~So, how many more times are you going to post this question.
~1. To defeat the Axis
2. East of and across the channel from Great Britain, northeast of Spain and west of Germany. Look at a map of Europe; you're sure to be able to find it.
3. Stalin and the US were allies despite their diametrically opposed political philosophies and Stalin had very little to fear from a war with the US. He would have won, or, at the very worst, fought to a stalemate.
4. As in, how much? What do you claim Roosevelt gave up that was his to begin with? Perhaps the 10 million dead Soviet troops vs the 295,000 US and 300,000 British KIAs may have been legitimate bargaining chips. Also, it stands to reason that the victor generally dictates terms and it is clear that the war in Europe was won by the Soviets.
Ah, jewle, I see you're still cutting and pasting and still not responding to questions with any germane or relevant material.
2007-04-23 20:28:09
·
answer #1
·
answered by Oscar Himpflewitz 7
·
1⤊
0⤋
1 - split Germany into four parts, re-unite them at a later date
2 - ??? They are not yet viable as a country and government, but will be so soon.
3 - No, but I don't want to ever have to deal with Germany again, and I don't want to be bullied by the USA
4 - Because I hate war, it costs too much, and besides, my legs are killing me, I am not feeling all that well, and can't we just get this over with so I can go home?
2007-04-23 22:07:25
·
answer #2
·
answered by John B 7
·
0⤊
0⤋
meeting (Feb. 4–11, 1945), at Yalta, Crimea, USSR, of British Prime Minister Winston Churchill, U.S. President Franklin Delano Roosevelt, and Soviet Premier Joseph Stalin. Most of the important decisions made remained secret until the end of World War II for military or political reasons; the complete text of all the agreements was not disclosed until 1947. The Yalta conferees confirmed the policy adopted at the Casablanca Conference of demanding Germany’s unconditional surrender. Plans were made for dividing Germany into four zones of occupation (American, British, French, and Soviet) under a unified control commission in Berlin, for war crimes trials, and for a study of the reparations question. Agreement was also reached on reorganizing the Polish Lublin government (supported by Stalin) “on a broader democratic basis” that would include members of Poland’s London government-in-exile, which the Western Allies had supported. The conferees decided to ask China and France to join them in sponsoring the founding conference of the United Nations to be convened in San Francisco on Apr. 25, 1945; agreement was reached on using the veto system of voting in the projected Security Council. Future meetings of the foreign ministers of the “Big Three” were planned. The USSR secretly agreed to enter the war against Japan within three months of Germany’s surrender and was promised S Sakhalin, the Kuril Islands, and an occupation zone in Korea. The secret agreement respecting the disposal of Japan’s holdings also provided that the port of Dalian (Dairen) should be internationalized, that Port Arthur should be restored to its status before the 1904–5 Russo-Japanese War as a Russian naval base, and that the Manchurian railroads should be under joint Chinese-Soviet administration. China later protested that it was not informed of these decisions concerning its territory and that its sovereignty was infringed. The United States and Great Britain also agreed to recognize the autonomy of Outer Mongolia, and to admit Ukraine and Belorussia (Belarus) to the United Nations as full members. The Yalta agreements were disputed even before the Potsdam Conference later in 1945. The subsequent outbreak of the cold war and Soviet successes in Eastern Europe led to much criticism in the United States of the Yalta Conference and of Roosevelt, who was accused of delivering Eastern Europe to Communist dominatio
2007-04-23 22:05:48
·
answer #3
·
answered by jewle8417 5
·
0⤊
2⤋