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.
Potsdam Conference
Churchill, Stalin, and Roosevelt met in Yalta to craft the peace-time settlement in 1945.
The two armies met each other in Torgau , Germany April 25, 1945 .
The allies met at Tehran because it was considered a neutral location for all of the allies. It was also a good idea to meet here logistically due to Chinese and Egyptian involvement.
The Yalta Conference was held February 4-11, 1945 .
The Yalta Conference in February 1945.
Yalta, a town on the south coast of Crimea, an island in the Black Sea. Correction: They met at Potsdam, Germany, in July, 1945. The Yalta Conference, in February 1945, involved Roosevelt, Churchill and Stalin.
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.
The Potsdam Conference.
The allied leaders met for a conference in July of 1945 the in Potsdam.
Potsdam Conference
The Allied leaders met at the Yalta Conference, held in February 1945 in Yalta, Crimea. During this conference, leaders such as Franklin D. Roosevelt, Winston Churchill, and Joseph Stalin discussed the reorganization of postwar Europe and laid the groundwork for the United Nations. They addressed key issues like the division of Germany and the fate of Eastern European countries. The decisions made at Yalta significantly influenced the geopolitical landscape of the postwar world.
The "Big 3", known as Stalin, Churchill and Roosevelt (and other allies) met at Casablanca and Yalta and Potsdam to plan and discuss matters concerning the war.
Churchill, Stalin, and Roosevelt met in Yalta to craft the peace-time settlement in 1945.
The plan the Allies did to give Hitler his demands was during the Munich conference and they gave him Czechoslovakia.
They will meet a group of experts in the field at the conference.