Map of Europe/Asia Union held the superior position, yet didn't get everything they wanted, including severe monetary reparations from Germany. Later in history, as the US-

Soviet conflict began, many people looked back on anything given to the Soviet Union as too much.

The Potsdam Conference took place in Germany, from July 17-August 2, 1945. The "Big Three" nations were once again represented, though their leaders had changed. Stalin was there, but Truman had become

President when Roosevelt died in April. Churchill was there to begin the conference, but he was replaced when

Clement Atlee was elected Prime Minister in the middle of the conference on July 26. Many things from the

Yalta Conference came up, including the occupation of Germany and reparations. Also discussed were plans for war crime trials, and a possible surrender by Japan.

Reparations were finally decided on. The Soviet Union received 1/3 of Germany's ships and industrial equipment. The German economy was also decentralized, and monopolies were broken up. The allies together agreed to prosecute German leaders for war crimes. They decided that they should make a list of all major war criminals and every criminal captured would be given a fair judicial trial. At Potsdam, Truman learned of the first successful atom bomb test on July 16. Truman told Churchill, and Stalin later learned of it from one of

Truman's aides. As a result of this, the Potsdam Proclamation was issued. This called on Japan to surrender unconditionally or be destroyed. Japan chose to ignore the Potsdam Proclamation and continued fighting. This led to the first atomic bomb used on Hiroshima on August 6 and the second against Nagasaki. Differences amongst the allies also arose at Potsdam. Britain and the US refused to accept the Soviet government in

Poland and called for free elections in Rumania, Bulgaria, and Hungary, while Stalin demanded that they accept his puppet governments. They also charged that the Soviet Union had helped establish communist governments in other Eastern European countries, which had been freed from German control.

Comparison of Yalta and Potsdam

At Yalta and Potsdam, the issues were the same, but the goodwill to overcome them was gone.

Yalta Potsdam

Churchill, Roosevelt and Stalin

Germany to be split into four zones.

Germany will pay reparations.

A government of 'national unity' to be set up in

Poland, comprising both communists and noncommunists.

Free elections in the countries of eastern Europe.

This part of the agreement was called the

Declaration of Liberated Europe.

Attlee, Truman and Stalin

Arguments about the details of the boundaries between the zones.

Disagreements about the amount of reparations Russia wanted to take. It was agreed that Russia could take whatever it wanted from the Soviet zone, and 10 per cent of the industrial equipment of the western zones, but Britain and the US thought this was too much.

Truman was angry because Stalin had arrested the noncommunist leaders of Poland.

America and Britain were alarmed because communists

were coming to power in the countries of Eastern Europe.

Yalta

Russia would help against Japan when Germany was defeated.

Potsdam

Truman dropped the atomic bomb so that Japan would surrender before Russian troops could go into Japan.

America had the bomb in July 1945, but Truman did not tell

Stalin about it. When he saw how he had been tricked,

Stalin was furious.

The Yalta and Potsdam Peace Conferences set the stage for life after WWII and influenced and led to many future events including the Cold War.

Reading Comprehension:

1.

What conditions are agreed upon at the Yalta Conference?

2.

What conditions are agreed upon at the Potsdam Conference?

True/False (There is no right or wrong answer! Just be able to justify your response.)

1.

Germany was reduced to a state just as bad as it had after WWI.

2.

The Allies’ Powers’ alliance was formed out of convenience, not out of a genuine respect for each other.

3.

FDR’s death was a turning point in post-war agreements.

4.

The Soviet Union is to blame for the beginning of the Cold War.

On Your Own – Who is to blame for the breakdown of post-war talks between the U.S. and the USSR?

Why?

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