Yalta Agreement, 1945

 

Citation: Landmark Document in American History; The Public Papers and Addresses of Franklin D. Roosevelt, 1944-45, Vol., Victory and the Threshold of Peace, p. 531-537

Agreement signed in February 11, 1945, by the three main Allied leaders -- U.S. President Franklin D. Roosevelt, British Prime Minister Winston Churchill, and Soviet Premier Joseph Stalin -- at Yalta, Crimea, U.S.S.R., at a conference (February 4-11, 1945) convened there in the final months of World War II (1939-45) to discuss strategies for the invasion and final defeat of Nazi Germany and the terms of settlement. The three powers agreed to demand Germany's unconditional surrender and planned to divide Germany into four zones of occupation, with France being the fourth occupying power. The Soviet Union promised to enter the war against Japan after the German surrender. They also finalized the dates of the meeting in San Francisco to draft the United Nations Charter. Only two Soviet republics would be allowed full representation at the United Nations, where veto powers would be vested in the three big powers. The Allies also signed a pledge to help the countries in Europe (referring to Poland under Soviet occupation) settle their political and economic problems by democratic means.

YALTA AGREEMENT

 

The Defeat of Germany

 

We have considered and determined the military plans of the three Allied

powers for the final defeat of the common enemy. The military staffs of

the three Allied Nations have met in daily meetings throughout the

Conference. These meetings have been most satisfactory from every point

of view and have resulted in closer coordination of the military effort

of the three Allies than ever before. The fullest information has been

interchanged. The timing, scope, and coordination of new and even more

powerful blows to be launched by our armies and air forces into the

heart of Germany from the East, West, North, and South have been fully

agreed and planned in detail.

 

Our combined military plans will be made known only as we execute them,

but we believe that the very close working partnership among the three

staffs attained at this Conference will result in shortening the war.

Meetings of the three staffs will be continued in the future whenever

the need arises.

 

Nazi Germany is doomed. The German people will only make the cost of

their defeat heavier to themselves by attempting to continue a hopeless

resistance.

 

The Occupation and Control of Germany

 

We have agreed on common policies and plans for enforcing the

unconditional surrender terms which we shall impose together on Nazi

Germany after German armed resistance has been finally crushed. These

terms will not be made known until the final defeat of Germany has been

accomplished. Under the agreed plan, the forces of the three powers

will each occupy a separate zone of Germany. Coordinated administration

and control has been provided for under the plan through a central

control commission consisting of the Supreme Commanders of the three

powers with headquarters in Berlin. It has been agreed that France

should be invited by the three powers, if she should so desire, to take

over a zone of occupation, and to participate as a fourth member of the

control commission. The limits of the French zone will be agreed by the

four Governments concerned through their representatives on the European

Advisory Commission.

 

It is our inflexible purpose to destroy German militarism and Nazism and

to ensure that Germany will never again be able to disturb the peace of

the world. We are determined to disarm and disband all German armed

forces; break up for all time the German General Staff that has

repeatedly contrived the resurgence of German militarism; remove or

destroy all German military equipment; eliminate or control all German

industry that could be used for military production; bring all war

criminals to just and swift punishment and exact reparation in kind for

the destruction wrought by the Germans; wipe out the Nazi Party, Nazi

laws, organizations and institutions, remove all Nazi and militarist

influences from public office and from the cultural and economic life of

the German people; and take in harmony such other measures in Germany as

may be necessary to the future peace and safety of the world. It is not

our purpose to destroy the people of Germany, but only when Nazism and

militarism have been extirpated will there be hope for a decent life for

Germans, and a place for them in the comity of Nations.

 

Reparation by Germany

 

We have considered the question of the damage caused by Germany to the

Allied Nations in this war and recognized it as just that Germany be

obliged to make compensation for this damage in kind to the greatest

extent possible. A commission for the compensation of damage will be

established. The commission will be instructed to consider the question

of the extent and methods for compensating damage caused by Germany to

the Allied countries. The commission will work in Moscow.

 

United Nations Conference

 

We are resolved upon the earliest possible establishment with our allies

of a general international organization to maintain peace and security.

We believe that this is essential, both to prevent aggression and to

remove the political, economic, and social causes of war through the

close and continuing collaboration of all peace-loving peoples.

 

The foundations were laid at Dumbarton Oaks. On the important question

of voting procedure, however, agreement was not three reached. The

present Conference has been able to resolve this difficulty.

 

We have agreed that a conference of United Nations should be called to

meet at San Francisco in the United States on April 25, 1945, to prepare

the charter of such an organization, along the lines proposed in the

informal conversations at Dumbarton Oaks.

 

The Government of China and the Provisional Government of France will be

immediately consulted and invited to sponsor invitations to the

conference jointly with the Governments of the United States, Great

Britain, and the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics. As soon as the

consultation with China and France has been completed, the next of the

proposals on voting procedure will be made public.

 

Declaration on Liberated Europe

 

The Premier of the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics, the Prime

Minister of the United Kingdom, and the President of the United States

of America have consulted with each other in the common interests of the

peoples of their countries and those of liberated Europe. They jointly

declare their mutual agreement to concert during the temporary period of

instability in liberated Europe the policies of their three Governments

in assisting the peoples liberated from the domination of Nazi Germany

and the peoples of the former Axis satellite states of Europe to solve

by democratic means their pressing political and economic problems.

