News

On February 4, 1945, Churchill, Roosevelt and Stalin met in Livadia Palace, in the Crimean resort of Yalta, with a single item on the agenda: to plan for the final defeat of Nazi Germany and the ...
In early February of 1945, when the defeat of Germany was finally a foregone conclusion, President Franklin Delano Roosevelt, Prime Minister Winston Churchill and Premier Joseph Stalin met in the ...
In 1943, ending a "Big Three" meeting in Tehran, U.S. President Franklin Roosevelt, British Prime Minister Winston Churchill and Russian Premier Josef Stalin pledged a concerted effort to defeat ...
Yet such is the enduring interest in the subject that there is always room for another one, and the newest book by the scholar Phillips Payson O’Brien on Churchill, Stalin, Roosevelt ...
Winston Churchill, the pink-cheeked giant of Western ... ∙ “The President,” said the transcript of a private Stalin-Roosevelt conversation, “said he would now tell the marshal something ...
In February 1945, Churchill, Roosevelt and Stalin met in the Crimean resort of Yalta for a crucial summit that would decide the future of Europe. The Yalta Conference was the culmination of years of ...
Stalin, Roosevelt, Churchill – not a natural threesome. The stresses and strains between them were many and frequent. After the Germans invaded Russia and reached as far as the outskirts of ...
Allies,’ declared Stalin on 8 February 1945, the fifth day of the Yalta Conference, ‘should not deceive one another.’ In ...
November 28-December 1: Roosevelt, Churchill, and Stalin convene in Tehran, Iran, to discuss the German invasion of Italy. It is the first time all three have met. June 6: Over 160,000 Allied ...
Eighty years ago the Big Three—America, Britain and the Soviet Union—assembled for eight days of jaw-jawing at the Crimean resort of Yalta, their second gathering to finish the second world ...
We end with the total victory of the Big Three: Churchill, Roosevelt and Stalin, the last now our beloved Uncle Joe. And Poland, for whom we first went to war, betrayed. Churchill understood that ...