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July 26 marks 80 years since the 1945 Potsdam Declaration, in which the United States, Britain and China called on Japan to ...
The Conference of the Big Three at Yalta, Crimea, with British Prime Minister Winston S. Churchill, U.S. President Franklin D. Roosevelt, and Soviet Premier Josef Stalin, February 1945.
Editor’s note: Today marks the 75th anniversary of the commencement of the Yalta Conference, held February 4–11, 1945. The following article was published in the February 19, 1982, issue of ...
Prior to the Yalta conference, Roosevelt confided to the U.S. ambassador to Russia that he believed that if he gave Stalin “everything I possibly can and ask for nothing in return, noblesse ...
Stalin’s aggressive expansion in, and subsequent oppression of, Eastern Europe was the cause of Yalta’s failure. The stakes of Bush’s contortions of history are more than political posture.
This month marks the 75 th anniversary of the infamous meeting at Yalta of Soviet dictator Josef Stalin, British Prime Minister Winston Churchill, and President Franklin Roosevelt. Yalta has ...
The problem with Yalta was not that it was a bad agreement but that Stalin ignored it. Eastern Europe was not written off, as the president implies. At Tehran in November 1943, it was agreed to move ...
Then the bus cut slightly inland, which meant I didn’t see the palaces in Koreiz—not far from Yalta— where Josef Stalin and Winston Churchill stayed during the February 1945 conference.
The apologetic and whitewash of what happened at the Yalta Conference continues. The villain now isn’t the despot and mass murderer Joseph Stalin, but Winston Churchill.
Re "Once Again, the Big Yalta Lie," Commentary, May 10: I read with particular disgust The Times' desperate defense of President Franklin Roosevelt's deplorable actions at the Yalta summit.
BIG TROUBLE AT LITTLE YALTA is a comedic take by Neil Salvage on a not very well remembered, but extremely important meeting of world leaders during the waning days of the World War II in Europe.