 

The establishment of order in Europe and the rebuilding of national

economic life must be achieved by processes which will enable the

liberated peoples to destroy the last vestiges of Nazism and Fascism and

to create democratic institutions of their own choice. This is a

principle of the Atlantic Charter -- the right of all peoples to choose

the form of government under which they will live -- the restoration of

sovereign rights and self-government to those peoples who have been

forcibly deprived of them by the aggressor Nations.

 

To foster the conditions in which the liberated peoples may exercise

these rights, the three Governments will jointly assist the people in

any European liberated state or former Axis satellite state in Europe

where in their judgment conditions require (a) to establish conditions

of internal peace; (b) to carry out emergency measures for the relief of

distressed peoples; (c) to form interim governmental authorities broadly

representative of all democratic elements in the population and pledged

to the earliest possible establishment through free elections of

governments responsive to the will of the people; and (d) to facilitate

where necessary the holding of such elections.

 

The three Governments will consult the other United Nations and

provisional authorities or other Governments in Europe when matters of

direct interest to them are under consideration.

 

When, in the opinion of the three Governments, conditions in any

European liberated state or any former Axis satellite state in Europe

make such action necessary, they will immediately consult together on

the measures necessary to discharge the joint responsibilities set forth

in this declaration.

 

By this declaration we reaffirm our faith in the principles of the

Atlantic Charter, our pledge in the declaration by the United Nations,

and our determination to build in cooperation with other peace-loving

Nations world order under law, dedicated to peace, security, freedom,

and general well-being of all mankind.

 

In issuing this declaration, the three powers express the hope that the

Provisional Government of the French Republic may be associated with

them in the procedure suggested.

 

Poland

 

A new situation has been created in Poland as a result of her complete

liberation by the Red Army. This calls for the establishment of a

Polish provisional government which can be more broadly based than was

possible before the recent liberation of western Poland. The

provisional government which is now functioning in Poland should

therefore be reorganized on a broader democratic basis with the

inclusion of democratic leaders from Poland itself and from Poles

abroad. This new government should then be called the Polish

Provisional Government of National Unity.

 

M. Molotov, Mr. Harriman, and Sir A. Clark Kerr are authorized as a

commission to consult in the first instance in Moscow with members of

the present provisional government and with other Polish democratic

leaders from within Poland and from abroad, with a view to the

reorganization of the present government along the above lines. This

Polish Provisional Government of National Unity shall be pledged to the

holding of free and unfettered elections as soon as possible on the

basis of universal suffrage and secret ballot. In these elections all

democratic anti-Nazi parties shall have the right to take part and to

put forward candidates.

 

When a Polish Provisional Government of National Unity has been properly

formed in conformity with the above, the Government of the U.S.S.R.,

which now maintains diplomatic relations with the present provisional

government of Poland, and the Government of the United Kingdom and the

Government of the U.S.A. will establish diplomatic relations with the

new Polish Provisional Government of National Unity, and will exchange

ambassadors by whose reports the respective Governments will be kept

informed about the situation in Poland.

 

The three heads of government consider that the eastern frontier of

Poland should follow the Curzon line with digressions from it in some

regions of five to eight kilometers in favor of Poland. They recognized

that Poland must receive substantial accessions of territory in the

North and West. They feel that the opinion of the new Polish

Provisional Government of National Unity should be sought in due course

on the extent of these accessions and that the final delimitation of the

western frontier of Poland should thereafter await the peace conference.

 

Yugoslavia

 

We have agreed to recommend to Marshal Tito and Dr. Subasic that the

agreement between them should be put into effect immediately, and that a

new government should be formed on the basis of that agreement.

 

We also recommend that as soon as the new government has been formed it

should declare that:

 

1. The anti-Fascist Assembly of National Liberation (Avnoj) should be

extended to include members of the last Yugoslav Parliament (Skupschina)

who have not compromised themselves by collaboration with the enemy,

thus forming a body to be known as a temporary Parliament; and,

 

2. Legislative acts passed by the anti-Fascist Assembly of National

Liberation will be subject to subsequent ratification by a constituent

assembly.

 

There was also a general review of other Balkan questions.

 

Meetings of Foreign Secretaries

 

Throughout the Conference, besides the daily meetings of the heads of

governments and the Foreign Secretaries, separate meetings of the three

Foreign Secretaries, and their advisers have also been held daily.

 

These meetings have proved of the utmost value and the Conference agreed

that permanent machinery should be set up for regular consultation

between the three Foreign Secretaries. They will, therefore, meet as

often as may be necessary, probably about every three or four months.

These meetings will be held in rotation in the three capitals, the first

meeting being held in London, after the United Nations Conference on

World Organization.

 

Unity for Peace as for War

 

Our meeting here in the Crimea has reaffirmed our common determination

to maintain and strengthen in the peace to come that unity of purpose

and of action which has made victory possible and certain for the United

Nations in this war. We believe that this is a sacred obligation which

our Governments owe to our peoples and to all the peoples of the world.

 

Only with the continuing and growing cooperation and understanding among

our three countries and among all the peace-loving Nations can the

highest aspiration of humanity be realized -- a secure and lasting peace

which will, in the words of the Atlantic Charter, "afford assurance that

all the men in all the lands may live out their lives in freedom from

fear and want."

 

Victory in this war and establishment of the proposed international

organization will provide the greatest opportunity in all history to

create in the years to come the essential conditions of such a peace.

 

Signed: Winston S. Churchill

Franklin D. Roosevelt

J. Stalin