The Alies agreed that International courts would prosecute Nazis for war crimes.
Potsdam , Tehran and Yalta conferences .
There were three conferences where the Allied powers met to discuss the surrender of Germany and the endgame of 1945. The three locations were Yalta, in the Ukraine SSR, Tehran, and Casablanca. There was also the Potsdam conference after surrender where additional negotiations where held.
Yalta came first
Similarities were that they were both about what to do after the war
Stalin
Potsdam , Tehran and Yalta conferences .
Tehran, Yalta & Potsdam. Churchill & Roosevelt met at Casablanca.
Churchill & Roosevelt meet at Casablanca: Tehran & Yalta follow. Attlee, Stalin & Truman meet at Potsdam.
Casablanca, Yalta, Potsdam
The meetings at Yalta and Potsdam were more focused on the post-war order and the reorganization of Europe after World War II. Unlike the earlier Casablanca and Tehran conferences, which primarily addressed military strategies and coordination against the Axis powers, Yalta and Potsdam dealt with the establishment of political boundaries, the fate of Germany, and the formation of international bodies like the United Nations. These later conferences reflected a shift from wartime collaboration to the complexities of peacemaking and geopolitical power dynamics.
The Yalta ConferenceThe Potsdam ConferenceThe Casablanca Conference
The Potsdam Conference.
Yalta and Potsdam were the sites of the two 1945 World War II Conferences of the Big Three Allied leaders. The purpose was to figure out what would happen to war torn Europe, as well as the fate of Germany, after the war.
The three leaders who met at Tehran, Yalta, and Potsdam to determine the outcome of World War II were Franklin D. Roosevelt, the President of the United States; Winston Churchill, the Prime Minister of the United Kingdom; and Joseph Stalin, the Premier of the Soviet Union. These conferences were crucial in shaping post-war Europe and addressing issues related to the war's conclusion and the reconstruction of nations.
There were three conferences where the Allied powers met to discuss the surrender of Germany and the endgame of 1945. The three locations were Yalta, in the Ukraine SSR, Tehran, and Casablanca. There was also the Potsdam conference after surrender where additional negotiations where held.
Yalta came first
The Allied leaders met at the Yalta and Potsdam conferences to discuss the post-World War II reorganization of Europe and the management of Germany's defeat. At Yalta in February 1945, they aimed to establish plans for the occupation of Germany, the formation of the United Nations, and the future of Eastern Europe. By July-August 1945 at Potsdam, the focus shifted to finalizing the terms for Germany's surrender and addressing tensions among the Allies, particularly concerning Soviet influence in Eastern Europe. These meetings were crucial for shaping the geopolitical landscape of the post-war world.