The Yalta Conference, 1945
The Yalta Conference took place in a Russian resort town in the Crimea from February 4-11, 1945, during World War Two.
At Yalta, U.S. President Franklin D. Roosevelt, British Prime Minister Winston Churchill, and Soviet Premier Joseph Stalin made important decisions regarding the future progress of the war and the postwar world. ..."
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Initial reaction to the Yalta agreements was celebratory. Roosevelt and many other Americans viewed it as proof that the spirit of U.S.-Soviet wartime cooperation would carry over into the postwar period.
This sentiment, however, was short lived.
With the death of Franklin D. Roosevelt on April 12, 1945, Harry S. Truman became the thirty-third president of the United States.
By the end of April, the new administration clashed with the Soviets over their influence in Eastern Europe, and over the United Nations.
Alarmed at the perceived lack of cooperation on the part of the Soviets, many Americans began to criticize Roosevelt's handling of the Yalta negotiations.
To this day, many of Roosevelt's most vehement detractors accuse him of "handing over" Eastern Europe and Northeast Asia to the Soviet Union at Yalta despite the fact that the Soviets did make many substantial concessions.
Wow! They sent four whole planes!
That’s just like the Eighth Air Force sending out the 2000 bomber and 1000 fighter raids of 1945.