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Showing posts from February, 2025

Eighty years ago this week the fault lines of post-war diplomacy open further

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After a lull of two months in the Pacific US forces landed on Iwo Jima, a small island some 1,000km from mainland Japan. The Japanese had reinforced the garrison to about 22,000 troops. The military value of the island was debatable. It was too small to serve as a naval base and its airfield was not being used by fighters to intercept B-29 raids on the home islands. As these faced little fighter opposition over their targets, Iwo Jima's value as a base of long range escort fighters was marginal. A major diplomatic row exploded between General de Gaulle and President Roosevelt. France had not been asked to attend the Yalta conference with the imputation that it did not rank as one of the senior allied powers. With matching insincerity Roosevelt proposed to meet de Gaulle somewhere on his way back to the US and de Gaulle invited Roosevelt to Paris. The first would have cast de Gaulle as a US dependent,  who could be summoned to wait on his master; the second would have implied equali...

Eighty years ago this week Churchill stores trouble for his historical reputation

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  The meeting between Churchill, Roosevelt and Stalin at Yalta agreed to split Germany into zones occupied by each power and to recognise the Communist puppet government of Poland. Stalin promised democratic elections in eastern Europe after the war which provided a pretext for accepting the latter. When he briefed the Cabinet Churchill claimed that he could trust Stalin, "Poor Neville Chamberlain believed he could trust Hitler. He was wrong. But I don't think I'm wrong about Stalin."    In today's parlour game of comparing Neville Chamberlain's performance at Munich in 1938 with Churchill's at Yalta, this counts against Churchill,  although he was doing little more than accepting a military fait accompli . Moreover Stalin had respected his side of their private deal assigning Greece to the British sphere of influence . RAF Bomber Command attacked Dresden with the aim of disrupting military communications with the eastern front. This was an extension of th...

Eighty years ago this week the Soviet occupation of eastern Europe takes shape

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  The leaders of the principal allied powers, Churchill, Roosevelt and Stalin, met in conference at Yalta in the Crimea to plan the future after the defeat of Germany. Only Stalin had a realistic agenda and that had already been set by the Red Army's advance across Europe. He simply wished to retain Soviet conquests and to ensure that they faced no military challenge. Roosevelt hoped to entice the Soviets into  particpating in the military defeat of Japan; Stalin was aware that Soviet territorial ambitions in the East would be fulfilled by military action which Japan would be powerless to halt especially if the UK and US invaded the home islands. Churchill entertained fantasies of instituting some form of democracy in Soviet occupied eastern Europe. The Bulgarian Communist Party gave a foretaste of politics after Soviet occupation. Ninety three senior figures in Bulgaria's wartime government including the former regents and the prime minister were executed by firing squad afte...

Eighty years ago this week Auschwitz is liberated

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    The Red Army overran the Auschwitz extermination camp. It still held some 7,500 inmates whom the Germans had not been able to evacuate. Most of the gas chambers and crematoria had been dismantled the previous year to remove evidence  in anticipation of Soviet occupation but one crematorium remained to be blown up. The Soviet troops had been warned in advance of what they might see but the sight of the mounds of corpses and the pitiable state of the survivors still shocked them. The advance of the Red Army isolated the city of Koenigberg (now Kaliningrad in Russia) in East Prussia trapping about 100,000 troops and 200,000 civilians far behind the new front line. The Soviets were focussed on the advance into Germany and were content to besiege the pocket. The German passenger ship Wilhelm Gustloff, originally built as a pleasure cruise liner for Nazi Kraft durch Freude holidays was torpedoed and sunk by a Soviet submarine as she sailed from Gdynia in East Prussia with...